Anonymous wrote:I don't get it. Do you want them to post on Yelp instead?
Anonymous wrote:In my college days, I always used ratemyprofessor.com. I am a teacher now and I wouldn’t care if I was out there like that be it negative or positive. Teaching does have a customer service aspect to it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm ok with parents venting on facebook, but they shouldn't name the teacher - that is tacky.
This idea that teachers are so fragile and need to be protected is weird. We all complain about professional relationships (doctors, bosses) on facebook though we don't use names. It's like the whole teacher appreciating week thing. So infantilizing!
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it. Do you want them to post on Yelp instead?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a big difference between:
Ms. Monica Bing at Radlin Middle School is just AWFUL! So shrill, always screaming at the kids, talks nonstop during tests and refusing to let the kids mute their laptops, etc.
and
My daughter's 3rd grade teacher is really making my DD hate school. I am scrambling to make things better but she's just awful.
I disagree. Though not specifically naming is better, her daughter’s third grade teacher might be known to the friends. You are still identifying a professional and criticizing her on social media.
What do you do for a living? Do you think it would be ok for your client or coworker to post “my coworker who works on blah blah blah is just awful”?
People leave reviews for service providers all the time. I'm frequently asked by the providers to leave reviews on Facebook/Google/Yelp.
So you equate a teacher to.... wait staff?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a big difference between:
Ms. Monica Bing at Radlin Middle School is just AWFUL! So shrill, always screaming at the kids, talks nonstop during tests and refusing to let the kids mute their laptops, etc.
and
My daughter's 3rd grade teacher is really making my DD hate school. I am scrambling to make things better but she's just awful.
I disagree. Though not specifically naming is better, her daughter’s third grade teacher might be known to the friends. You are still identifying a professional and criticizing her on social media.
What do you do for a living? Do you think it would be ok for your client or coworker to post “my coworker who works on blah blah blah is just awful”?
People leave reviews for service providers all the time. I'm frequently asked by the providers to leave reviews on Facebook/Google/Yelp.
So you equate a teacher to.... wait staff?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a big difference between:
Ms. Monica Bing at Radlin Middle School is just AWFUL! So shrill, always screaming at the kids, talks nonstop during tests and refusing to let the kids mute their laptops, etc.
and
My daughter's 3rd grade teacher is really making my DD hate school. I am scrambling to make things better but she's just awful.
I disagree. Though not specifically naming is better, her daughter’s third grade teacher might be known to the friends. You are still identifying a professional and criticizing her on social media.
What do you do for a living? Do you think it would be ok for your client or coworker to post “my coworker who works on blah blah blah is just awful”?
People leave reviews for service providers all the time. I'm frequently asked by the providers to leave reviews on Facebook/Google/Yelp.
Anonymous wrote:Another example of teachers wanting no accountability.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of my friends are posting critiques of their kids’ teachers on Facebook.
I don’t think this is appropriate....is it?
I would not appreciate it if my coworker or client or boss posted about me on Facebook. I feel like we should give teachers the same professional courtesy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a big difference between:
Ms. Monica Bing at Radlin Middle School is just AWFUL! So shrill, always screaming at the kids, talks nonstop during tests and refusing to let the kids mute their laptops, etc.
and
My daughter's 3rd grade teacher is really making my DD hate school. I am scrambling to make things better but she's just awful.
Uh...neither sounds OK to me. What am I missing?
Huh? Why not? The first one offers specific complaints, while the second one is just venting about a difficult situation. What's the problem?
The problem is your kid’s teacher is easily identifiable. You are trashing a professional online.