Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids are younger than this so please excuse this naive question:
When I was in middle school and high school, we had 4 minutes of “passing time” between classes. If your next class was on the other side of the school, you needed that time to walk there, but most classes were fairly close together, so that was when I changed pads/tampons. And so did everyone else I know. That was when you were supposed to do things like go to the bathroom, get water, go to your locker, etc. So most teachers were unwilling to have you use the bathroom during class, which made perfect sense to me.
Am I missing something here? What’s changed?
Some campuses are bigger than others. Some schools only give three minutes. Sometimes when the bell rings your teacher keeps everyone for an extra 30 seconds. Or keeps you. Or you have to talk to them about something. Or you're carrying three classes worth of heavy books and have to go to the other side of campus to dump those in your locker, get the new books for the next three classes and then go back to the side of campus you were just on. Or between classes you have to run to your sibling's class to drop off a paper because he's home sick but that teacher is a jerk and said if the paper isn't handed in that day they get a 0. Or a thousand other things.
PP here. If it’s 3 minutes, okay, I’d buy that and be concerned.
Beyond that - I don’t find this convincing. I went to what was at the time literally the biggest middle school in the country. (600 kids per grade, 1800 students total) and this was still manageable. You don’t need to change your pad after EVERY class. What, 2x per day? You need to plan. Sometimes you go to the bathroom (when you’ll have the most time and the bathroom is most convenient). Sometimes you’ve got a long walk to the next class and that’s all you do. Sometimes you stop at your locker. Sometimes you run an errand. That’s what passing time is made for!
The fact that so many people are telling you to get the principal involved (!!) when a) there’s a system in place for this - passing time and b) this is just one teacher that won’t let your kid go to the bathroom and you were able to work around it by going in other classes seems crazy to me. You guys are one of Those Parents, I’m sorry to say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard disagree on the restriction being “a part of life.” Would any of you accept your boss telling you when you can and can’t use the restroom? If some kids are skipping class, then better monitoring and larger deterrents are need to curb that behavior. It is wild how many adults are willing to accept the casual carceral organization of school life. Wild.
No. And I'm a lawyer. Even judges will break to let people use the bathroom. I would never even consider working somewhere that restricted my bathroom use. I cannot imagine any sane adult would.
Adults aren’t goofing off in bathrooms and vaping, doing drugs, or making out.
Anonymous wrote:My 11-year-old sixth grader just started her periods too. They’re very irregular and just today she had an accident at school. I asked if her teachers had restrictions and she said no.
I made sure to tell her that if she ever feels like she needs to go to the bathroom, and the teacher won’t let her, that she can just go, and the teacher and principal can call me and I will deal with them. She is a quiet, straight a kid who does not cause trouble. I think it’s unfair that women and girls to risk bleeding through or having a bleeding accident in school because their teachers won’t let them go.
Anonymous wrote:Our 11 year old DD just wears a Thinx modal boyshort all day at school. Had zero problems so far this school year. We size up 1. These require a little hand washing before putting in the machine and hang drying for 2 days. I use Dr Bronners soap. can't use any fabric softener. We have several pairs to last the week. On really light days, we are using Thinx Air, but they aren't as leak proof as we'd like. Maybe too light.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are younger than this so please excuse this naive question:
When I was in middle school and high school, we had 4 minutes of “passing time” between classes. If your next class was on the other side of the school, you needed that time to walk there, but most classes were fairly close together, so that was when I changed pads/tampons. And so did everyone else I know. That was when you were supposed to do things like go to the bathroom, get water, go to your locker, etc. So most teachers were unwilling to have you use the bathroom during class, which made perfect sense to me.
Am I missing something here? What’s changed?
Anonymous wrote:It’s always unfair to not let people who legitimately need to use the bathroom go to the bathroom. It’s also unfair for kids to continue to interrupt class with bogus bathroom requests.
Try period underwear for your DD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard disagree on the restriction being “a part of life.” Would any of you accept your boss telling you when you can and can’t use the restroom? If some kids are skipping class, then better monitoring and larger deterrents are need to curb that behavior. It is wild how many adults are willing to accept the casual carceral organization of school life. Wild.
No. And I'm a lawyer. Even judges will break to let people use the bathroom. I would never even consider working somewhere that restricted my bathroom use. I cannot imagine any sane adult would.
Anonymous wrote:Hard disagree on the restriction being “a part of life.” Would any of you accept your boss telling you when you can and can’t use the restroom? If some kids are skipping class, then better monitoring and larger deterrents are need to curb that behavior. It is wild how many adults are willing to accept the casual carceral organization of school life. Wild.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is in 6th grade and just got her period for the second time. She is strategic about what classes she asks to go to the bathroom in, so she can change her pad. I don't know every detail, but I assume it's something like wanting to go to a close bathroom, a more private bathroom, a class she won't miss important things in, maximizing the use of one pad (timing), etc.
She came to me and said, Mrs. O (English) says we can't go to the bathroom in her class anymore, and here's why that's hard for me.... then, we talked and came up with a solution for her to go a bit later in the day.
But this strikes me as unfair and making a hard thing harder, for no reason. I feel like MS teachers should never have this rule. What do you think?
Public or private? If it's public, confirm with the teacher and then go way above her head to have someone explain why this form of gender discrimination is being allowed
How is is gender discrimination if no one can use the bathroom during her class?
Anonymous wrote:Hard disagree on the restriction being “a part of life.” Would any of you accept your boss telling you when you can and can’t use the restroom? If some kids are skipping class, then better monitoring and larger deterrents are need to curb that behavior. It is wild how many adults are willing to accept the casual carceral organization of school life. Wild.