Anonymous wrote:My kids are younger than this so please excuse this naive question:
When I was in middle school and high school, we had 4 minutes of “passing time” between classes. If your next class was on the other side of the school, you needed that time to walk there, but most classes were fairly close together, so that was when I changed pads/tampons. And so did everyone else I know. That was when you were supposed to do things like go to the bathroom, get water, go to your locker, etc. So most teachers were unwilling to have you use the bathroom during class, which made perfect sense to me.
Am I missing something here? What’s changed?
Anonymous wrote:My kids are younger than this so please excuse this naive question:
When I was in middle school and high school, we had 4 minutes of “passing time” between classes. If your next class was on the other side of the school, you needed that time to walk there, but most classes were fairly close together, so that was when I changed pads/tampons. And so did everyone else I know. That was when you were supposed to do things like go to the bathroom, get water, go to your locker, etc. So most teachers were unwilling to have you use the bathroom during class, which made perfect sense to me.
Am I missing something here? What’s changed?
Anonymous wrote:My 10yo got hers at the end of 4th grade. Now in 5th. Both her teachers assured me she could go to the bathroom whenever she asks. She doesn’t know the teachers know, I talked to them privately because she’s so young and I wanted them to be aware. So yes I agree with you that they should be able to use the bathroom whenever. I bet if they knew why they would allow it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is in 6th grade and just got her period for the second time. She is strategic about what classes she asks to go to the bathroom in, so she can change her pad. I don't know every detail, but I assume it's something like wanting to go to a close bathroom, a more private bathroom, a class she won't miss important things in, maximizing the use of one pad (timing), etc.
She came to me and said, Mrs. O (English) says we can't go to the bathroom in her class anymore, and here's why that's hard for me.... then, we talked and came up with a solution for her to go a bit later in the day.
But this strikes me as unfair and making a hard thing harder, for no reason. I feel like MS teachers should never have this rule. What do you think?
Ms. O and I would be having a talk, with the principal if necessary, about how my DD will be using the bathroom if she needs it. END of story.
Anonymous wrote:DD is in 6th grade and just got her period for the second time. She is strategic about what classes she asks to go to the bathroom in, so she can change her pad. I don't know every detail, but I assume it's something like wanting to go to a close bathroom, a more private bathroom, a class she won't miss important things in, maximizing the use of one pad (timing), etc.
She came to me and said, Mrs. O (English) says we can't go to the bathroom in her class anymore, and here's why that's hard for me.... then, we talked and came up with a solution for her to go a bit later in the day.
But this strikes me as unfair and making a hard thing harder, for no reason. I feel like MS teachers should never have this rule. What do you think?