Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sister who is a teacher out in Calif. is always encouraging me to email the teacher, b/c she is used to having parents contact her all the time. She tells me she even texts them in the middle of the day, gets texts from parents clarifying something in the middle of the day, etc.
In my experience, this feels excessive to me as a parent, so I don't do what she suggests.
However, on days when my DD (age 6, in K) is supposed to go someplace different (to Extended Day instead of the carpool line, to Daisies in stead of the carpool line, etc.) I send an email just with one sentence: "Just a quick reminder: Larla Smith goes to Daisies today." or something like that. The one day I did not do it, teacher sent her to Daisies when she wasn't supposed to go that day, and I was left standing out at carpool line thinking, "Where is my child? Where is my child?" Loony annoying teacher didn't even apologize to me.
How is this the teacher's fault? You didn't remind her and Larla isn't the only snowflake in the class.
Anonymous wrote:My sister who is a teacher out in Calif. is always encouraging me to email the teacher, b/c she is used to having parents contact her all the time. She tells me she even texts them in the middle of the day, gets texts from parents clarifying something in the middle of the day, etc.
In my experience, this feels excessive to me as a parent, so I don't do what she suggests.
However, on days when my DD (age 6, in K) is supposed to go someplace different (to Extended Day instead of the carpool line, to Daisies in stead of the carpool line, etc.) I send an email just with one sentence: "Just a quick reminder: Larla Smith goes to Daisies today." or something like that. The one day I did not do it, teacher sent her to Daisies when she wasn't supposed to go that day, and I was left standing out at carpool line thinking, "Where is my child? Where is my child?" Loony annoying teacher didn't even apologize to me.
Anonymous wrote:So here is the viewpoint from the teacher side:
Parents did or didn't email me. Out of 21 kids last year about 5 parents emailed me. Out of those 2 of them emailed what I felt was excessively. 3 sent sporadic emails.
Anonymous wrote:Reading the post about coaches made me wonder how much is too much to call/email the teacher. I am sure that many would say if you are wondering you are calling too often, but I am wondering and trying not be that mother.
I would say that I emailed about twice with some adjustment concerns my child was having at the beginning of the year (kindergarten, new school). Then maybe 3 or 4 times since then for various questions. Sometimes the emails they send are not clear and I want to do things correctly so I inquire.
I respect my child's teacher tremendously, and I don't want to be a pest, but I also want to show that I care and want to contribute where appropriate.
What do others think?