Anonymous wrote:lAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mind if I can address you by your first name. What I do mind is when a parent wants to address me by my first name and have me refer to them as Mr./Ms. I am not the help. I do this with doctors as well. If the doctor uses my first name I use his/hers in return.
+1,000
I have a neighbor who knows that I am a teacher, so she requests that I call her Mrs. X. I do not teach her children, nor will I ever teach her children as long as we live in the neighborhood we do.
Her rationale, which she very openly voiced, is that it is a term of respect since she is a parent of schoolchildren. When I responded that I too am the mother of school-aged children, she replied, "Of course, but you are also just a teacher," while addressing me by my first name.![]()
lAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mind if I can address you by your first name. What I do mind is when a parent wants to address me by my first name and have me refer to them as Mr./Ms. I am not the help. I do this with doctors as well. If the doctor uses my first name I use his/hers in return.
+1,000
Anonymous wrote:I don't mind if I can address you by your first name. What I do mind is when a parent wants to address me by my first name and have me refer to them as Mr./Ms. I am not the help. I do this with doctors as well. If the doctor uses my first name I use his/hers in return.
Anonymous wrote:I never call parents by first names and I don’t like it if they call me by my first name. I’m a professional and I want boundaries in my workplace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those teachers on this thread who insist that parents call you Mr. Or Miss/Mrs./Ms., this is one reason that parents generally have no respect for teachers. I was a Wall Street lawyer and former investment banker who left and became a teacher. I insisted that parents call me by my first name. I was older than most of them and wanted them to view me as a professional who was working with them to help their kids be the best that they could be. I didn't need to create an silly artificial boundary by insisting that the parents address me as Mrs. Smith. In the world of professionals most people wish to be addressed by their first names, even by their subordinates (and parents are definitely not the subordinates of teachers). Students should call teachers by their last name as it is a whole different relationship.
That is a bit hyperbolic.
When I taught, everyone called me by my last name. That was the culture where I taught. Now, when I email teachers, I start with the honorific and follow their lead. I read nothing into it. I certainly don't think this choice is related to the downfall of education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do mind. I have a parent this year who addresses me in emails by my first name. I address him as “Mr.” and I sign as “Mr.”.
This is kinda stuck up. I work in an industry where suits are still the norm and I call my CEO by his first name. (Yes, I started with Mr.)
Anonymous wrote:I do mind. I have a parent this year who addresses me in emails by my first name. I address him as “Mr.” and I sign as “Mr.”.
Anonymous wrote:You address friends by their first names. Teachers are not your friends and should not be treated as such. Keep the relationship professional by addressing him/her as'mr., mrs., miss' etc