Should kids clean school bathrooms

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


How are 75% of adults overweight and 40% obese? A simple thing as keeping your weight in check yet their kids look just like them. Teaching good behavior is the same. Most of you self righteous parents on this board who coddle and defend your kids even in virtual anonymity don't know how to parent. The people who have parented properly would most definitely have kids that wouldn't bat an eye when told to do things by their superiors (teachers, coaches, etc.) such as tidy up and clean up shared spaces as a group. Stop setting a bad example by treating public spaces as places you can muddy and make other clean.


Exactly. The kids most likely to pitch in without complaint are those who are expected to do that at home. OP needs to teach her own kid to do some chores rather than get people on the internet to endorse her plan to get her kid’s teacher to do it for her.


Ok so as long as kids are expected to clean at home, it’s ok to ask them to do the same at school? Great!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


Schools teach kids all kinds of things that parent won’t or can’t. So what.


So you are good with lazy parents and asking teachers to clean bathrooms on top of everything else they do?



Where did I say that I’m ok with lazy parents. I’m ok with acknowledging they exist because of course they do. And who is asking teachers to clean bathrooms? The topic is kids cleaning bathrooms. Not teachers.


Who would teach kids to clean school bathrooms? How do you teach someone to clean a bathroom? You show them by doing it.


Sure. You tell them to take a brush and scrub. Super hard. I know.


Right. Teachers cleaning bathrooms.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


Schools teach kids all kinds of things that parent won’t or can’t. So what.


So you are good with lazy parents and asking teachers to clean bathrooms on top of everything else they do?



Where did I say that I’m ok with lazy parents. I’m ok with acknowledging they exist because of course they do. And who is asking teachers to clean bathrooms? The topic is kids cleaning bathrooms. Not teachers.


Who would teach kids to clean school bathrooms? How do you teach someone to clean a bathroom? You show them by doing it.


Sure. You tell them to take a brush and scrub. Super hard. I know.


Right. Teachers cleaning bathrooms.



Again. Playing dumb. Kids would be the ones holding brushes. Get it now?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


How are 75% of adults overweight and 40% obese? A simple thing as keeping your weight in check yet their kids look just like them. Teaching good behavior is the same. Most of you self righteous parents on this board who coddle and defend your kids even in virtual anonymity don't know how to parent. The people who have parented properly would most definitely have kids that wouldn't bat an eye when told to do things by their superiors (teachers, coaches, etc.) such as tidy up and clean up shared spaces as a group. Stop setting a bad example by treating public spaces as places you can muddy and make other clean.


Exactly. The kids most likely to pitch in without complaint are those who are expected to do that at home. OP needs to teach her own kid to do some chores rather than get people on the internet to endorse her plan to get her kid’s teacher to do it for her.


Ok so as long as kids are expected to clean at home, it’s ok to ask them to do the same at school? Great!


Should teachers be expected to teach kids to clean toilets so parents like OP don’t have to?
Anonymous
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week. [/quote]

Did you scrub the toilets? [/quote]

Nope. I just told you what we did.[/quote]

Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.[/quote]

The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience. [/quote]

The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.
[/quote]

How are 75% of adults overweight and 40% obese? A simple thing as keeping your weight in check yet their kids look just like them. Teaching good behavior is the same. Most of you self righteous parents on this board who coddle and defend your kids even in virtual anonymity don't know how to parent. The people who have parented properly would most definitely have kids that wouldn't bat an eye when told to do things by their superiors (teachers, coaches, etc.) such as tidy up and clean up shared spaces as a group. Stop setting a bad example by treating public spaces as places you can muddy and make other clean.[/quote]

Exactly. The kids most likely to pitch in without complaint are those who are expected to do that at home. OP needs to teach her own kid to do some chores rather than get people on the internet to endorse her plan to get her kid’s teacher to do it for her.[/quote]

Ok so as long as kids are expected to clean at home, it’s ok to ask them to do the same at school? Great![/quote]

Should teachers be expected to teach kids to clean toilets so parents like OP don’t have to?[/quote]

I have no problem with that. 10 min of instruction. Hardly a big ask.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


How are 75% of adults overweight and 40% obese? A simple thing as keeping your weight in check yet their kids look just like them. Teaching good behavior is the same. Most of you self righteous parents on this board who coddle and defend your kids even in virtual anonymity don't know how to parent. The people who have parented properly would most definitely have kids that wouldn't bat an eye when told to do things by their superiors (teachers, coaches, etc.) such as tidy up and clean up shared spaces as a group. Stop setting a bad example by treating public spaces as places you can muddy and make other clean.


Exactly. The kids most likely to pitch in without complaint are those who are expected to do that at home. OP needs to teach her own kid to do some chores rather than get people on the internet to endorse her plan to get her kid’s teacher to do it for her.


Ok so as long as kids are expected to clean at home, it’s ok to ask them to do the same at school? Great!


