Anonymous wrote:Yes I agree.
My kids get on my nerves because they have their dad's mannerisms.
Everything they do remind me of his annoying a$$.
We are not together ...haven't been in 9 years the whole point of being away is to not have to still have his mannerisms in my home. Ugh
Anonymous wrote:I have 175 kids on my roster. I see them every other day. I barely know their names by the 2nd or 3rd week of school when we have back to school night. No way could I match them to parents.
The teacher next door to me though knows all the names by the end of the first week (I don’t know how, she’s a facial recognition genius!) and probably could match parents too.
Anonymous wrote:Yes I agree.
My kids get on my nerves because they have their dad's mannerisms.
Everything they do remind me of his annoying a$$.
We are not together ...haven't been in 9 years the whole point of being away is to not have to still have his mannerisms in my home. Ugh
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ran into my one of my middle schooler’s teachers and had a pleasant interaction about this past school year and the overall experience of teaching.
He remarked that once he gets to know his students at the beginning of a new school year, he can almost 100% correctly identify each student’s parents at back to school night later in the fall. He said it’s amazing how similar in mannerisms and overall vibe kids this age are to their parents.
I find this incredible/hard to believe. What’s your take?
What a load of crap. I find this hard to believe. My kids teacher thought I was another kid's parent because we are both Indian.
Anonymous wrote:I am a retired teacher - 35 years. Most times I could definitely match the kid to the parent. It's not about looks - it's about mannerisms - just the vibe the OP mentioned.
That old saying: the apple doesn't fall far from the tree - tends to be correct. And it's true if the kid is your child by birth, adoption, step parenting. Living together creates this similarity. It is often hard for a parent to see.
Anonymous wrote:I mostly agree. In many ways, our kids are very similar to us. But some of those things aren’t immediately obvious. But, I can believe there are a lot of tiny “tells” that we aren’t aware of that would identify us.
Anonymous wrote:Ran into my one of my middle schooler’s teachers and had a pleasant interaction about this past school year and the overall experience of teaching.
He remarked that once he gets to know his students at the beginning of a new school year, he can almost 100% correctly identify each student’s parents at back to school night later in the fall. He said it’s amazing how similar in mannerisms and overall vibe kids this age are to their parents.
I find this incredible/hard to believe. What’s your take?
Anonymous wrote:It’s a lot easier if there is some racial and socioeconomic diversity at school.
Anonymous wrote:Ran into my one of my middle schooler’s teachers and had a pleasant interaction about this past school year and the overall experience of teaching.
He remarked that once he gets to know his students at the beginning of a new school year, he can almost 100% correctly identify each student’s parents at back to school night later in the fall. He said it’s amazing how similar in mannerisms and overall vibe kids this age are to their parents.
I find this incredible/hard to believe. What’s your take?