| Ugh, I despise people like OP. Go have your kid allergy tested before you complain about a fake allergy you made up in your own anxious head. |
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While it is possible your child is allergic to the class rodent, it is far more likely that she is allergic to one or more of the following:
1. Animal hair on a classmate's clothes 2. Mold in the building 3. Mildew in the building |
+1 considering OP doesn’t even know what the class pet is…it would be funny if it were actually a fish. |
You won the internet today. Hilarious. |
Love you fellow teacher! We have those too, but they poop in colors because they eat playdough crumbs.
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That's not not necessarily true. I'm violently allergic to guinea pigs and rabbits. As a school based technology specialist, I've walked into classrooms with a guinea pig in a cage maybe 25 feet away and immediately started to have an asthma attack. With poor air circulation, even a very distant class pet could cause major allergic problems for a kid. I totally agree that, in general, class pets can be very beneficial to student morale and enthusiasm and can be great for developing responsibility and learning about pet care, but they can be really detrimental to staff and students with severe allergies. |
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I don't know about the allergy issue--but I do know my DH reacts to some cats, but not all.
Years ago, I taught in a school where one of the teachers had a rabbit. The rabbit hopped free in the room, and they kept a gate on the door. I just flat did not like the idea because of the need to constantly "pick up" after the rabbit. I like animals, but I kind of felt like this was over the top. |
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I’m shocked people commenting negatively towards OP. Schools are no place for animals. Definitely less likely for pet hair on clothing to be more allergenic than an actual pet in a classroom.
I’m surprised FCPS doesn’t have a policy on this. Or at look east guidance for having turtles, lizards, or fish that is less likely to trigger an allergy. But no big deal, if this kid is allergic she can ask to be moved to another class. No need to put down the OP. |
| I had fish in my classroom and so did a lot of us. Usually, they did not last all year, though. |
| The teacher can remove the pet. She brings it in each Monday. She never uses it for teaching anything. It just exists in the back of the class. The room does have a stench. We had this last year. It was a sneezing 🤧 problem for some but no one spoke up. |
Perhaps you should have tried a different medication. I can't take Claritin because it makes me feel very woozy, but Zyrtec just makes my allergies better. A good doctor would have helped you figure this out. You should see an allergist. |
| No. Mine would either bake to death (a/c is always breaking) or freeze (ditto with the heat). There is nothing in between. |
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pets should not be in schools
I'm allergic to pets and would have to have to spend all day long in a room with one in a classroom with a couple dozen kids, someone's bound to be allergic. probably multiple kids |
There's also a chance she is allergic to whatever bedding they are using in its cage. I am extremely allergic to cedar so can't be near animals w/ cedar shavings/bedding in their enclosures, but I'm not actually allergic to the animal. You should see if this is the case, and if so, suggest a different bedding. There are paper based ones, other shavings, etc. |
| If you are in DCUM area it's incredibly bad weed pollen now. My eyes are red and swollen and there are no animals around. |