Anonymous wrote:I do not understand hating on the teachers. My sister is a severely dyslexic, but very enthusiastic English teacher. When I see threads like this, making fun of errors in teacher communications, I think it is just petty, and again competitive. I guess it's what some people need to feel good about themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I am certainly not making fun of the teacher, nor shame her, nor am I ready to march into the principle's office. But a foreign language teacher, whose job is to teach my DC a foreign language, and who grades my DC on the errors DC makes, and who consistently makes egregious mistakes (which are clearly not just typos) is a concern. What I am asking is, is there a gentle way to point this out to her, to printout that these do not go unnoticed, and to ask her to do a better job proofreading/ask a colleague to proofread before handing her texts to the students? I am also obviously worried that if I do bring it up to her she ale take her anger (at me) on my DS.
Don't you mean march into the princiPAL's office? BOOM!
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I am certainly not making fun of the teacher, nor shame her, nor am I ready to march into the principle's office. But a foreign language teacher, whose job is to teach my DC a foreign language, and who grades my DC on the errors DC makes, and who consistently makes egregious mistakes (which are clearly not just typos) is a concern. What I am asking is, is there a gentle way to point this out to her, to printout that these do not go unnoticed, and to ask her to do a better job proofreading/ask a colleague to proofread before handing her texts to the students? I am also obviously worried that if I do bring it up to her she ale take her anger (at me) on my DS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not understand hating on the teachers. My sister is a severely dyslexic, but very enthusiastic English teacher. When I see threads like this, making fun of errors in teacher communications, I think it is just petty, and again competitive. I guess it's what some people need to feel good about themselves.
I don't see anyone 'making fun' of teachers' errors. It's a serious problem if a teacher makes spelling and grammatical errors.
Anonymous wrote:I do not understand hating on the teachers. My sister is a severely dyslexic, but very enthusiastic English teacher. When I see threads like this, making fun of errors in teacher communications, I think it is just petty, and again competitive. I guess it's what some people need to feel good about themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not understand hating on the teachers. My sister is a severely dyslexic, but very enthusiastic English teacher. When I see threads like this, making fun of errors in teacher communications, I think it is just petty, and again competitive. I guess it's what some people need to feel good about themselves.
Teachers are supposed to teach the next generation. In their job, spelling and accuracy count. If that's not something that a teacher is good at they need to work on that skill. Would it be acceptable to you if your accountant consistently made mathematical errors?
or your surgeon to make surgery errors?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not understand hating on the teachers. My sister is a severely dyslexic, but very enthusiastic English teacher. When I see threads like this, making fun of errors in teacher communications, I think it is just petty, and again competitive. I guess it's what some people need to feel good about themselves.
Teachers are supposed to teach the next generation. In their job, spelling and accuracy count. If that's not something that a teacher is good at they need to work on that skill. Would it be acceptable to you if your accountant consistently made mathematical errors?
Anonymous wrote:I do not understand hating on the teachers. My sister is a severely dyslexic, but very enthusiastic English teacher. When I see threads like this, making fun of errors in teacher communications, I think it is just petty, and again competitive. I guess it's what some people need to feel good about themselves.