Anonymous wrote:Waaaay inappropriate. You keep that grief inside until the end of the school day, then you let it all out all night long if you need to. Rinse, repeat.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with OP
Absolutely not with the photos that’s ridiculous.
She could have explained she had a recent loss if she’s like.
I have plenty of empathy no one should lose a child however back to school night with photos omg no.
Anonymous wrote:Agree that you are a jerk. And they are 7th graders, not preschoolers. They can know that info.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waaaay inappropriate. You keep that grief inside until the end of the school day, then you let it all out all night long if you need to. Rinse, repeat.
Agreed. And obviously it bothered OP's kid because kid told OP who posted here. It's TMI and professionally inappropriate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I appreciate your teachers humanity. In time she will she it differently. If anything I’d be comfortable knowing my child’s instructor has the ability to be vulnerable, which to me would equate with compassion and empathy for their students.
+10,000
We need more compassion in middle school, not less of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last night was my 7th grader’s BTS night. Each teacher on the team started with a brief personal introduction (education, family, favorite activity, etc.) with a photo collage on their presentation. Most had pictures of their spouse, kids, activities, college banner, etc. A new teacher to the school had a photo of a newborn in a hospital with oxygen, IV, etc. as the most prominent photo of the collage, and she said her daughter passed away a few years ago but is very important to her, and the students have been very supportive.
I can only imagine the pain of losing a newborn. However, I do not think it should be discussed with students. It is not a recent death, nor did the students know her when she was pregnant. That said, kids often ask teachers “do you have kids”, and it must be a painful topic to answer. It’s possible she brought this up with students as a way to get this topic over with. But the way she said that her daughter is very important to her and the students are supportive was awkward, as if she is still processing the grief and the pain is still raw. And who would turn to brand new class for “support”?
I know there is no normal “timeline” and losing a child isn’t something you just “get over”. However, it has been several years and it seemed very odd and somewhat disturbing.
Thoughts? Would you say anything to the administration about it? Or am I a jerk for thinking this was inappropriate?
Yes. You are being a jerk.
+1
And good lord don't say anything to the administration. You don't need everyone to know what a jerk you are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last night was my 7th grader’s BTS night. Each teacher on the team started with a brief personal introduction (education, family, favorite activity, etc.) with a photo collage on their presentation. Most had pictures of their spouse, kids, activities, college banner, etc. A new teacher to the school had a photo of a newborn in a hospital with oxygen, IV, etc. as the most prominent photo of the collage, and she said her daughter passed away a few years ago but is very important to her, and the students have been very supportive.
I can only imagine the pain of losing a newborn. However, I do not think it should be discussed with students. It is not a recent death, nor did the students know her when she was pregnant. That said, kids often ask teachers “do you have kids”, and it must be a painful topic to answer. It’s possible she brought this up with students as a way to get this topic over with. But the way she said that her daughter is very important to her and the students are supportive was awkward, as if she is still processing the grief and the pain is still raw. And who would turn to brand new class for “support”?
I know there is no normal “timeline” and losing a child isn’t something you just “get over”. However, it has been several years and it seemed very odd and somewhat disturbing.
Thoughts? Would you say anything to the administration about it? Or am I a jerk for thinking this was inappropriate?
Yes. You are being a jerk.