It depends on the laws in the jurisdiction. For a public school it may be the superintendent of schools, the school board, the school committee, the principal or some other official approved by law. The answer also depends on whether the school is public or private. For a private school it may be the director, the board of trustees, or the president or some other entity appointed by the school for that purpose.
no thats disgusting fire this teacher
Dalia Falmea
She fires Professor Sibyll Trelawney, the Divination teacher, and she tries to fire Hagrid the groundskeeper (and Care of Magical Creatures teacher).
None. The superintendent has ultimate control
run to the safety point and listen to your teacher
you get the helephant spell by the fire teacher in ravenwood when you are lvl 42
Well, honey, that sentence is as confused as a chameleon in a bag of Skittles. It should be "Either the teacher or the students are to blame for the fire" to match subject-verb agreement. So, in short, no, it ain't grammatically correct.
that question doesn't sense fire your teacher
It is possible for teachers who are tenure to be fired as you would a normal teacher. You will have to have strong evidence against them and it may cost a large amount but it can be done with the right backup information.
This site has a lot of good information. McGruff is great. I am a teacher and I use McGruff to teach the kids all about fire safety.
Possible natural gas fire or explosion.
Follow the instruction of the teacher closest to you and join their class.