Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I initiate with Ms/Mrs/Mr but if they respond with Sally or Bob I call them by their first name.
+1 This. I'd add please use "Dr." if appropriate. My kids have a teacher who also holds a PhD in her content area, and they appropriately corrected me when I accidentally referred to her as "Mrs."
Good god this is obnoxious. I would keep using mrs.
I would call them Dr. if they preferred, but yeah…when a PhD insists on being called “Doctor” I assume there’s something off about them.
There is also to me the need to maintain that distance because you never want parents to get the idea that they’re special friends with you which could affect how they perceive how you treat their child. I’m warm, we are in this together, but I’m never going to call you Heather, I’m always going to use Ms. Smith and I prefer parents do the same.
Anonymous wrote:Clearly I'm in the minority, but somewhere along the line I transitioned to using first name, like I would with any other adult in nearly all professional settings. Teachers hold an authority role over my kids, not me. The kids obviously use Mr/Ms/Mrs, but to me you are Larla Jones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I initiate with Ms/Mrs/Mr but if they respond with Sally or Bob I call them by their first name.
+1 This. I'd add please use "Dr." if appropriate. My kids have a teacher who also holds a PhD in her content area, and they appropriately corrected me when I accidentally referred to her as "Mrs."
Good god this is obnoxious. I would keep using mrs.
Anonymous wrote:I am a teacher and honestly, I don’t care what you call me. Mrs Smith, Ms Smith, Smith, Anne Smith, Anne. Like who cares, I am going to answer regardless of how you address me.