Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's not the point. The point are they really legally allowed to do that (in which case the law/policy is the problem)? Or are they making it up (in which case the school is the problem) For regular volunteers I can understand the requirement. For a parent coming to school once in a blue moon this is an overreach in my opinion. Why do I have to "learn" to jump through additional hoops with no reasonable rationale for it. Who know what they will come up with next - mentality of just complying with everything that gets thrown at you without any critical thinking is not the way to go.
To be frank, an adult volunteering in the classroom or going on fields trips needs to have a background and fingerprint check. I dont know you.
Once in a blue moon could be 3-4 a year. Thats not once. Second, it should be done when your kid enters the school and then you have 6 years of volunteering so it ends up being multiple times over the course of the year.
I had to pay 68 for a fingerprint and background check to do these things. Just like every adult in the school. If its too big a hump for you oh well.
Anonymous wrote:Lodge a complaint with your boss for not letting you volunteer more in the classroom. It’s mid-April. This is the first time you’ve been to the school during the school day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My understanding is that you aren't required to take the training for an all parent-type event like a band concert, chorus concert or whole class presentation where all the parents come. You're only required to take the training if you're volunteering.
We have grandparents coming to watch a class presentation in the gym today and they certainly haven't taken any training.
Same here. Volunteer— need training. Visitor— don’t. Where does it state that visiting is a one-time thing? That’s not how it works at our APS elementary.
I think the question is whether the parent or visitor plans to be in the classroom or not and whether they will be interacting with children or just standing by a wall like a fly. My understanding is that if an adult is going to be in a classroom with children, their own or not, they should take the training.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My understanding is that you aren't required to take the training for an all parent-type event like a band concert, chorus concert or whole class presentation where all the parents come. You're only required to take the training if you're volunteering.
We have grandparents coming to watch a class presentation in the gym today and they certainly haven't taken any training.
Same here. Volunteer— need training. Visitor— don’t. Where does it state that visiting is a one-time thing? That’s not how it works at our APS elementary.
I think the question is whether the parent or visitor plans to be in the classroom or not and whether they will be interacting with children or just standing by a wall like a fly. My understanding is that if an adult is going to be in a classroom with children, their own or not, they should take the training.
I think OP just needs to reverse the situation and think about another adult entering their child's classroom "one-time", and having that adult interact with their child without you being there to see what they say or do. Granted, most visitors are totally fine but unless you want to restrict all adults from entering the school, just take the training so the rest of us can volunteer/visit peacefully.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My understanding is that you aren't required to take the training for an all parent-type event like a band concert, chorus concert or whole class presentation where all the parents come. You're only required to take the training if you're volunteering.
We have grandparents coming to watch a class presentation in the gym today and they certainly haven't taken any training.
Same here. Volunteer— need training. Visitor— don’t. Where does it state that visiting is a one-time thing? That’s not how it works at our APS elementary.
Anonymous wrote:My understanding is that you aren't required to take the training for an all parent-type event like a band concert, chorus concert or whole class presentation where all the parents come. You're only required to take the training if you're volunteering.
We have grandparents coming to watch a class presentation in the gym today and they certainly haven't taken any training.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, I don't have enough imagination to figure out how I could even begin to perpetrate sexual assault in a classroom with 20 kids and at least 10 or so other adults over an hour event on the school premises...
Its not about you. Its about consistency and covering bases. And having regulations for who needs to go through the process. Stop wanting the rules bent for you. The rules exist, follow them and stop whining.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m confused, were you volunteering or there to attend some all parent type event? I completed the training and I’m in the school regularly, my husband has not but has had no issue going to attend events.
I wasn't volunteering. Attending an all parent type event, but it involved going into your child's classroom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m confused, were you volunteering or there to attend some all parent type event? I completed the training and I’m in the school regularly, my husband has not but has had no issue going to attend events.
I wasn't volunteering. Attending an all parent type event, but it involved going into your child's classroom.
But you had already used the 1x visitor policy. Just follow the darn rules. G-d.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, I don't have enough imagination to figure out how I could even begin to perpetrate sexual assault in a classroom with 20 kids and at least 10 or so other adults over an hour event on the school premises...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m confused, were you volunteering or there to attend some all parent type event? I completed the training and I’m in the school regularly, my husband has not but has had no issue going to attend events.
It was an in-classroom event from the OP which is different IMO from a group gathering like a concert or school-wide event. If you are in the CLASSROOM you need to go through the process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m confused, were you volunteering or there to attend some all parent type event? I completed the training and I’m in the school regularly, my husband has not but has had no issue going to attend events.
I wasn't volunteering. Attending an all parent type event, but it involved going into your child's classroom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lodge a complaint with your boss for not letting you volunteer more in the classroom. It’s mid-April. This is the first time you’ve been to the school during the school day?
I have 2 kids in elementary in APS and have had zero need to go during the day. Unless it's for a concert or a field day, where they don't usually use the same screening because you are signed in as a visitor, not a volunteer. Mine don't like me to chaperone field trips, so I don't.
So you went to field day which was your one use of the visitor process and now you need to use the other process.