Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its really none of your business. Teachers are human too and if they have the days, they have the days.
Why do people automatically jump to this? My son's teacher was out for over a month earlier this year without any sort of communication from the school. The initial response was that they couldn't give out her personal info. No one ever asked for her personal info - we were interested in a)who the sub was and b) reassurance that the curriculum was being taught was planned.
If this teacher is out on a regular basis, the least the school could do is let parents know what is happening on those days. Will there be a sub? Will the kids go to a different teacher's class?
OP here. Thank you! That is exactly my sentiments. The school should communicate with the parents of the students in the class. Be proactive. Let parents know their children are still in a learning environment and on task with the curriculum. If there are special circumstances in which children are going to completely different grade levels, be up front and tell the parents. Why would you wait until parents find out and are alarmed??? Especially in a school system who has seen less than stellar results. You would think being more proactive, not less, would be on the forefront of the administration.
Anonymous wrote:Then perhaps you should be more clear in your question "what's going on?". That suggests you're curious as to why the teacher is out. That part is none of your business, as it is likely personal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its really none of your business. Teachers are human too and if they have the days, they have the days.
Why do people automatically jump to this? My son's teacher was out for over a month earlier this year without any sort of communication from the school. The initial response was that they couldn't give out her personal info. No one ever asked for her personal info - we were interested in a)who the sub was and b) reassurance that the curriculum was being taught was planned.
If this teacher is out on a regular basis, the least the school could do is let parents know what is happening on those days. Will there be a sub? Will the kids go to a different teacher's class?
Anonymous wrote:Its really none of your business. Teachers are human too and if they have the days, they have the days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is my business as it is my child. How absurd to say it's none of my business.
My child has been put in an upper grade classroom- doing who knows what- every time the teacher is out. Which by the way the teacher hasn't been there a full week since school started.
So YES it IS my business.
The fact that the school can't provide a sub is your business.
A teacher's medical information is not.
Anonymous wrote:It is my business as it is my child. How absurd to say it's none of my business.
My child has been put in an upper grade classroom- doing who knows what- every time the teacher is out. Which by the way the teacher hasn't been there a full week since school started.
So YES it IS my business.