Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My DC’s social studies teacher does not show her face on the screen during class. She scrolls through various slides and talks, but there is no human face on the screen. When she pauses and asks if students have questions, she puts up a solid black slide. She doesn’t even post a photo of herself somewhere. I thought DC was exaggerating when they told me this, but now that I’m checking into it I see it’s true. I get being camera shy, but how can 11-year-olds be expected to pay attention to a slide show for an hour, with no human face? Apart from attention, how can students feel any kind of connection to their teacher if they don’t see her face?
I feel so upset about this. Is it me or is this abnormal[b]?
I can’t imagine why this would make you so upset.
It makes me upset because it’s creating a bad experience for my child and the other students. It’s alienating to not see a teacher’s face for the entire hour of instruction. There’s no personal connection, there’s no human face (literally) to the class, and the entire experience is mediated through static images. If you say through it for even 30 minutes you’d either fall asleep or go crazy. I have experience teaching and I can’t imagine doing this. Poor kids. I’m generally a big booster of teachers, but this is just terrible.