Anonymous wrote:
I explained to my child that what the teacher does is unexceptable and unprofessional. You would not expect to get an appointment with a lawyer, doctor, etc. who would be chewing a junk food while listening to you.
What would you do? I have never ever complaint to school about teachers before and don't really want to go above her. She is not bad teacher (not great, just OK).
Anonymous wrote:We are new in this school and my kid's ES teacher constantly eat during the class. It's being going for a while now: teacher would bring a jar of candies and finish it by the end of the day. She eats in the middle of the teaching class. She drinks soda in front of kids as well. I am not against junk food, even thought we never eat it at home. My kid doesn't feel any cravings for what teacher eats (its just not our type of food). What bothers me that it is totally unprofessional to do it. My child keeps bringing it up almost daily, telling me what the teacher was eating today. So, obviously it is bothering my kid to watch adult chewing meal in front of the class. I think teachers get a lunch break and should use it for food consumption. It is probably OK to get occasional snack if you really can't get through between meals or have some medical condition that requires frequent meals.
I explained to my child that what the teacher does is unexceptable and unprofessional. You would not expect to get an appointment with a lawyer, doctor, etc. who would be chewing a junk food while listening to you.
What would you do? I have never ever complaint to school about teachers before and don't really want to go above her. She is not bad teacher (not great, just OK).