Anonymous wrote:I think it's odd that she refers to a male student as a young MAN, but her female students are GIRLS. sigh. If he's a young adult, at least respect them enough to think of them as young WOMEN.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have teenagers. I think you should try teaching younger kids.
Oh please! You have 2 maybe 3 teenagers not a classroom full of teens trying to show off for each other. Give the OP a break.
Anonymous wrote:I kept my pregnancy under wraps until now - 20 weeks- I don't think I can really hide it anymore- but many of the students were oblivious
I told them yesterday, most seemed shocked and surprised despite my 11 lb gain- a few girls said, "I knew it!"
A young man actually said, "Wait a minute, are you saying you got it in over the weekend?" (!!!!!)
The "tact" of 15 year olds....
What KILLS me though- and why I postponed telling them as long as I thought I possibly could, "That's why you have been so cranky with us."
My students are ill behaved- and when I call them out on it, they accuse me of blowing things out of proportion. I assure you my reaction is appropriate to the behavior - I have been "cranky" with such behavior - as anyone would be- when not pregnant - but now they will blow it off as- "oh she's just hormonal... we didn't actually do anything wrong." It happened with my first pregnancy-
It is so difficult to work with people who don't have fully developed brains- they are sooo irrational
Anonymous wrote:I have teenagers. I think you should try teaching younger kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm sure it can be frustrating working with teens. I have three of them myself, and I counsel college students (who are better, but still often pretty immature). Still, I hope this is just a momentary rant and not indicative of how you feel about your students and your work. As a parent I'd be dismayed to hear a teacher speaking so negatively.
Your kids are probably not in my class-And probably don't speak so inappropriately to their teachers. I am not really so negative, we have lots of good days, but when they are bad, they are VERY, VERY, BAD- and they absolutely won't own up to it- And NOW they will blame my baby- poor thing-
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm sure it can be frustrating working with teens. I have three of them myself, and I counsel college students (who are better, but still often pretty immature). Still, I hope this is just a momentary rant and not indicative of how you feel about your students and your work. As a parent I'd be dismayed to hear a teacher speaking so negatively.