+1 |
Try teaching for just one day. Just ONE DAY. You know how it’s difficult dealing with 2-3 kids at home, tracking all of their work? Consider how challenging it is to track 150 students at once. The teacher did all that’s expected. Period. There’s no need for public humiliation, etc. The idea that some posters here need the teacher to SUFFER and SUFFER LONG for something that was so easily reconciled is really discouraging. How are we going to keep people willing to teach if one ridiculously minor misstep means they must endure this amount of nonsense from a vindictive parent? (And again… does the student even care?) |
You think apologizing when you’re wrong is “public humiliation” and that being expected to do so is “SUFFER(ing)”? That’s…really dramatic. |
Are you the same poster who said teachers don’t fear accountability? Wherever the teacher goes after leaving teaching, they will be expected to apologize (at minimum) when they don’t follow policies and make foolish mistakes (foolish because the facts were so easily verified). |
No, the PAGES of discussion here is the public humiliation, as well as the multiple insults written by the mother. For all we know, the teacher did apologize. Heck, she clearly was willing to do twice as much work to help the child out. You know what I did when my doctor’s office made a records mistake recently? I sent a message to my doctor, who promptly replied and said she would fix it. She didn’t apologize, and I’m not sure why I’d need one. I just wanted the paperwork fixed, and that was a bigger deal than this because it was medical records. I didn’t come here to insult her. I moved on. |
I’m a high school teacher and I agree. I RARELY remember from day to day who was absent last class. Probably she passed the quiz out, the kid took it and then said they were out, and she said oh ok just do a retake. Alternately, maybe she had the kid take it just to see how they’d do it on it because sometimes it happens that the kid does just fine on the quiz and you don’t even need to bother with a retake. It is so far from a big deal that it’s crazy how much of a fuss this mom is making of it. Zero harm was done here. |
Another high school teacher here and I agree. I’m very good at record keeping, but having 30 people needing me simultaneously means that I often can’t make it back to my desk to see my notes. |
This is a remarkable take. No one knows who the teacher is which is the basic definition of “public humiliation”. You need to reevaluate how much parents taking their frustration to the internet actually harms anyone. Your doctor didn’t make the mistake, her office did. If your doctor had ordered a lab for you that you already had, and you told her you’d already has it, then after they drew your blood she said oh right you had that already, she would apologize if she was a good doctor (unless she’s committing insurance fraud). And there’s no “twice as much work” to help the student out— it’s twice as much work because she didn’t follow school policy. |
It was the doctor’s mistake. And she corrected it. And the world kept spinning. I didn’t need to come online and complain. I’m a reasonable person and I respect others. And yes, she can still be a good doctor without apologizing. The parent who started this isn’t being reasonable at all. It’s over. The student has moved on. The teacher corrected the issue and moved on. The parent is online calling the teacher a “jerk” and other teachers “idiots”. And the rest of us have to read it, knowing full well what that poor teacher must be dealing with. |
Mom here. I didn’t call other teachers “idiots” for being teachers. I called other posters here idiots who kept saying there “must be more to the story because I didn’t share how many days my child was out (when in fact I did and they just didn’t bother to read the thread). Those are the idiots. But carry on. |
And I think a teacher who insists a kid takes a quiz despite explanations about being sick is a jerk. |
Your explanation doesn’t make you look any better. I’m never impressed by people who resort to childish insults. And, I guess I’m one of the “idiots” because I would love to hear the teacher’s side of this. Heck, I’d like to hear your child’s side of this. I suspect both stories are rather benign compared to your outrage over a minor quiz retake. |
Regardless of whether the teacher is a jerk (sounds like they may be but leaving it aside) we can all agree the teacher was entirely in violation of policy. |
One post ago it was her office and a records mistake. Now it’s her mistake. If it was her mistake she should apologize. Complaining about a teacher not following countywide policy isn’t unreasonable. Claiming that the complaint is “public humiliation” or “SUFFER AND SUFFER LONG” is an incredible level of drama. Follow policy. Listen to students. Apologize when you’re wrong. Which of the above is it you think is too much to ask of our heroic teachers? |
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The mom was not there. According to mom, the kid told the teacher ahead of time. Perhaps the quiz covered earlier information and the teacher said to go ahead and take the quiz, knowing that she could give a retake later because of the policy.
I guess the alternative could have been to tell the kid to study while the rest of the kids took the test? This is a nothingburger, but shows just how ridiculous helicopter parenting has become. Sounds like the teacher and kid handled it. I just don't see a problem. |