Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She may be on the spectrum, be open to other's communication differences, and seek to be patient instead of taking it personally. Why are you letting this get to you?
Because it's one thing after another and she's coming across as rude. She's also my son's teacher. If she wasn't his teacher I could ignore it. He's only 4 years old.
Just take a step back. You sound very wound up. Maybe you come across a certain way you don't intend. Have grace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She may be on the spectrum, be open to other's communication differences and seek to be patient instead of taking it personally. Why are you letting this get to you?
Agree. BUT, telling people to sit or stand, and dismissing their education and experience, is rude and inappropriate. Not a matter of style. boundary setting is important. “Thank you, but I am comfortable like this (hard stare)”. “I appreciate your perspective but feel my experience is relevant here”
Op here. Thank you!!! I am also not the best at confrontation. The education thing came up two times. The second time I didn't mention it but she said the same thing to another teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She may be on the spectrum, be open to other's communication differences and seek to be patient instead of taking it personally. Why are you letting this get to you?
Agree. BUT, telling people to sit or stand, and dismissing their education and experience, is rude and inappropriate. Not a matter of style. boundary setting is important. “Thank you, but I am comfortable like this (hard stare)”. “I appreciate your perspective but feel my experience is relevant here”
Op here. Thank you!!! I am also not the best at confrontation. The education thing came up two times. The second time I didn't mention it but she said the same thing to another teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She may be on the spectrum, be open to other's communication differences and seek to be patient instead of taking it personally. Why are you letting this get to you?
Agree. BUT, telling people to sit or stand, and dismissing their education and experience, is rude and inappropriate. Not a matter of style. boundary setting is important. “Thank you, but I am comfortable like this (hard stare)”. “I appreciate your perspective but feel my experience is relevant here”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She may be on the spectrum, be open to other's communication differences and seek to be patient instead of taking it personally. Why are you letting this get to you?
Agree. BUT, telling people to sit or stand, and dismissing their education and experience, is rude and inappropriate. Not a matter of style. boundary setting is important. “Thank you, but I am comfortable like this (hard stare)”. “I appreciate your perspective but feel my experience is relevant here”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She may be on the spectrum, be open to other's communication differences, and seek to be patient instead of taking it personally. Why are you letting this get to you?
Because it's one thing after another and she's coming across as rude. She's also my son's teacher. If she wasn't his teacher I could ignore it. He's only 4 years old.
Anonymous wrote:She may be on the spectrum, be open to other's communication differences and seek to be patient instead of taking it personally. Why are you letting this get to you?
Anonymous wrote:She may be on the spectrum, be open to other's communication differences, and seek to be patient instead of taking it personally. Why are you letting this get to you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve had coworkers that are challenging to converse with. Sometimes just letting them keep speaking until they run out of air helps…let them see they’ve sucked all the air out of the room. But pay attention to what they say, and then, when they have paused and you’ve given them a minute to feel a little self conscious, address what they’ve said—calmly and slowly.
Op here. Here's another example. She asked someone to take notes during the meeting and then kept pestering them to make sure they were writing everything. The teacher who recently had back surgery didn't want to sit in a chair due to pain but she kept asking her to sit down. Another teacher is pregnant and likes to sit and stand and she also kept asking her to sit down.
Did any of these people simply say, no? Is she their supervisor? Sounds like you all need to establish some boundaries, politely, without resorting to meangirling in private meetings. This person is new—they will adjust to the culture of you set the example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve had coworkers that are challenging to converse with. Sometimes just letting them keep speaking until they run out of air helps…let them see they’ve sucked all the air out of the room. But pay attention to what they say, and then, when they have paused and you’ve given them a minute to feel a little self conscious, address what they’ve said—calmly and slowly.
Op here. Here's another example. She asked someone to take notes during the meeting and then kept pestering them to make sure they were writing everything. The teacher who recently had back surgery didn't want to sit in a chair due to pain but she kept asking her to sit down. Another teacher is pregnant and likes to sit and stand and she also kept asking her to sit down.
Did any of these people simply say, no? Is she their supervisor? Sounds like you all need to establish some boundaries, politely, without resorting to meangirling in private meetings. This person is new—they will adjust to the culture if you set the example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve had coworkers that are challenging to converse with. Sometimes just letting them keep speaking until they run out of air helps…let them see they’ve sucked all the air out of the room. But pay attention to what they say, and then, when they have paused and you’ve given them a minute to feel a little self conscious, address what they’ve said—calmly and slowly.
Op here. Here's another example. She asked someone to take notes during the meeting and then kept pestering them to make sure they were writing everything. The teacher who recently had back surgery didn't want to sit in a chair due to pain but she kept asking her to sit down. Another teacher is pregnant and likes to sit and stand and she also kept asking her to sit down.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve had coworkers that are challenging to converse with. Sometimes just letting them keep speaking until they run out of air helps…let them see they’ve sucked all the air out of the room. But pay attention to what they say, and then, when they have paused and you’ve given them a minute to feel a little self conscious, address what they’ve said—calmly and slowly.