Anonymous wrote:All I know is my good friend has a child there and is upset by her experience with her classroom teacher. She said she will not send her second child there.
Anonymous wrote:
Here is an excerpt from the Director's facebook post to the families:
XXXX (preschool parent’s name) met with me for an hour and a half yesterday. If she had questions or concerns about this, she should have raised them with me directly. Since I started here, there have been parents that have not demonstrated the values that we hope to teach our students—respect, flexibility, questioning, perspective taking, and problem solving. In the fall when we responded directly to a teacher concern and request to try a change specifically so they could better meet their team and students’ needs, I had parents, before we even had a chance to see what was, or wasn’t, going to work, write some of the nastiest emails I’ve ever received. Emails that question not only my credentials, but my intelligence and called me all manner of childish names. I had a father, who towers over me, get in my face, and SCREAM and threaten me. This is unacceptable behavior.
Anonymous wrote:As a newer parent in the JCC preschool, I have kept quiet until now. I couldn’t believe what I saw the other day when I looked at the facebook group for our preschool families. The director hijacked the page, and posted a multiple paragraph posting which included calling out one parent by name, and insulting other parents. At the end she blamed parents in the school who are speaking up against her poor leadership for ruining the community. Shocking that a post like this was not grounds for firing her. Things seem to be running off the rails. If you are looking for a Jewish preschool, there are at least 5 in a couple mile radius of the JCC. I recommend looking at them. We are.
Here is an excerpt from the Director's facebook post to the families:
XXXX (preschool parent’s name) met with me for an hour and a half yesterday. If she had questions or concerns about this, she should have raised them with me directly. Since I started here, there have been parents that have not demonstrated the values that we hope to teach our students—respect, flexibility, questioning, perspective taking, and problem solving. In the fall when we responded directly to a teacher concern and request to try a change specifically so they could better meet their team and students’ needs, I had parents, before we even had a chance to see what was, or wasn’t, going to work, write some of the nastiest emails I’ve ever received. Emails that question not only my credentials, but my intelligence and called me all manner of childish names. I had a father, who towers over me, get in my face, and SCREAM and threaten me. This is unacceptable behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Is there such a thing as “anti- preschool people”, that is just a weird thing to even write.