That's kind of what Waldorf school is like sometimes. And then they go inside and practice their cursive. But first, running and talking. |
The teacher is not responsible for your child’s reaction to a very reasonable consequence for CONSTANT disreipuve behavior in the hallway. What your child should heel ashamed of is her behavior. Work on that. Do not focus on criticizing the teacher. Help your child to do better. |
They have had 3/4 of the year to improve. They have not. The teacher is trying to get through the year without quitting. Your kid needs to shut up and behave properly. Do better. |
You’re ridiculous. There are 1000 things wrong with schooling in general, but learning that there is a time and place for volume is something that any child must (should) do. School is certainly the appropriate place to teach it, and you should be reinforcing that at home. Do you think it’s okay to encourage running and screeching in hotel rooms? Do you like your children to use loud and exuberant voices in the hallway when their elderly grandparent is napping in an adjacent room? Do you smile indulgently while your child’s talking wakes a sleeping baby? Or when your child is being “exuberant” in the public library while people are trying to read? If so, YOU are the problem. There is a time and place for everything. Kids can be louder in the cafeteria and at recess and in PE and even in the classroom. But teachers are trying to teach and kids are trying to learn. There is no talking in the hallways. This was the rule at the dawn of time when I was in elementary school, too. Be a damn grown up and raise your kid to have some consideration for others. |
At my kid's school they aren't allowed to talk in the cafeteria at lunchtime and they can't talk to each other during PE or very much in the classroom unless it's to discuss a designated assignment. The only time kids are allowed to talk freely to each other is during recess. So it doesn't surprise me that kids are constantly trying to chat in the hallways or during class -- they get very little time to socialize. Sometimes the problem is the kid won't follow the rules. Sometimes the problem is the rules. |
I was a constant talker and I am the parent of one as well. I support the solution because sometimes there is NOTHING the teacher or kid can do. I think it’s more shaming / damaging for the kid to be scolded daily than to be moved to a place where it’s less disruptive.
For all the pearl clutching parents of angel snowflakes - do you even have an elementary age child? They are loud. Have you been in a school with one? Brick walls, linoleum floors - sound echoes. It’s important to be quiet to avoid disturbing other classes they walk past. This is a reasonable behavior most kids can master part way through kindergarten. MOST. For those that can’t, changing up line order is an effective tool. |
It's walking last in line, it's not being spanked. Get over it. |
It's a line. Its sole purpose is to get the kids from one room to another one. It lasts all of two minutes max. Why is this a big deal? |
Oh dear, I know exactly what kind of parent you are, and my friend you are exhausting!!! |
Traditional schools aren’t really meant for talkative silly kids, because those children are constantly disrupting learning. |
As a teacher I don’t. But there is an expectation that self control is used. Every human being needs self control. I give lots of time to talk and socialize so I expect 5 minutes of non talking during group lessons or walking in the hallway. |
Y’all complain that there’s no discipline anymore, then y’all complain when your kid gets disciplined.
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They are not allowed to talk at lunchtime because they get way too loud and other attempts to lower the volume have failed. My DS tells me that they do a lot of group projects and work at school. The kids can talk during those times. I would bet that they are talking about the project/work as well as whatever else they are interested in. We don’t get many reports home from the Teacher about DS or about his class as a whole which makes me think that they stay on task for the most part and the extra talking is not over the top. DS has a friend in a different class whose parents talk about all the emails home about behavior, talking, and constant correction. The parents used those emails as part of their reason to have their child moved into my kids classroom. They say it is night and day different in terms of behavior. |
As a high school teacher OP becomes the same parent who I call home to all year about their student skipping and not completing work and then in May is losing her mind that he’s failing and I won’t just pass him. Fascinating to see how early the lack of accountability starts. |
So? Teachers have lost pretty much all disciplinary options. I bet she’s told this kid to stop the talking for months. Everyone has their limits. The OP is why teachers are quitting. I had a talker and I told the teachers to be harder in him. He learned through quick enforcement of the rules with appropriate consequences. |