Lol! |
| Ugly as hell, makes me question their judgment, but officially in the category of "none of my business." |
Yes, it's much better that your high school age DD is "protected" from life by lies, preferably lies orchestrated for her benefit by people in charge. That always breeds thoughtfulness, integrity and intellectual honesty. Or you could, you know, talk with her about how spectacularly difficult parenthood is and how many of the difficulties of parenthood are compounded by doing it alone. |
That's right! b/c as an English teacher, I talked about my pregnancy ad infinitum about HOW I got pregnant and how the pregnancy was progressing However, I was married but couldn't wear my ring. Salem Witch Trial, anyone? |
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I would find it distasteful because I really dislike tattoos, but as long as it is not obscene, racist, criminal, or hateful, I would keep my opinion to myself because it's not my place to comment on what anyone other than my minor children chooses to do with their own body.
If the tattoo were obscene, racist, criminal, or hateful in nature, depending on the grade level the teacher was teaching, I might consider bringing that up to the principal as a concern because I don't necessarily think children should be forcibly exposed to such things for ~8 hours a day by an authority figure in their lives. Maybe it would be possible for the teacher to cover the tattoo during school hours. Or, maybe the school's stance is that this is none of the parents' business and they would not ask such a thing of their teachers. I can respect such a viewpoint, and in the latter case, depending on the tattoo in question and the specific teacher, I would have to give serious consideration to whether or not my child's continued attendance in the teacher's class was an honest reflection of our family values. If my kids say they want a tattoo and one of their reasons is that their teacher has one, I will just tell them (1) whether or not to get a tattoo is an adult decision, (2) whether or not to get a tattoo as an adult is an individual's personal choice and none of our business, and (3) our opinion on the various pros and cons of getting a tattoo. |
Really? My brother works for FedEx and company policy is that tats must be covered while on duty. |
At least 3 teachers at my DD's independent Catholic school have ink and I've seen a fair share on parents of both sexes. Nothing risque. In fact, most have religious significance from what I've seen. |
No one is going to see a teacher's tramp stamp at school because ofdress codes about the midriff. I have seen quite a few on y'all's daughters though. Most be mom's influence. |
I've never thought of this. Wow. But then again, I'd never get a tattoo so this wasn't on my radar. Interesting. |
they are everywhere in the nba, but it is a generationanl thing - otherwise you would've seen jordan, bill russell, bird, magic, isiah inked up - and they weren't. iverson was when everything changed in the nba in terms of tats IMO. |
Oh, you mean a young woman who chose life for her baby rather than abortion? Yeah, I can see how that would be a horrible role model. |
Mother Superior from the Magdalene Laundry is that you? I feel like I just been transported into a 1950's time capsule.
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| OP here again - wow wasn't expecting so many replies. Thanks everyone, your opinions are appreciated! DD read some of the replies and we are in agreement about the poster who suggested covering up for the interviews and then she will see what her new school atmosphere is like before exposing any tattoos. Whether she will get any additional tattoos is still up in the air but she now has something to think about. |
agree! |
| 16 tattoos and never had to cover them!!!! I had some of the best results in every school I taught at and was head of the English Dept. ART and creativity are nothing to hide! |