Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone’s, I know you’re right. The thing is, now not only did she “waste time” sending the email, but on Tuesday she will “waste time” again when he asks her how to complete the assignment then. Why not just answer the kid in the time it took to send what she did?
Because it’s the end of the year and annoying when kids miss school and then want a one on one explanation. The teacher shouldn’t have replied at all. But your kid was out of line writing and expecting a response over a holiday weekend. Doesn’t your school have some type of help or remediation block in the day? This is the time to ask. Better yet, your kid could text someone in class and ask for clarification. It’s been an entire year, surely he knows someone else who has this teacher.
I mean yes, but also no. I was at a gathering yesterday and stepped away for a minute to take a work-related call. It’s really no big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone’s, I know you’re right. The thing is, now not only did she “waste time” sending the email, but on Tuesday she will “waste time” again when he asks her how to complete the assignment then. Why not just answer the kid in the time it took to send what she did?
Because she wants kids to learn responsibility. She cares about him and she knows that protecting kids from learning responsibility is not good for them.
What was irresponsible in a middle schooler taking the initiative to email the teacher during an absence caused by no fault of his own?
Anonymous wrote:DS (8th grade) missed school today (half-day) because we had left for a trip to visit family. He was working on assignments and was confused about the directions for one writing assignment (there were none) so he emailed the teacher and politely asked if she could briefly explain. He received back a really snarky response about how he would know how to do the assignment if he had been in class, and he can find out on Tuesday. The assignment is due on Tuesday, so he’s going to try to wing it. But I’m curious if his sending the email was out of line, or if the response was.[/quote
Your son could have contacted a friend from the class instead of bothering a teacher on their weekend. You know 8th grade really doesn't matter that much., right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone’s, I know you’re right. The thing is, now not only did she “waste time” sending the email, but on Tuesday she will “waste time” again when he asks her how to complete the assignment then. Why not just answer the kid in the time it took to send what she did?
Because it’s the end of the year and annoying when kids miss school and then want a one on one explanation. The teacher shouldn’t have replied at all. But your kid was out of line writing and expecting a response over a holiday weekend. Doesn’t your school have some type of help or remediation block in the day? This is the time to ask. Better yet, your kid could text someone in class and ask for clarification. It’s been an entire year, surely he knows someone else who has this teacher.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone’s, I know you’re right. The thing is, now not only did she “waste time” sending the email, but on Tuesday she will “waste time” again when he asks her how to complete the assignment then. Why not just answer the kid in the time it took to send what she did?
Anonymous wrote:If its an unexcused absence the teacher is not required to spend additional time to explain things they explained in class that was missed.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone’s, I know you’re right. The thing is, now not only did she “waste time” sending the email, but on Tuesday she will “waste time” again when he asks her how to complete the assignment then. Why not just answer the kid in the time it took to send what she did?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone’s, I know you’re right. The thing is, now not only did she “waste time” sending the email, but on Tuesday she will “waste time” again when he asks her how to complete the assignment then. Why not just answer the kid in the time it took to send what she did?
Because she wants kids to learn responsibility. She cares about him and she knows that protecting kids from learning responsibility is not good for them.
What was irresponsible in a middle schooler taking the initiative to email the teacher during an absence caused by no fault of his own?
Anonymous wrote:The teacher's response was fine.
The kid is not to blame.
OP looks more entitled and whiny with every post.
YOU DID THIS TO YOUR SON, OP. THIS PROBLEM IS YOUR FAULT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone’s, I know you’re right. The thing is, now not only did she “waste time” sending the email, but on Tuesday she will “waste time” again when he asks her how to complete the assignment then. Why not just answer the kid in the time it took to send what she did?
Because she wants kids to learn responsibility. She cares about him and she knows that protecting kids from learning responsibility is not good for them.
What was irresponsible in a middle schooler taking the initiative to email the teacher during an absence caused by no fault of his own?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone’s, I know you’re right. The thing is, now not only did she “waste time” sending the email, but on Tuesday she will “waste time” again when he asks her how to complete the assignment then. Why not just answer the kid in the time it took to send what she did?
Because she wants kids to learn responsibility. She cares about him and she knows that protecting kids from learning responsibility is not good for them.