It is impossible to trust that my concern is being handled if the response to me saying "My kid is having issues with another kid in the classroom, can you keep an eye on that dynamic" is responded to with "I will remind all students to be respectful to each other, anything else?" Look, I'm not even blaming the teacher here. But when every conversation with a teacher is weird in this way where the teacher can't really say anything and you can tell their response is being dictated by a policy that won't allow them to even acknowledge the exististance of other children, it absolutely undermines trust and makes parents feel like the teacher may not know what is happening or that if something bad happens to their kid, they won't even be informed. It's not a good system. It also didn't used to be this way. When I was a kid my mom could call the school and say "hey Laura and Jenny had a falling out and we're hearing about it constantly at home, just letting you know if it's helpful in assigning groups or seats because I don't know if they are behaving any better around each other at school," and the teacher would say "Got it, Laura and Jenny are on the outs -- I noticed some conflict between them but didn't know it was a friendship issue. I'll keep an eye on it and let you know if I see anything concerning with Laura." It's a two minute conversation in which both people acknowledge the situation and are understood by the other. No gossip, nothing inappropriate. And yet we are not allowed to do that anymore for stupid reasons. |
You can tell the teacher that Larla and Jenny are on the outs and the teacher will keep an eye on it. What more do you want? Detailed disciplinary reports? A dossier on the other kid? The teacher isn’t going to give you additional information. And that’s the way it should be. Would you be upset to find out that the teacher disclosed information about your child to another parent? I’m guessing yes. So give the teacher a break. |
Excused or not excused- it’s still an absence counted against my kids so it doesn’t really matter. And yes the school calls but I just don’t pick up. |
The teacher will not even say "I will keep an eye on the dynamic between Larla and Jenny" because the teacher is not allowed to acknowledge that Jenny exists. The teacher may not say Jenny's name or confirm that Larla and Jenny interact. And if the teacher sees something concerning going on between Larla and Jenny (which they may or may not, since they can't confirm for you that the girls even interact, and cannot acknowledge that Jenny exists, there's no way to expect the teacher to pay any attention to them at all), the teacher cannot tell you about it because doing so would require referencing Jenny and the teacher isn't allowed to do that. I would personally not be upset if a teacher disclosed to another teacher that their child was having positive or negative interactions with my kid. I would expect the teacher to keep it professional and stick to neutral facts, not gossip. So "Jenny and Larla are struggling to play effectively together" would be more than fine with me (I would love if teachers spoke this way about kids) but "wow that Larla is a real pill, I think it's because she's a middle child and her parents ignore her." It's nuts that teachers cannot apparently be trusted to understand the difference between the above comments and thus schools will not allow teachers to even mention other kids when talking to parents. It's ridiculous. |
I really don’t understand what you want. You want to be able to tell teachers about student interactions / concerns. You can do so, and then teachers will adjust or accommodate. Do you really need the teacher to say, “I confirm that Jenny exists”? You both know she does, so why put the teacher in the position to break policy? It seems that you really want the teacher to speak openly and candidly to you about other students. That isn’t going to happen because we aren’t supposed to do so. And, quite frankly, that’s a very understandable policy. I’m a teacher and a parent. If I were to tell my own children’s teachers about an issue, I would do so clearly: “Larla is having difficulty with Jenny right now. It seems from something that happened on the playground, as I understand it…” I would expect the teacher to say, “thank you for letting me know” and then I would drop it. The teacher now has the information she needs for seating charts, group work, etc., and therefore I don’t need to grill her for anything else. She can do her job and I can go about my business knowing that I alerted her to the problem. I don’t need her to risk disciplinary action to tell me all about Jenny. What would I do with that info anyway? |
|
How hard is it for parents to understand teachers need a recess break too. They need to go to the bathroom, grab a snack, and prep for next lesson.
