Teacher issues: sarcasm etc

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:“I don’t think children should be responsible for the emotions for adults” Really? The teacher is communicating to her students in words that children understand. Children need to understand that their actions have consequences. Newsflash, OP, people’s actions do have consequences and do affect how how others feel. You are a piece of work. Please, please, please bring this example to your Principal and ask for a new teacher....


The feeling of another adult is not a consequence that should be meaningful to the child. I've taught my children early on to respond to things like that with "I'm not responsible for what you feel." And they aren't.


This is an appalling attitude both to have and to pass onto your children. It is this kind of attitude that leads to individuals being self-absorbed, unempathetic, close-minded, antisocial people who care nothing about their families, neighbors, community, or humankind as a whole.

If your kid says to an adult, "You are fat and ugly," and the adult responds, "Those words hurt my feelings," you actually taught your children to say, "I'm not responsible for what you feel"?

If your kid makes a racist or discriminatory comment, and the adult tells your kid that the comment is not appropriate and is hurtful, you'd encourage your child to reapond, "I'm not responsible for what you feel"?

If your kid is kind towards another person and that person says, "Thank you! That made me feel happy that you showed kindness, " you taught your kid to answer, "I'm not responsible for what you feel"?

If your kid does a good job on something and his or her teacher/coach/religious leader says, "I am so proud of you," you encourage your child to respond,
"I'm not responsible for what you feel"?


OP is making an error in parenting that will impact the kind of person her child becomes. And she is more concerned about a mediocre teacher.


+1


https://cw.liveyourtruth.com/why-parents-need-to-stop-saying-youre-making-me/


Silly. It's a figure of speech to convey that your actions have consequences. Empathy is a life skill.
Anonymous
Children are NOT responsible for adult's feelings. My children are told it's unkind to call names but a child shouldnn't be on tiptoes hoping someone doesn't get their feelings hurt. That's abuse. The original post does not state anything you infer. Get a grip!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:“I don’t think children should be responsible for the emotions for adults” Really? The teacher is communicating to her students in words that children understand. Children need to understand that their actions have consequences. Newsflash, OP, people’s actions do have consequences and do affect how how others feel. You are a piece of work. Please, please, please bring this example to your Principal and ask for a new teacher....


The feeling of another adult is not a consequence that should be meaningful to the child. I've taught my children early on to respond to things like that with "I'm not responsible for what you feel." And they aren't.


This is an appalling attitude both to have and to pass onto your children. It is this kind of attitude that leads to individuals being self-absorbed, unempathetic, close-minded, antisocial people who care nothing about their families, neighbors, community, or humankind as a whole.

If your kid says to an adult, "You are fat and ugly," and the adult responds, "Those words hurt my feelings," you actually taught your children to say, "I'm not responsible for what you feel"?

If your kid makes a racist or discriminatory comment, and the adult tells your kid that the comment is not appropriate and is hurtful, you'd encourage your child to reapond, "I'm not responsible for what you feel"?

If your kid is kind towards another person and that person says, "Thank you! That made me feel happy that you showed kindness, " you taught your kid to answer, "I'm not responsible for what you feel"?

If your kid does a good job on something and his or her teacher/coach/religious leader says, "I am so proud of you," you encourage your child to respond,
"I'm not responsible for what you feel"?


OP is making an error in parenting that will impact the kind of person her child becomes. And she is more concerned about a mediocre teacher.


+1


+2
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Children are NOT responsible for adult's feelings. My children are told it's unkind to call names but a child shouldnn't be on tiptoes hoping someone doesn't get their feelings hurt. That's abuse. The original post does not state anything you infer. Get a grip!

News flash - even children are capable of hurting the feelings of others.
Anonymous
"I don’t think children should be responsible for the emotions for adults" is not saying treat people disrespectfully. It also doesn't say what OP tells her kids. You made a HUGE jump.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Children are NOT responsible for adult's feelings. My children are told it's unkind to call names but a child shouldnn't be on tiptoes hoping someone doesn't get their feelings hurt. That's abuse. The original post does not state anything you infer. Get a grip!

News flash - even children are capable of hurting the feelings of others.


Did a child recently tell you that your wrinkles have wrinkles? What's the deal?
Anonymous
"I'm sad because you didn't follow instructions" is bullish!t. Schoolwork is not about a teacher's feelings; it is about kids learning and being taught how to learn and follow instructions. I mean, this is kindergarten.

"Seems you didn't follow instructions. Let's look at those again. .... Do you have questions about what to do or how to do it?" helps the kid.

The teacher saying, "I'm sad" is immature and inappropriate for this type of situation. The kid didn't call names, the kids didn't follow instructions.





Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:"I don’t think children should be responsible for the emotions for adults" is not saying treat people disrespectfully. It also doesn't say what OP tells her kids. You made a HUGE jump.


You missed the post.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:"I don’t think children should be responsible for the emotions for adults" is not saying treat people disrespectfully. It also doesn't say what OP tells her kids. You made a HUGE jump.


You missed the post.


No, I did not.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:"I don’t think children should be responsible for the emotions for adults" is not saying treat people disrespectfully. It also doesn't say what OP tells her kids. You made a HUGE jump.


You missed the post.


No, I did not.


Clearly you did. The OP said she tells her children to say that they are not responsible for how another feels.
Anonymous
Chiming in to say we don't know the specific reason teacher said "I feel sad." I doubt it was from miscoloring a donkey. When my DS's (5) very effective speech therapist says "look at my face. How do you think I am feeling right now. Why?" it is because DS is at his worst behavior, not because he made a mistake in his work.

It is a technique she has used over a few years and seeing it in Zoom never makes me question it or feel uncomfortable FWIW.
-NP
Anonymous
Was that OP who said that?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:"I don’t think children should be responsible for the emotions for adults" is not saying treat people disrespectfully. It also doesn't say what OP tells her kids. You made a HUGE jump.


You missed the post.


No, I did not.


Clearly you did. The OP said she tells her children to say that they are not responsible for how another feels.


Where?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Chiming in to say we don't know the specific reason teacher said "I feel sad." I doubt it was from miscoloring a donkey. When my DS's (5) very effective speech therapist says "look at my face. How do you think I am feeling right now. Why?" it is because DS is at his worst behavior, not because he made a mistake in his work.

It is a technique she has used over a few years and seeing it in Zoom never makes me question it or feel uncomfortable FWIW.
-NP


OP here. It actually was about coloring a donkey grey. Some children colored the donkey brown or another color. Teacher did not like that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:"I don’t think children should be responsible for the emotions for adults" is not saying treat people disrespectfully. It also doesn't say what OP tells her kids. You made a HUGE jump.


You missed the post.


No, I did not.


Clearly you did. The OP said she tells her children to say that they are not responsible for how another feels.


Where?


The feeling of another adult is not a consequence that should be meaningful to the child. I've taught my children early on to respond to things like that with "I'm not responsible for what you feel." And they aren't.


It seems that this is the OP because several PPs attributed it to the OP and no one has corrected it. Even if it isn't the OP, this post is still an example of poor parenting.
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