Anonymous wrote:It's horrible, not that infrequent, and should not be tolerated.
My child had an IEP for years, and we came to know many children with behavioral and physical disabilities in his school. None of them behaved like this (some did have multiple tantrums and hit paraeducators while they were being led out of the room, but no cursing at the teacher).
I really think there should be no excuse. Most children with special needs can be taught to stop doing this.
Anonymous wrote:This type of behavior should never be tolerated if American schools are to retain teachers. Other cultures would never tolerate this disrespect. Honestly it’s the overly permissive liberal culture.
Anonymous wrote:Straight to the union and do what? I am a teacher and this is common, along side throwing stuff at us. It’s part of the job.
Anonymous wrote:My MS child came home with a story about a student calling a teacher an a-hole and telling her to shut up in class today in front of everyone. This student isn't from the community and comes on a special program. It took 15 minutes for security to arrive, and the boy has been talking to the teacher like this all week. Kids said the teacher was crying. If the kid is back in class on Monday, I hope the teacher goes straight to the union.
Anonymous wrote:You need to domain as a parent. They don't care about the teacher. They will probably even blame her.
Anonymous wrote:My MS child came home with a story about a student calling a teacher an a-hole and telling her to shut up in class today in front of everyone. This student isn't from the community and comes on a special program. It took 15 minutes for security to arrive, and the boy has been talking to the teacher like this all week. Kids said the teacher was crying. If the kid is back in class on Monday, I hope the teacher goes straight to the union.