Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. I'm really sorry that happened. She should know to say that it's an emergency if it is, though, especially if the schools policy is twice a day. I am a middle school teacher so it's a bit different, and sometimes students claim "emergency" when it's not. A teacher may say not right now and not know it's an emergency. I agree with the walking out if it's a true emergency.
I will never forget when I was in second grade and a classmate was denied going to the bathroom. She was wearing a dress and stockings, made a big triangle by spreading her legs and just peed all over the floor.
No. It's not the schools policy to have two bathroom breaks a day, and even if it was, that's bs. A good teacher would stand up for the students right to use the toilet when they need to. What's so important that kids should have to "hold it in" until class bathroom break? Nothing is. How about you only get two bathroom breaks a day? Wouldn't like that, would you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And my daughter peed her pants. She asked to use the bathroom and wasn't allowed. She tried holding it but wound up peeing her pants. Why do teachers do this? I called the school to make sure my daughter told the truth, spoke to the teacher and was told that there are two bathroom breaks per day and if they need to go when it's not a bathroom break then they must declare that it's an emergency. Unbelievable.
Ugh I am so sorry. Teacher's like this really upset. Anecdotal but I had a teacher my junior year that absolutely would not let anyone use they restroom, not even when girls were on that time of the month. I had him after lunch period and one person peed themselves and ran out crying and several people took the detention for just getting up and heading to the bathroom.
Its a nasty control issue over a bodily function and doing it to young children is just rotten.
That's it. The teacher my daughter has is very controlling. It's obvious by other classroom policies. Unfortunately, you can't control another persons need to use the toilet. Students have been punished for passing gas, burping and similar bodily functions if what my daughter tells me is true.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And my daughter peed her pants. She asked to use the bathroom and wasn't allowed. She tried holding it but wound up peeing her pants. Why do teachers do this? I called the school to make sure my daughter told the truth, spoke to the teacher and was told that there are two bathroom breaks per day and if they need to go when it's not a bathroom break then they must declare that it's an emergency. Unbelievable.
Ugh I am so sorry. Teacher's like this really upset. Anecdotal but I had a teacher my junior year that absolutely would not let anyone use they restroom, not even when girls were on that time of the month. I had him after lunch period and one person peed themselves and ran out crying and several people took the detention for just getting up and heading to the bathroom.
Its a nasty control issue over a bodily function and doing it to young children is just rotten.
That's it. The teacher my daughter has is very controlling. It's obvious by other classroom policies. Unfortunately, you can't control another persons need to use the toilet. Students have been punished for passing gas, burping and similar bodily functions if what my daughter tells me is true.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. I'm really sorry that happened. She should know to say that it's an emergency if it is, though, especially if the schools policy is twice a day. I am a middle school teacher so it's a bit different, and sometimes students claim "emergency" when it's not. A teacher may say not right now and not know it's an emergency. I agree with the walking out if it's a true emergency.
I will never forget when I was in second grade and a classmate was denied going to the bathroom. She was wearing a dress and stockings, made a big triangle by spreading her legs and just peed all over the floor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And my daughter peed her pants. She asked to use the bathroom and wasn't allowed. She tried holding it but wound up peeing her pants. Why do teachers do this? I called the school to make sure my daughter told the truth, spoke to the teacher and was told that there are two bathroom breaks per day and if they need to go when it's not a bathroom break then they must declare that it's an emergency. Unbelievable.
Ugh I am so sorry. Teacher's like this really upset. Anecdotal but I had a teacher my junior year that absolutely would not let anyone use they restroom, not even when girls were on that time of the month. I had him after lunch period and one person peed themselves and ran out crying and several people took the detention for just getting up and heading to the bathroom.
Its a nasty control issue over a bodily function and doing it to young children is just rotten.
Anonymous wrote:And my daughter peed her pants. She asked to use the bathroom and wasn't allowed. She tried holding it but wound up peeing her pants. Why do teachers do this? I called the school to make sure my daughter told the truth, spoke to the teacher and was told that there are two bathroom breaks per day and if they need to go when it's not a bathroom break then they must declare that it's an emergency. Unbelievable.
Anonymous wrote:That makes me so mad! My DD is sometimes scared to tell the teacher she has use the bathroom, so she holds it. She's also peed her pants a couple times (kindergartener)
Anonymous wrote:And my daughter peed her pants. She asked to use the bathroom and wasn't allowed. She tried holding it but wound up peeing her pants. Why do teachers do this? I called the school to make sure my daughter told the truth, spoke to the teacher and was told that there are two bathroom breaks per day and if they need to go when it's not a bathroom break then they must declare that it's an emergency. Unbelievable.