Anonymous wrote:Play the lottery and GTFO!
Anonymous wrote:We experienced this in a bad (failing) DCPS elementary. I hated it, and we lotteried out. It's lazy, plain and simple. In my experience, it was most often the paraprofessionals - as soon as the teacher left the classroom (for a meeting, or something with another student, or testing, or whatever), the TV went on.
All you can do is complain. I'd raise it with the principal and the PTA, if there is one. And when nothing happens, I'd write a letter to the instructional superintendent. And I'd keep trying the lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve been a teacher for 15+ years at an elementary school with over 1,000 students. My principal set the expectations that there are no shows and movies shown. So parents do not need to tell on teachers because the expectation is higher than tv and movies.
Maybe the principal should start there?
+1 The principal using parents to report on teachers is odd. He/she should set expectations and see that those expectations are followed. Or he/she should remove televisions from the classrooms and library.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve been a teacher for 15+ years at an elementary school with over 1,000 students. My principal set the expectations that there are no shows and movies shown. So parents do not need to tell on teachers because the expectation is higher than tv and movies.
Maybe the principal should start there?
+1 The principal using parents to report on teachers is odd. He/she should set expectations and see that those expectations are followed. Or he/she should remove televisions from the classrooms and library.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been a teacher for 15+ years at an elementary school with over 1,000 students. My principal set the expectations that there are no shows and movies shown. So parents do not need to tell on teachers because the expectation is higher than tv and movies.
Maybe the principal should start there?
Anonymous wrote:Hi, parents.
At our DCPS, the music teacher and the librarian regularly show Disney movies and other popular cartoons during music and library time. That is, in library, rather than read a book to the kids or have the kids find books, kids only watch cartoons. And in music, rather than play a rhythm instrument, listen to different styles of music, sing, etc., kids only watch cartoons.
Now -- my kids are in PreK and K, and I am pretty sure that music class and library are taken more seriously for grades 1-5. Question -- if you were in my shoes, would you raise concern with the admin or the teachers themselves? Ask that your kid interacts with books during library time and that the music teacher puts in at least a 15-20 minute effort before reverting to the tv? Or would you let it go?
Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been a teacher for 15+ years at an elementary school with over 1,000 students. My principal set the expectations that there are no shows and movies shown. So parents do not need to tell on teachers because the expectation is higher than tv and movies.
Maybe the principal should start there?[/quote
Yeah, it seems odd to me that the principal can't just set a policy and have teachers follow it. Worst case I would take away the AV equipment from those teachers if I was the principal.