Ha. I still think about the parent teacher conference in 5th grade where the teacher told us she loved and trusted our son so much she'd even be willing to lend him her car ![]() |
My favorite kids are authentic, curious, and kind. I never worry that they will do amazing things in life, even if they struggle in my classes. |
OMG. This post is for teachers to talk about THEIR favorite students. Not you blathering on about how great your son is. |
+1,000,000. PP has a humongous head. |
Great. So those parents with little money, little work flexibility, and little to no time to volunteer are punished. Lower income families, single parents, double earners, etc... might struggle to volunteer that much. I find amazing you penalized this type of families. |
PP here. Sorry you took the comment that way. It would be amazing if I penalized single-parent families. Our school has lots of opportunities on weekends and evenings to volunteer, and some families are asked to do fewer hours because of their circumstances, but extra effort is appreciated. Thought that appreciation was worth mentioning, and I think children should appreciate the things their parents do on their behalf, from writing a tuition check to keeping score at their weekend basketball game. |
I bet you don’t even have kids. You don’t know what is to raise a kid alone and work full time. |
Glad my kids didn’t have you as a teacher. This is very closed minded. Some kids, like mine, are introverts who are actually lovely, funny, people, but who don’t warm easily. Their best teachers were those who took the time and cared enough to get to know them, and make them feel comfortable in their classes. Their worst were like you - teachers who assumed they were “cold and grumpy” for no apparent reason, and who made it clear who the favorite personalities were in class. Thanks for making it harder for kids like mine. |
Rich, White, Christian and Republican. |