Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This HS new teacher is unqualified for the job he took this year. All he does is assigning heavy homework and sitting at his messy desk. He’s the only teacher who hasn’t taught anything since the beginning of the school year. During the 10 minute presentation at BTSN, he just talked about himself, made jokes, and barely explained the grading.
Any ideas on how to proceed?
Send your kid to public school where at least the teachers are qualified and licensed?
This is the thing about private schools. There are no standards for the teachers.
Hilarious!
Kids in public schools can’t read at grade level, nor can they do math at grade level.
And these kids are being taught by “qualified” and “licensed” teachers.
Doesn’t seem like these qualifications are having much effect, does it?
I doubt if things could be any worse with more “unqualified” ones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This HS new teacher is unqualified for the job he took this year. All he does is assigning heavy homework and sitting at his messy desk. He’s the only teacher who hasn’t taught anything since the beginning of the school year. During the 10 minute presentation at BTSN, he just talked about himself, made jokes, and barely explained the grading.
Any ideas on how to proceed?
Send your kid to public school where at least the teachers are qualified and licensed?
This is the thing about private schools. There are no standards for the teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This HS new teacher is unqualified for the job he took this year. All he does is assigning heavy homework and sitting at his messy desk. He’s the only teacher who hasn’t taught anything since the beginning of the school year. During the 10 minute presentation at BTSN, he just talked about himself, made jokes, and barely explained the grading.
Any ideas on how to proceed?
Send your kid to public school where at least the teachers are qualified and licensed?
This is the thing about private schools. There are no standards for the teachers.
This exactly
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On what basis do you think the teacher is unqualified? Surely the hiring process at the school would have revealed something about the teacher’s training and experience. Your school may also have been having difficulty hiring.Perhaps this teacher isn’t the best, but he is the one they were able to get.
Remember that curricula are chosen to teach the greatest number of children well most of the time. Remember also that individual teachers, especially new hires, do not choose the curriculum, an expensive multi-year investment. The success of a new teacher also depends on how well a school keeps its curriculum map updated and how well teachers within a department are able to plan and coordinate together (something which depends on the schedule that admins create for faculty). A lot of teachers who appear to be doing poorly are just in crummy settings. I saw it myself inside a “Big 5” school.
As an educator I’m also quite wary of the phrase “doesn’t teach.” Anything new or different from other teachers often draws this criticism. Students often level it when teachers appropriately try to make them more responsible for good work habits. Also, there’s a big difference between a “bad teacher” and one who’s not the best fit for a particular student.
It’s early in the year. Focus on teaching your kid good study skills and being responsible for him/herself. Start a dialog with the teacher, but accept that you may have different points of view.
Many teachers have very little control over their curriculum (others much more, my preference). It's possible this teacher was mandated to give out assignments and quizzes for "self-directed learning" to build independence and resilience in students and all that.
Or maybe he's just lazy as you suspect.
I would meet with the teacher first to get his take on your concerns, and then the dean if necessary, if the first meeting doesn't work.
Find out what's going on before drawing conclusions. And remember that students often caricature teachers when telling their parents about them. Get the whole story.
Anonymous wrote:On what basis do you think the teacher is unqualified? Surely the hiring process at the school would have revealed something about the teacher’s training and experience. Your school may also have been having difficulty hiring.Perhaps this teacher isn’t the best, but he is the one they were able to get.
Remember that curricula are chosen to teach the greatest number of children well most of the time. Remember also that individual teachers, especially new hires, do not choose the curriculum, an expensive multi-year investment. The success of a new teacher also depends on how well a school keeps its curriculum map updated and how well teachers within a department are able to plan and coordinate together (something which depends on the schedule that admins create for faculty). A lot of teachers who appear to be doing poorly are just in crummy settings. I saw it myself inside a “Big 5” school.
As an educator I’m also quite wary of the phrase “doesn’t teach.” Anything new or different from other teachers often draws this criticism. Students often level it when teachers appropriately try to make them more responsible for good work habits. Also, there’s a big difference between a “bad teacher” and one who’s not the best fit for a particular student.
It’s early in the year. Focus on teaching your kid good study skills and being responsible for him/herself. Start a dialog with the teacher, but accept that you may have different points of view.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This HS new teacher is unqualified for the job he took this year. All he does is assigning heavy homework and sitting at his messy desk. He’s the only teacher who hasn’t taught anything since the beginning of the school year. During the 10 minute presentation at BTSN, he just talked about himself, made jokes, and barely explained the grading.
Any ideas on how to proceed?
Send your kid to public school where at least the teachers are qualified and licensed?
This is the thing about private schools. There are no standards for the teachers.
Anonymous wrote:This HS new teacher is unqualified for the job he took this year. All he does is assigning heavy homework and sitting at his messy desk. He’s the only teacher who hasn’t taught anything since the beginning of the school year. During the 10 minute presentation at BTSN, he just talked about himself, made jokes, and barely explained the grading.
Any ideas on how to proceed?
Anonymous wrote:This HS new teacher is unqualified for the job he took this year. All he does is assigning heavy homework and sitting at his messy desk. He’s the only teacher who hasn’t taught anything since the beginning of the school year. During the 10 minute presentation at BTSN, he just talked about himself, made jokes, and barely explained the grading.
Any ideas on how to proceed?