Anonymous wrote:Um, how about using this time to form a relationship with your child?
Anonymous wrote:Um, how about using this time to form a relationship with your child?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um, how about using this time to form a relationship with your child?
You are truly an a$$hole. You don’t have a demanding job? Not worried about your kids playing in the street for hours while you work trying not to lose your job so you still feed your kids? There was lots of good ideas in this thread like Outschool, for example. You’re just an unhelpful piece of sh$t.
NP. You seem stressed, PP. If you can't devote time to your family right now, maybe you should at least learn how to better cope with stress. There are lots of resources out there. No need to lash out at others.
NP: PP, you are as helpful as the people implying or saying outright that because we are stressed about how to manage work and family in this unprecedented time, that we don't have strong bonds with our kids, or we've made life decisions that don't prioritize the right things. Nothing like a patronizing pat on the head to really make someone feel great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um, how about using this time to form a relationship with your child?
You are truly an a$$hole. You don’t have a demanding job? Not worried about your kids playing in the street for hours while you work trying not to lose your job so you still feed your kids? There was lots of good ideas in this thread like Outschool, for example. You’re just an unhelpful piece of sh$t.
NP. You seem stressed, PP. If you can't devote time to your family right now, maybe you should at least learn how to better cope with stress. There are lots of resources out there. No need to lash out at others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um, how about using this time to form a relationship with your child?
You are truly an a$$hole. You don’t have a demanding job? Not worried about your kids playing in the street for hours while you work trying not to lose your job so you still feed your kids? There was lots of good ideas in this thread like Outschool, for example. You’re just an unhelpful piece of sh$t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here- I’ve taught children from all of the wards in the city and can assure you there is no correlation between the ward a child lives in and rather or not he/she has demonstrates poor behavior, so let’s stop that convo RIGHT NOW.
Dear Teacher,
Maybe you need to go back and re-read the earlier posts. This point was conveyed earlier, not sure why you are arguing with yourself.
“Well, the behavior of the Emmas, Brads, Emilys, and Hunters of wards 3 and 6 is a lot worse.” Direct quote, right on this page. Feel free to join one of my remedial reading groups in August!
Anonymous wrote:Um, how about using this time to form a relationship with your child?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here- I’ve taught children from all of the wards in the city and can assure you there is no correlation between the ward a child lives in and rather or not he/she has demonstrates poor behavior, so let’s stop that convo RIGHT NOW.
Dear Teacher,
Maybe you need to go back and re-read the earlier posts. This point was conveyed earlier, not sure why you are arguing with yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher here- I’ve taught children from all of the wards in the city and can assure you there is no correlation between the ward a child lives in and rather or not he/she has demonstrates poor behavior, so let’s stop that convo RIGHT NOW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how the teachers living in Maryland and Virginia will swing childcare for their own kids if they are now forced to return to work July 27th and their kids don’t start school until September 8th.
Do what many other families who work do- camp, grandparents, take leave, etc.
Pretty sure teachers don’t get 3 weeks of leave. Also sure that teaching is the most flexible child friendly jobs in a lot of cases which is why the pay is abysmal and the unions would not allow that to happen where teachers are forced to start work three weeks before regular school without any flexibility or understanding.
The problem is that a lot of bratty children are in the DMV area. When your child was interrupting the education of mine and other children, you shrugged the teacher off and your lack of caring was a just deal attitude. Now that you have to deal with the bratty behavior of your own spawn you now see what the teacher was saying. If you raise your children well and raise them to understand your boundaries and expectations then the stress factor is not going to be there as much. The only thing you need to do is sign up for mail subscriptions to Kids Time Magazine, Plan outdoor activities (yard pop, chalk on the sidewalk, trail walking), KiwiCo, etc.
75% of the panicking on this board is people not knowing how to be active parents because they are used to outsourcing parenting to the ah pair/nanny, the teachers (private, public or charter) or some family member.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how the teachers living in Maryland and Virginia will swing childcare for their own kids if they are now forced to return to work July 27th and their kids don’t start school until September 8th.
Do what many other families who work do- camp, grandparents, take leave, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how the teachers living in Maryland and Virginia will swing childcare for their own kids if they are now forced to return to work July 27th and their kids don’t start school until September 8th.
Do what many other families who work do- camp, grandparents, take leave, etc.