Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the parents are that annoying to you, get another job!
Oh come on, teachers don't have to be the only profession that's not allowed to gripe about work annoyances in order to do a good job.
Anonymous wrote:If the parents are that annoying to you, get another job!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12. Parents who come to lunch and spoon/fork feed their 6 year olds.
13. My child lost their library book somewhere in the school. Can you find it?
14. I didn't have time to brush my child's hair. Parent then hands you a comb in carpool line.
C'mon. 12 and 14 didn't really happen, did they?
They sure did. #14 was a number of years ago. #12 was last year.
As the parent of a child with a significant eating disorder, I would assume there was a good, and private, reason for a parent coming to school at lunch and who help with feeding. As for teachers who poke fun about it publicly, I'm not sure I see a good reason for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12. Parents who come to lunch and spoon/fork feed their 6 year olds.
13. My child lost their library book somewhere in the school. Can you find it?
14. I didn't have time to brush my child's hair. Parent then hands you a comb in carpool line.
C'mon. 12 and 14 didn't really happen, did they?
They sure did. #14 was a number of years ago. #12 was last year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12. Parents who come to lunch and spoon/fork feed their 6 year olds.
13. My child lost their library book somewhere in the school. Can you find it?
14. I didn't have time to brush my child's hair. Parent then hands you a comb in carpool line.
C'mon. 12 and 14 didn't really happen, did they?
Anonymous wrote:12. Parents who come to lunch and spoon/fork feed their 6 year olds.
13. My child lost their library book somewhere in the school. Can you find it?
14. I didn't have time to brush my child's hair. Parent then hands you a comb in carpool line.
Anonymous wrote:Please stop restraining yourself. It is so therapeutic
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:7. "My 2nd grader is fluent in French. Will she be stuck in the same class as the other 2nd graders for French or can she go to the high school French class?"
See, this is such tea party anti-intellectualism, and such a stupid complaint (same with the other two similar complaints - "my kid is advanced in [x];" "my kid is smart".
If a child is indeed proficient in a language (or other subject, frankly) offered by the school - why on earth is it obnoxious to ask if they can attend a class where they'll actually learn something? Especially in a city like DC which is full of smart parents & kids, full of kids who speak or begin to speak another language at home, etc.