Hint - Not NCS, Not STA. |
I’m a teacher too. I can handle parents because I’m organized, fair, timely and transparent. It is infuriating to pay $50k a year for teachers who barely do their jobs. And anyone who thinks students should suffer because teachers need to be protected from a handful of mean mommies probably shouldn’t be teaching. |
| And the teachers will retaliate. The students know this and the teachers know they know it. The kids keep quiet because they know their grades will suffer and most leave the school vowing never to return except for a handful of students who the administration fawns over. |
That sounds like a fun school. Why do so many parents keep making their kids go there? |
Because they did not know before enrolling. Once you are there, it is difficult to move to another school, esp in high school. |
+1 |
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Let me guess, you’re the teacher who teaches 1 or 2 classes and is fawned over because your grandfather/mother has a building on campus named after him. None of my colleagues barely does their job. This sounds like something parents say to each other at cocktail parties. |
I assume it’s sfs and gds and it’s a way to avoid accountability for their decisions and behaviors, as a school and individual teacher. Didn’t have this dynamic in NYC private schools nor where I grew up. It’s too bad, since the same misfires keep repeating and no improvement. Year after year. |
I’d like some lower school and intermediate /middle school student parent perspectives. They have the same policy there- parents out of the picture. My kid got dragged into a Restorative Justice session when witnessing bullying. Parents were never told, or at least we weren’t. A couple months later when my kid was the target of the same bully and not wanting to go to school, she disclosed this mtg that happened a couple months ago. Apparently she only said some benign thing at the mtg, in front of the bully snd whole group since that’s how the guidance counselor rolls, about how everyone should be nice. And then the retaliation game began. First I asked teacher wtf was going on. Silence; everyone is nice here. Then we had to go to guidance counselor, got total shock from her. Lastly I ran into some parents who all had issues with the same bully bullying their kid. Took months to figure that out with zero help, only zero communication, from the lower school. And they had the gall to say, when we requested distance with next years homeroom, you should have told us right away! |
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Honestly, I'm fine with it at our Big 3 school. I like and trust the teachers and administrators. If I didn't, we wouldn't send our kids there.
I've seen too many of my fellow parents behaving poorly, intervening when they shouldn't, treating their kids like fragile flowers, and speaking rudely to school staff even when their child is in the wrong. I'm not going to be there 24/7 when the kids are off to college and adulthood, so they might as well start learning how to get through life. |
I don't know if the teachers will retaliate but I do know the kids "think/fear" they will. Another reason why this all leads to a toxic culture. |
This ^^ |
But that really is their main job. That said - they should learn to not favor certain kids or families and to be a better leader for all students. |
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Sometimes “parents out of the picture schools” happen, because either the teachers and/or administration and/or parents (yes, we can be the problem too) are not skilled in cross-functional collaboration. To me, this is a big issue, because cross-functional collaboration is a critical skill and the lack of it can cause all kinds of life limitations (which are visible in those who lack it).
My kids are at River School in part because the teachers and administration are very strong at teaching interpersonal skills. Even parents who need help are given resources to improve their skills (some are flat out asked take parent training). These skills don’t become important until applying for jobs, and then suddenly you need them to advance in management. I would not sacrifice teaching them in childhood. |