Anonymous wrote:rAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And half the time the teacher “forgets” to record. We were having issues with a teacher and he “forgot” often and selectively.
I legitimately forget all the time. It’s easy when you’re focused on teaching and not one kid, parent, anyone has ever once asked to see one. I remember probably 1/5 of the time at this point in the year. You don’t normally have a recording of what happens in the classroom.
What happens if a kid uploads part of the lesson on YouTube?
I literally can’t envision a student ever doing that. But if they do I guess it would be up to the school to get it removed since it would violate other kids’ privacy.
It happen In PWCS and the teacher got resigned or was fired for protesting
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s okay, I just caught the teacher live instead. Can’t stop parents from watching the class.
I'm confused. Is this OP? Are you having concerns about something the teacher is doing?
Or is OP just trying to get a kid caught up on a missed lesson?
No, I'm the PP and not the OP. I was responding to a poster claiming parents can't monitor teachers. We had a teacher literally showing up 15 minutes late to class, repeatedly, with no lessons planning and googling the material right in front of the kids and not being able to explain the material well at all. I didn't believe my child at first so I watched a few classes. It was horrifying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s okay, I just caught the teacher live instead. Can’t stop parents from watching the class.
I'm confused. Is this OP? Are you having concerns about something the teacher is doing?
Or is OP just trying to get a kid caught up on a missed lesson?
Anonymous wrote:rAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And half the time the teacher “forgets” to record. We were having issues with a teacher and he “forgot” often and selectively.
I legitimately forget all the time. It’s easy when you’re focused on teaching and not one kid, parent, anyone has ever once asked to see one. I remember probably 1/5 of the time at this point in the year. You don’t normally have a recording of what happens in the classroom.
What happens if a kid uploads part of the lesson on YouTube?
I literally can’t envision a student ever doing that. But if they do I guess it would be up to the school to get it removed since it would violate other kids’ privacy.
It happen In PWCS and the teacher got resigned or was fired for protesting
Anonymous wrote:It’s okay, I just caught the teacher live instead. Can’t stop parents from watching the class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And half the time the teacher “forgets” to record. We were having issues with a teacher and he “forgot” often and selectively.
You see to think you are allowed to monitor a teacher. You are not. You forget yourself. You’re just a parent.
rAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And half the time the teacher “forgets” to record. We were having issues with a teacher and he “forgot” often and selectively.
I legitimately forget all the time. It’s easy when you’re focused on teaching and not one kid, parent, anyone has ever once asked to see one. I remember probably 1/5 of the time at this point in the year. You don’t normally have a recording of what happens in the classroom.
What happens if a kid uploads part of the lesson on YouTube?
I literally can’t envision a student ever doing that. But if they do I guess it would be up to the school to get it removed since it would violate other kids’ privacy.
Anonymous wrote:And half the time the teacher “forgets” to record. We were having issues with a teacher and he “forgot” often and selectively.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And half the time the teacher “forgets” to record. We were having issues with a teacher and he “forgot” often and selectively.
I legitimately forget all the time. It’s easy when you’re focused on teaching and not one kid, parent, anyone has ever once asked to see one. I remember probably 1/5 of the time at this point in the year. You don’t normally have a recording of what happens in the classroom.
What happens if a kid uploads part of the lesson on YouTube?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And half the time the teacher “forgets” to record. We were having issues with a teacher and he “forgot” often and selectively.
I legitimately forget all the time. It’s easy when you’re focused on teaching and not one kid, parent, anyone has ever once asked to see one. I remember probably 1/5 of the time at this point in the year. You don’t normally have a recording of what happens in the classroom.
Anonymous wrote:And half the time the teacher “forgets” to record. We were having issues with a teacher and he “forgot” often and selectively.
Anonymous wrote:You can’t. You have to email the teacher and ask them to send you recordings for specific classes and dates. The files are huge, there’s nowhere to just post them, and they aren’t public since they send to the teacher email after the class