Of course. Just like you should teach your kids math, reading, writing, and science. That way they won't have trouble keeping up with the low level of the curriculum... low level because of parents like you who didn't teach your kids math, reading, writing, and science. Then there'll be so much time at school that they'll have a few minutes to help keep their school clean. Or else, make schools 5 hours a day with extra optional babysitting hours you pay for as needed because that's about as much studying they ever do anyway. I don't need to be subsidizing your lazy ass and your messy kids who refuses to even keep their school clean.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


Schools teach kids all kinds of things that parent won’t or can’t. So what.


So you are good with lazy parents and asking teachers to clean bathrooms on top of everything else they do?



Where did I say that I’m ok with lazy parents. I’m ok with acknowledging they exist because of course they do. And who is asking teachers to clean bathrooms? The topic is kids cleaning bathrooms. Not teachers.


Who would teach kids to clean school bathrooms? How do you teach someone to clean a bathroom? You show them by doing it.


Sure. You tell them to take a brush and scrub. Super hard. I know.


Right. Teachers cleaning bathrooms.



Again. Playing dumb. Kids would be the ones holding brushes. Get it now?


Riiight. Ask a teacher how they would teach this and they will say they would be scrubbing toilets to show how it’s done.

You guys really do want teachers to quit rather teach your kids a few chores.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


How are 75% of adults overweight and 40% obese? A simple thing as keeping your weight in check yet their kids look just like them. Teaching good behavior is the same. Most of you self righteous parents on this board who coddle and defend your kids even in virtual anonymity don't know how to parent. The people who have parented properly would most definitely have kids that wouldn't bat an eye when told to do things by their superiors (teachers, coaches, etc.) such as tidy up and clean up shared spaces as a group. Stop setting a bad example by treating public spaces as places you can muddy and make other clean.


Exactly. The kids most likely to pitch in without complaint are those who are expected to do that at home. OP needs to teach her own kid to do some chores rather than get people on the internet to endorse her plan to get her kid’s teacher to do it for her.


Ok so as long as kids are expected to clean at home, it’s ok to ask them to do the same at school? Great!


Should teachers be expected to teach kids to clean toilets so parents like OP don’t have to?


I have no problem with that. 10 min of instruction. Hardly a big ask.
Anonymous
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week. [/quote]

Did you scrub the toilets? [/quote]

Nope. I just told you what we did.[/quote]

Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.[/quote]

The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience. [/quote]

The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.
[/quote]

How are 75% of adults overweight and 40% obese? A simple thing as keeping your weight in check yet their kids look just like them. Teaching good behavior is the same. Most of you self righteous parents on this board who coddle and defend your kids even in virtual anonymity don't know how to parent. The people who have parented properly would most definitely have kids that wouldn't bat an eye when told to do things by their superiors (teachers, coaches, etc.) such as tidy up and clean up shared spaces as a group. Stop setting a bad example by treating public spaces as places you can muddy and make other clean.[/quote]

Exactly. The kids most likely to pitch in without complaint are those who are expected to do that at home. OP needs to teach her own kid to do some chores rather than get people on the internet to endorse her plan to get her kid’s teacher to do it for her.[/quote]

Ok so as long as kids are expected to clean at home, it’s ok to ask them to do the same at school? Great![/quote]

Should teachers be expected to teach kids to clean toilets so parents like OP don’t have to?[/quote]

I have no problem with that. 10 min of instruction. Hardly a big ask.[/quote]

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


How are 75% of adults overweight and 40% obese? A simple thing as keeping your weight in check yet their kids look just like them. Teaching good behavior is the same. Most of you self righteous parents on this board who coddle and defend your kids even in virtual anonymity don't know how to parent. The people who have parented properly would most definitely have kids that wouldn't bat an eye when told to do things by their superiors (teachers, coaches, etc.) such as tidy up and clean up shared spaces as a group. Stop setting a bad example by treating public spaces as places you can muddy and make other clean.


Exactly. The kids most likely to pitch in without complaint are those who are expected to do that at home. OP needs to teach her own kid to do some chores rather than get people on the internet to endorse her plan to get her kid’s teacher to do it for her.


Ok so as long as kids are expected to clean at home, it’s ok to ask them to do the same at school? Great!


Of course. Just like you should teach your kids math, reading, writing, and science. That way they won't have trouble keeping up with the low level of the curriculum... low level because of parents like you who didn't teach your kids math, reading, writing, and science. Then there'll be so much time at school that they'll have a few minutes to help keep their school clean. Or else, make schools 5 hours a day with extra optional babysitting hours you pay for as needed because that's about as much studying they ever do anyway. I don't need to be subsidizing your lazy ass and your messy kids who refuses to even keep their school clean.


You sound unhinged. Please go to bed.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


Schools teach kids all kinds of things that parent won’t or can’t. So what.


So you are good with lazy parents and asking teachers to clean bathrooms on top of everything else they do?



Where did I say that I’m ok with lazy parents. I’m ok with acknowledging they exist because of course they do. And who is asking teachers to clean bathrooms? The topic is kids cleaning bathrooms. Not teachers.


