Anonymous wrote:I taught in a rural area in the middle of the country. One of my students was very bright, had excellent ACT scores, had great leadership skills and extracurriculars, and was very diligent with her schoolwork. We talked college one day (she was a junior) and I suggested she look at top tier schools, maybe one of the Ivies if any appealed to her. I thought she had a good chance on paper especially since she was coming from a school and area that was essentially not represented at all in any of the schools we were talking about.
Her parents were FURIOUS with me.
Anonymous wrote:And the PP sounds like an arrogant defensive dope to me. Professional Educators don't think of their students or their parents as crazy. No my teacher friend, they think of them as people with whom they work and interact as part of their profession. Apparently you believe anyone who may be outside of your cozy little clique is crazy.
But then again this exemplifies a problem with so many teachers today. They can't even begin to describe the people with whom they interact good or bad. They describe people as crazy, insane, outrageous, annoying, helicopters, or PITAs etc. Those are just insults not descriptions of the things that have upset your precious little fiefdoms.
You know what - you really are not anything special to me until you prove yourselves as such. Some of you are good and an awful lot of you are pure dullards. There are some great teachers who are truly altruistic and no matter how good they are they always strive to make their next lesson perfect. They don't hang out in the teachers lounge, they don't gossip because they don't want to be contaminated by the groupthink of the dullard teachers clique.
If you are a teacher PP, where do you think you fall? Are one one of the few truly altruistic teachers who burns the midnight oil grading and preparing future lessons or are you a former Teacher's Pet yourself who was mediocre college student who couldn't wait to get back in the classroom were you be the smarty-pants kid again.
Give the choice between being a parent who has lived a life rich with knowledge and experiences and that of a wet behind the ears kid who beats the students out the door at the end of the day.... Well, I admit it coming from you and your limited vocabulary and range of knowledge, I'll take your name for "Crazy" as a compliment.
Go back to school, learn something, expand your vocabulary, stop calling people names, take your school's stated goals seriously, stop gossiping about your students and their families.
Learn to use your words.
You're probably are not a bad person, but you've probably never stopped to self-examine the real reasons you chose to be a teacher. Do it now - do you want to be one of the greats - because if you do, it takes genuine altruism. At the moment you are acting like a teacher's lounge slug.
The choice is yours.
Anonymous wrote:And the PP sounds like an arrogant defensive dope to me. Professional Educators don't think of their students or their parents as crazy. No my teacher friend, they think of them as people with whom they work and interact as part of their profession. Apparently you believe anyone who may be outside of your cozy little clique is crazy.
But then again this exemplifies a problem with so many teachers today. They can't even begin to describe the people with whom they interact good or bad. They describe people as crazy, insane, outrageous, annoying, helicopters, or PITAs etc. Those are just insults not descriptions of the things that have upset your precious little fiefdoms.
You know what - you really are not anything special to me until you prove yourselves as such. Some of you are good and an awful lot of you are pure dullards. There are some great teachers who are truly altruistic and no matter how good they are they always strive to make their next lesson perfect. They don't hang out in the teachers lounge, they don't gossip because they don't want to be contaminated by the groupthink of the dullard teachers clique.
If you are a teacher PP, where do you think you fall? Are one one of the few truly altruistic teachers who burns the midnight oil grading and preparing future lessons or are you a former Teacher's Pet yourself who was mediocre college student who couldn't wait to get back in the classroom were you be the smarty-pants kid again.
Give the choice between being a parent who has lived a life rich with knowledge and experiences and that of a wet behind the ears kid who beats the students out the door at the end of the day.... Well, I admit it coming from you and your limited vocabulary and range of knowledge, I'll take your name for "Crazy" as a compliment.
Go back to school, learn something, expand your vocabulary, stop calling people names, take your school's stated goals seriously, stop gossiping about your students and their families.
Learn to use your words.
You're probably are not a bad person, but you've probably never stopped to self-examine the real reasons you chose to be a teacher. Do it now - do you want to be one of the greats - because if you do, it takes genuine altruism. At the moment you are acting like a teacher's lounge slug.
The choice is yours.
Anonymous wrote:And the PP sounds like an arrogant defensive dope to me. Professional Educators don't think of their students or their parents as crazy. No my teacher friend, they think of them as people with whom they work and interact as part of their profession. Apparently you believe anyone who may be outside of your cozy little clique is crazy.
But then again this exemplifies a problem with so many teachers today. They can't even begin to describe the people with whom they interact good or bad. They describe people as crazy, insane, outrageous, annoying, helicopters, or PITAs etc. Those are just insults not descriptions of the things that have upset your precious little fiefdoms.
You know what - you really are not anything special to me until you prove yourselves as such. Some of you are good and an awful lot of you are pure dullards. There are some great teachers who are truly altruistic and no matter how good they are they always strive to make their next lesson perfect. They don't hang out in the teachers lounge, they don't gossip because they don't want to be contaminated by the groupthink of the dullard teachers clique.
If you are a teacher PP, where do you think you fall? Are one one of the few truly altruistic teachers who burns the midnight oil grading and preparing future lessons or are you a former Teacher's Pet yourself who was mediocre college student who couldn't wait to get back in the classroom were you be the smarty-pants kid again.
Give the choice between being a parent who has lived a life rich with knowledge and experiences and that of a wet behind the ears kid who beats the students out the door at the end of the day.... Well, I admit it coming from you and your limited vocabulary and range of knowledge, I'll take your name for "Crazy" as a compliment.
Go back to school, learn something, expand your vocabulary, stop calling people names, take your school's stated goals seriously, stop gossiping about your students and their families.
Learn to use your words.
You're probably are not a bad person, but you've probably never stopped to self-examine the real reasons you chose to be a teacher. Do it now - do you want to be one of the greats - because if you do, it takes genuine altruism. At the moment you are acting like a teacher's lounge slug.
The choice is yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't write any here- surely the crazy parents of my students read this!
If you can't write here ... it's only because you never learned to write at all. Stop blaming your students and their parents. Go back to school and actually learn something in college this time. Then go to Ed. School and learn something about teaching methodology, but better yet do yourself and your students the biggest favor of all quit doing this job in which you clearly hate. Get a job at Starbucks and complain for the rest of your life about your how your awful students and their crazy parents drove you out of the profession you loved so dearly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't write any here- surely the crazy parents of my students read this!
If you can't write here ... it's only because you never learned to write at all. Stop blaming your students and their parents. Go back to school and actually learn something in college this time. Then go to Ed. School and learn something about teaching methodology, but better yet do yourself and your students the biggest favor of all quit doing this job in which you clearly hate. Get a job at Starbucks and complain for the rest of your life about your how your awful students and their crazy parents drove you out of the profession you loved so dearly.
Good lord woman!![]()
You do know that every person on the face of the planet has stories about the crazies they encounter during their daily employment.
Teachers are no different.
She isn't criticizing her students. In fact, she probably loves them. That is why most teachers continue to teach, because of the students and in spite of the parents.
I guess the accusation of nutsy parent behavior hit a little too close to home for you...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't write any here- surely the crazy parents of my students read this!
If you can't write here ... it's only because you never learned to write at all. Stop blaming your students and their parents. Go back to school and actually learn something in college this time. Then go to Ed. School and learn something about teaching methodology, but better yet do yourself and your students the biggest favor of all quit doing this job in which you clearly hate. Get a job at Starbucks and complain for the rest of your life about your how your awful students and their crazy parents drove you out of the profession you loved so dearly.
Anonymous wrote:I can't write any here- surely the crazy parents of my students read this!
Anonymous wrote:I can't write any here- surely the crazy parents of my students read this!