Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Couple things:
1. The teacher's conduct is absolutely inappropriate. That doesn't mean your daughter ISN'T a problem student or that her behavior at school isn't an issue, but the teacher should NOT be posting about any of her students on social media, especially by name.
2. I would arrange a sit down with the principal to discuss the teacher's posting and how it will be handled and to request that your DD not be in that class.
3. At that meeting, you need to ask for an honest accounting of her behavior at school and what other teachers have reported in order for this to be coming up. There probably is something to it, your daughter is of course not going to know what it is because 13 year olds aren't very self aware.
4. You should not have shown your daughter the posting. That was terrible of you.
Thank you for your thoughts and I agree with the first three points you have made. But for the fourth comment, I am surprised to see this keep being mentioned. Why would I hide something like this from her, that I know some of her friends have already seen and the only reason she didn't see it is because I was really strict about not getting her a Facebook account until the first grading period after she is 13? It is unfortunate but now that something was said about her in public she already has the reputation. To know what people are saying about you and if there are any scandals or rumors is in my opinion the only way to be prepared to handle the situation. This way she knows to be very careful around that teacher and also is not blindsided if anyone of her peers says something to her about it.
Would it really have been better of me to not let her know this was going on? My mother always told me any gossip or impressions about me when I was growing up so that I could change my behavior to mitigate the damage and so that I would not react like I was shocked if any of the girls made fun of me for anything. Perhaps this, too, is a wrong approach that I need to reconsider?
Anonymous wrote:What the teacher did was definitely inappropriate. But get her fired? Really no, that's far too extreme a reaction. Its misconduct but its not gross misconduct. For that she'd have to poop on a desk or have sex with a student.
Couple things:
1. The teacher's conduct is absolutely inappropriate. That doesn't mean your daughter ISN'T a problem student or that her behavior at school isn't an issue, but the teacher should NOT be posting about any of her students on social media, especially by name.
2. I would arrange a sit down with the principal to discuss the teacher's posting and how it will be handled and to request that your DD not be in that class.
3. At that meeting, you need to ask for an honest accounting of her behavior at school and what other teachers have reported in order for this to be coming up. There probably is something to it, your daughter is of course not going to know what it is because 13 year olds aren't very self aware.
4. You should not have shown your daughter the posting. That was terrible of you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get your daughter out of that teacher's class and report the teacher for misconduct. It's too late now, but I would not have shown my daughter or told my daughter about a post going around on Facebook about her. How horrible for your daughter to know that she is fodder for gossip among your friends. Also, I would not attack my child because of some gossip on FB. Give your child the benefit of the doubt. If there truly was a problem with your child in school, the school would have notified you. It truly is despicable what that teacher did. She should be fired.
Absolutely all of this.
And I really think there was a better way for you to ask your child about this without showing her. That was cruel.
Anonymous wrote:Couple things:
1. The teacher's conduct is absolutely inappropriate. That doesn't mean your daughter ISN'T a problem student or that her behavior at school isn't an issue, but the teacher should NOT be posting about any of her students on social media, especially by name.
2. I would arrange a sit down with the principal to discuss the teacher's posting and how it will be handled and to request that your DD not be in that class.
3. At that meeting, you need to ask for an honest accounting of her behavior at school and what other teachers have reported in order for this to be coming up. There probably is something to it, your daughter is of course not going to know what it is because 13 year olds aren't very self aware.
4. You should not have shown your daughter the posting. That was terrible of you.