Who would teach kids to clean school bathrooms? How do you teach someone to clean a bathroom? You show them by doing it.


Sure. You tell them to take a brush and scrub. Super hard. I know.


Right. Teachers cleaning bathrooms.



Again. Playing dumb. Kids would be the ones holding brushes. Get it now?


Riiight. Ask a teacher how they would teach this and they will say they would be scrubbing toilets to show how it’s done.

You guys really do want teachers to quit rather teach your kids a few chores.



I have zero problem with teachers doing this. Zero!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


How are 75% of adults overweight and 40% obese? A simple thing as keeping your weight in check yet their kids look just like them. Teaching good behavior is the same. Most of you self righteous parents on this board who coddle and defend your kids even in virtual anonymity don't know how to parent. The people who have parented properly would most definitely have kids that wouldn't bat an eye when told to do things by their superiors (teachers, coaches, etc.) such as tidy up and clean up shared spaces as a group. Stop setting a bad example by treating public spaces as places you can muddy and make other clean.


Exactly. The kids most likely to pitch in without complaint are those who are expected to do that at home. OP needs to teach her own kid to do some chores rather than get people on the internet to endorse her plan to get her kid’s teacher to do it for her.


Ok so as long as kids are expected to clean at home, it’s ok to ask them to do the same at school? Great!


Of course. Just like you should teach your kids math, reading, writing, and science. That way they won't have trouble keeping up with the low level of the curriculum... low level because of parents like you who didn't teach your kids math, reading, writing, and science. Then there'll be so much time at school that they'll have a few minutes to help keep their school clean. Or else, make schools 5 hours a day with extra optional babysitting hours you pay for as needed because that's about as much studying they ever do anyway. I don't need to be subsidizing your lazy ass and your messy kids who refuses to even keep their school clean.


Weird that you are saying the parents who teach their kids to do chores are the lazy ones.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


Schools teach kids all kinds of things that parent won’t or can’t. So what.


So you are good with lazy parents and asking teachers to clean bathrooms on top of everything else they do?



Where did I say that I’m ok with lazy parents. I’m ok with acknowledging they exist because of course they do. And who is asking teachers to clean bathrooms? The topic is kids cleaning bathrooms. Not teachers.


Who would teach kids to clean school bathrooms? How do you teach someone to clean a bathroom? You show them by doing it.


Sure. You tell them to take a brush and scrub. Super hard. I know.


Right. Teachers cleaning bathrooms.



Again. Playing dumb. Kids would be the ones holding brushes. Get it now?


Riiight. Ask a teacher how they would teach this and they will say they would be scrubbing toilets to show how it’s done.

You guys really do want teachers to quit rather teach your kids a few chores.



I have zero problem with teachers doing this. Zero!


Of course you don’t. You’re a parent, not a teacher. Yet you expect them to do both jobs for you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At my private school, we cleaned the cafeteria tables and swept. Different people did it for a week and then switched. I can tell you for a fact that there was never anything but a few crumbs on the floor. If anyone spilled something, they'd go to clean it up and apologize to whoever was doing floors that week.


Did you scrub the toilets?


Nope. I just told you what we did.


Great. The topic is cleaning toilets.


The POINT of the post is students taking an active role in keeping their school clean as a matter of course, which is why I responded with my experience.


The point is OP wants her child’s teacher to add teaching cleaning bathrooms to their list of things they apparently have to do because parents won’t.


How are 75% of adults overweight and 40% obese? A simple thing as keeping your weight in check yet their kids look just like them. Teaching good behavior is the same. Most of you self righteous parents on this board who coddle and defend your kids even in virtual anonymity don't know how to parent. The people who have parented properly would most definitely have kids that wouldn't bat an eye when told to do things by their superiors (teachers, coaches, etc.) such as tidy up and clean up shared spaces as a group. Stop setting a bad example by treating public spaces as places you can muddy and make other clean.


Exactly. The kids most likely to pitch in without complaint are those who are expected to do that at home. OP needs to teach her own kid to do some chores rather than get people on the internet to endorse her plan to get her kid’s teacher to do it for her.


Ok so as long as kids are expected to clean at home, it’s ok to ask them to do the same at school? Great!


Of course. Just like you should teach your kids math, reading, writing, and science. That way they won't have trouble keeping up with the low level of the curriculum... low level because of parents like you who didn't teach your kids math, reading, writing, and science. Then there'll be so much time at school that they'll have a few minutes to help keep their school clean. Or else, make schools 5 hours a day with extra optional babysitting hours you pay for as needed because that's about as much studying they ever do anyway. I don't need to be subsidizing your lazy ass and your messy kids who refuses to even keep their school clean.


Weird that you are saying the parents who teach their kids to do chores are the lazy ones.



No, it's in reference to the PP who thinks that home life and school life should be kept separate. Meaning, they (you???) think "I teach my kid to clean" and "teachers teach their kids math, etc." In fact, home life and school life should mirror more than contrast.
Anonymous
A teacher is not your nanny!
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