Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel that sometimes teachers are way too sensitive about what time parents email them. I am emailing you at 11:00pm because I work full-time, then I have to make my kids dinner, then get them to bed, clean up for a bit, and around 11:00 is the first chance I've had to sit down at my computer. I'm not expecting you to respond right away, this is just my life.
This is because you aren’t emailing at 11:00 and then emailing again at 8 am angry that you did not get a reply. But other parents are. I can guarantee that right now, someone is emailing several teachers about her children’s failing grades and she will steam all weekend because no one has responded. All of that anger will erupt early Monday morning before teachers can read her emails and reply.
Then that teacher should have some grace and patience with the parent and reply at his/her earliest opportunity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel that sometimes teachers are way too sensitive about what time parents email them. I am emailing you at 11:00pm because I work full-time, then I have to make my kids dinner, then get them to bed, clean up for a bit, and around 11:00 is the first chance I've had to sit down at my computer. I'm not expecting you to respond right away, this is just my life.
This is because you aren’t emailing at 11:00 and then emailing again at 8 am angry that you did not get a reply. But other parents are. I can guarantee that right now, someone is emailing several teachers about her children’s failing grades and she will steam all weekend because no one has responded. All of that anger will erupt early Monday morning before teachers can read her emails and reply.
Anonymous wrote:I feel that sometimes teachers are way too sensitive about what time parents email them. I am emailing you at 11:00pm because I work full-time, then I have to make my kids dinner, then get them to bed, clean up for a bit, and around 11:00 is the first chance I've had to sit down at my computer. I'm not expecting you to respond right away, this is just my life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure what you are after here. Schools already have scheduled hours. As a side note, while I am not abusive about it, if I have a scheduled appointment at my doctor's office, I don't appreciate showing up on time only to be asked to wait another 3-4 hours because they habitually overbook to maximize profitability. I'll just leave and find a doctor/dentist/therapist/whatever who doesn't do that. Like the doctor, if you want me to respect your time and consider your needs, you will have to do the same for me. If I email you at midnight, I don't think you are even going to look at it immediately, so don't interpret it as some horrible affront, that was just when I had time to write the email. Respond during whatever time you have to do that and I'll read it when I get time. That's why we have email (faster than a letter, less intrusive than a phone call)
Emailing the teacher at 10 pm is not a problem. Emailing a teacher at 11 pm to ask why haven’t you answered the email I sent an hour ago? That’s a problem.
The teacher should respond the next day my work hours are from XX to XX and I try to respond at other times but if it is outside my work hours you can expect a response within 24 hours of the next business day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure what you are after here. Schools already have scheduled hours. As a side note, while I am not abusive about it, if I have a scheduled appointment at my doctor's office, I don't appreciate showing up on time only to be asked to wait another 3-4 hours because they habitually overbook to maximize profitability. I'll just leave and find a doctor/dentist/therapist/whatever who doesn't do that. Like the doctor, if you want me to respect your time and consider your needs, you will have to do the same for me. If I email you at midnight, I don't think you are even going to look at it immediately, so don't interpret it as some horrible affront, that was just when I had time to write the email. Respond during whatever time you have to do that and I'll read it when I get time. That's why we have email (faster than a letter, less intrusive than a phone call)
Emailing the teacher at 10 pm is not a problem. Emailing a teacher at 11 pm to ask why haven’t you answered the email I sent an hour ago? That’s a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure what you are after here. Schools already have scheduled hours. As a side note, while I am not abusive about it, if I have a scheduled appointment at my doctor's office, I don't appreciate showing up on time only to be asked to wait another 3-4 hours because they habitually overbook to maximize profitability. I'll just leave and find a doctor/dentist/therapist/whatever who doesn't do that. Like the doctor, if you want me to respect your time and consider your needs, you will have to do the same for me. If I email you at midnight, I don't think you are even going to look at it immediately, so don't interpret it as some horrible affront, that was just when I had time to write the email. Respond during whatever time you have to do that and I'll read it when I get time. That's why we have email (faster than a letter, less intrusive than a phone call)
Emailing the teacher at 10 pm is not a problem. Emailing a teacher at 11 pm to ask why haven’t you answered the email I sent an hour ago? That’s a problem.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't attribute this to Amazon, I would attribute it to DL, WFH.
I've WFH for years and sometimes I work during business hours, sometimes at 10pm, weekends, etc. As more and more workers work from home at odd hours, they expect odd hours of service.
Although abusive people are just bad.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure what you are after here. Schools already have scheduled hours. As a side note, while I am not abusive about it, if I have a scheduled appointment at my doctor's office, I don't appreciate showing up on time only to be asked to wait another 3-4 hours because they habitually overbook to maximize profitability. I'll just leave and find a doctor/dentist/therapist/whatever who doesn't do that. Like the doctor, if you want me to respect your time and consider your needs, you will have to do the same for me. If I email you at midnight, I don't think you are even going to look at it immediately, so don't interpret it as some horrible affront, that was just when I had time to write the email. Respond during whatever time you have to do that and I'll read it when I get time. That's why we have email (faster than a letter, less intrusive than a phone call)