Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It makes no sense. People that do this want attention. Give them none. Call her by her name.
Teachers are required to put their pronouns in emails. I haven’t had any that used “they” so it hasn’t been a problem.
Trump issued an EO on Wednesday and this is no longer going to be allowed in schools. For teachers or kids.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/ending-radical-indoctrination-in-k-12-schooling/
The EO just asks the Dept of Ed to come up with a plan in 90 days, based on what they have the authority to do. Nothing is banned, at least yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you give an example of a sentence where you address someone in person using the third person pronoun?
"Ms. Smith, this is my mom. Mom, this is Ms. Smith. She's my history teacher."
That’s not addressing your teacher- you are speaking to your mom at that point.
Hit send too soon.
So I still don’t see how the third person pronoun matters in addressing the teacher, which is the question asked in the subject.
I'm sure the person can still file a complaint if you refer to them in the third person, in front of them, if you use a non-preferred pronoun. The point is that you don't only use the third person form when the person isn't around.
Anonymous wrote:Just say Ms. Carlson.
“Good morning, Ms. Carlson.”
“Hi, Ms. Carson, I have a question.”
If you are talking about her, you can say Ms. Carlson.
“Ms. Carlson asked me to let you know we’re picking Billy up as a walker today.”
“She” is an option that Ms. Carlson lists as a pronoun, so you may say “she.” But you don’t really need to use pronouns when you can simply use someone’s name.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It makes no sense. People that do this want attention. Give them none. Call her by her name.
Teachers are required to put their pronouns in emails. I haven’t had any that used “they” so it hasn’t been a problem.
Trump issued an EO on Wednesday and this is no longer going to be allowed in schools. For teachers or kids.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/ending-radical-indoctrination-in-k-12-schooling/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It makes no sense. People that do this want attention. Give them none. Call her by her name.
Teachers are required to put their pronouns in emails. I haven’t had any that used “they” so it hasn’t been a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It makes no sense. People that do this want attention. Give them none. Call her by her name.
Teachers are required to put their pronouns in emails. I haven’t had any that used “they” so it hasn’t been a problem.
Anonymous wrote:She/her I understand. But she/they? Doesn't one signal you're female, while the other signals you're non-binary, so how can a person be both at once?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We recently received an email from our child's teacher, whose signature says they/ she.
How are we supposed to address her? Can we say she? When do we address her as they?
The teacher has never indicated how to address her in class and my child has no idea.
I want to make sure my child does the right thing.
What exactly is in the signature, besides the name?
"they/she" means that both of those forms of third-person singular pronoun are acceptable.
You should probably attend a refresher English class.
You'll get through this! I promise.
In most writing guides I've seen, you use "they" when the gender is unknown, and he or she when you do. But in this case, we know the teacher prefers "she" so why add in "they"? They seem to be conflicting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We recently received an email from our child's teacher, whose signature says they/ she.
How are we supposed to address her? Can we say she? When do we address her as they?
The teacher has never indicated how to address her in class and my child has no idea.
I want to make sure my child does the right thing.
What exactly is in the signature, besides the name?
"they/she" means that both of those forms of third-person singular pronoun are acceptable.
You should probably attend a refresher English class.
You'll get through this! I promise.
Anonymous wrote:We recently received an email from our child's teacher, whose signature says they/ she.
How are we supposed to address her? Can we say she? When do we address her as they?
The teacher has never indicated how to address her in class and my child has no idea.
I want to make sure my child does the right thing.
Anonymous wrote:Just say Ms. Carlson.
“Good morning, Ms. Carlson.”
“Hi, Ms. Carson, I have a question.”
If you are talking about her, you can say Ms. Carlson.
“Ms. Carlson asked me to let you know we’re picking Billy up as a walker today.”
“She” is an option that Ms. Carlson lists as a pronoun, so you may say “she.” But you don’t really need to use pronouns when you can simply use someone’s name.