This is why an email like this is annoying: Me: Hi, Larla has been having issues with Marla at recess -- Marla keeps pressuring Larla to play a physical game that Larla doesn't want to play and Larla has asked many times for Marla to leaver her out of it but Marla isn't getting the message. Can you check on them and just make sure Marla understands that if Larla says no, she needs to observe that boundary? First, no the teacher is not going to give up recess to go watch your child. Secondly, so what if a student is telling another student to play a game she doesn't want to play? Tell your kid to walk away and there won't be an issue. Instead she keeps hanging around the kid you don't want her around. How can you not see how ridiculous it would be for a teacher to go up to another kid and put all the blame on that kid. It sounds more like kids are playing and your kid doesn't like what they are playing so wants to play something else. Nowhere in your email is your child being teased, hit/pushed, excluded, etc. This is why your emails aren't going anywhere and the teacher finds them annoying. |
Lol no one is asking a teacher to "give up their recess" to watch a child. Recess is a supervised activity at school -- the teachers are required to watch the kids so they don't do something stupid. They might do it on a rotating schedule so teachers get breaks but supervising recess is already a part of most teacher's jobs. Also, if the solution to a solution like the above is to tell the child to walk away, a parent can say that at home but is not present at school and doesn't know if it's happening or not. So the point of emailing a teacher about that would be specifically to get on the same page so both parent and teacher can reinforce the same issue. No one suggested the solution was to go up and "put all the blame on the other kid." The solution is to discourage those two kids from playing together and keep an eye out in case there is in fact teasing, hitting, pushing, or other escalating behavior happening under the radar. This is a normal issue for someone to contact a teacher about. This is exactly the kind of dynamic that often leads to physical altercations so it's great to get it on the teacher's radar early before it escalates. I'd want to know. |
The greater likelihood is that the teacher isn’t at recess with the children on the first place. The teacher is at a meeting, covering for a coworker, or taking the period to eat/visit the bathroom/grade papers. What could the teacher do in this situation other than pass the info on to a recess attendant? |
You sound insane and no this is not normal. While the teachers may have to rotate supervising recess- they aren’t monitoring all the social interactions between kids. You kid’s inability to tell another kid no and walk away is something you can take your kid to therapy for. Nothing you have described warrants teacher intervention at all |
Are you even a teacher? If a situation is bad enough that you recommend a parent take a child to therapy to address it, then it is certainly serious enough to inform a teacher of. No one is suggesting a teacher monitor every social interaction. |
Therapy is suggested because your child should be able to say no they don’t want to play a game and go somewhere else. The other kid isn’t forcing her to participate, nothing bad is happening to her. She is playing a game. If she doesn’t want to she goes and finds something else to do. There is nothing for the teacher to do here. You really think the teacher should interrupt a game when there are no signs of distress or anything out the ordinary happening order to ask your child if they “really” want to be playing? Your kid needs to learn to say no if she doesn’t want to do something and go find something she does want to do- this is an age appropriate social skill and if your kid can’t do this, then perhaps therapy. But again, this is not an issue for the teacher to get involved in. |
Are you a teacher? A child who can't say no even when someone is telling them to do something they don't want to do needs help from the adults in their life, which would include their classroom teacher. PP said it was a "physical game." That would concern me and 100% merit a message to the teacher. And if a kid is in therapy to address a social skill deficit, that is something a teacher should be informed of as well. These are normal things to let a teacher know about. |
+1 An unnecessary email would be something like "can you seat Timmy next to Alex? they are best buddies and we'd love for them to be able to spend more time together during the day!" A playground conflict that is escalating or is resulting in a kid feeling forced to do something is a serious issue and a teacher should be made aware. It doesn't actually matter who supervises recess -- letting the teacher know flags it for the school and it can be shared with whoever is on recess duty. Some schools might also have the school social worker or a counselor observe that class's recess with eyes on the issue to see if it's something that needs intervention. |
Sorry, but a kid feeling “forced” to play tag is not a serious issue and they aren’t actually being forced to do anything. They so play with someone else. The other kid isn’t hypnotizing them. This isn’t even a conflict |
The other child may be threatening them, that would explain why the child isn't leaving to play with someone else. Or maybe the kid who says they feel forced needs to learn some agency. That's why it would be useful to have an adult actually watch the interaction. You can't count on young children to accurately describe situations like that, but I hear the word "force" or a kid saying "I don't want to, but they make me" and it sets off alarm bells for me. Teacher email warranted. |