Anonymous wrote:OP here--true to form, all of the snarky DCUM posts. And completely wrong about my not living in DC, but whatever. It's pretty amazing what the snarks come up with in speculating about a poster's background/worldview/life based on 5 sentences.
A school is an institution, is it not? How is it insulting to call a teacher an institutional employee? It wasn't meant to be insulting, more to show that it's more than just the teacher you are inviting in your home, and if they see something they might not like, they will report it to someone.
Thank you to the posters who described their experiences with home visits.
Anonymous wrote:OP,
Do you have other people come into your home?
What is your in bounds school?
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have no experience with home visits, is this for a preschooler? From reading these boards, it seems that one of the purposes is engagement with the student's family to better serve the child and another is confirming residency.
It's for an elementary school (a charter). Can't you "engage" with the family without inviting yourself into someone's house? As for confirmation of residency, they aren't stating that this is the reason for the visit, so coming over under a false pretense to bust people sounds a little fascist to me.
Maybe you should just go ahead and disenroll so a DC resident can get the spot ans stop being so crazy.
+1!
+2. You're busted.
PP here. At our DCPS it's completely voluntary. Only about 30 minutes. The teachers have a checklist of questions like your hopes and dreams for the child, etc.Anonymous wrote:Our charter makes parents sign a document agreeing to home visits to confirm residency.
Anonymous wrote:An "institutional employee"? That's how you think of the person who is responsible for a large part of your child's education and development for the next nine months?
My daughter ADORES her teachers, and I am thrilled. SHE will be thrilled to show them her favorite toys and introduce them to the cat. Whatever they think is appropriate for their pedagogy is fine by me.
You sound like an unspeakable snob, and I hope you don't let on to the teachers that you think them so beneath you. And if you can't control your superiority, I hope they're good enough teachers not to take it out on your kid.
This sounds like a perfectly reasonable option for people who are uncomfortable for whatever reason at home. So long as there are no other classroom students or parents competing for teachers' attention. No sitting in little chairs with lines of other parents waiting outside the classroom door.Anonymous wrote:I am the PP who said we never did them. We didn't do it because they are "institutional employees" or because we don't live IB. We did it because that is what was easiest for our family and our children. The school provided an option, home vitit or in school visit -- we chose in school since I wanted my children to see their classroom prior to going to school.
You and your child deserve some of the teachers' undivided attention.