Anonymous wrote:Teach your child to respect his elders and you won’t have a problem. If you’re raising a hoodlum though it’s going to be an issue.
Anonymous wrote:It is not a tapping of the foot. It is a very loud stomp in high heels against a hard floor. The children say that it sounds like someone has been slapped.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The misbehaving children are targeted, and my child, fortunately, is not one of them. But he/she is nervous about the way the discipline is carried out.
NP. Does the teacher’s approach work on the misbehaving children? I’m guessing not or the children wouldn’t be misbehaving. I would argue it’s a matter of ineffective discipline, not the teacher being loud or mean. (If kids won’t behave and sending them to the AP or calling their parents isn’t an option, send them to the back of the classroom where they can read/draw/play games and teach the students who are willing to sit at their desks and learn.)
Anonymous wrote:Our child has a specialist teacher (foreign language) at a Virginia independent school. He/she has told us several times that he/she is scared of the teacher because of her loud and unusual classroom management techniques -- stamping her heels very loudly so that it sounds like someone being slapped, saying rude things to the children. Other parents have told me that she has blown whistles at the children in the classroom in the past. Our child has not had any complaints about their other teachers and enjoys and does well in school. But he/she is becoming very nervous about being in this teacher's classroom. Other parents with older siblings have said that this has been a longterm issue at the school, but that any complaints to the administration are glossed over and that the teacher "retaliates" against the complaining parents' child. We are hesitant to bring up the issue directly with the teacher based upon this feedback, but we can't think of an alternative way to handle this that won't make things worse for our child. The administration apparently shares the name of the parents with the teacher, so going to the administration does not seem to be an option either.
Anonymous wrote:The misbehaving children are targeted, and my child, fortunately, is not one of them. But he/she is nervous about the way the discipline is carried out.
Anonymous wrote:I remember the days when if you got in trouble at school you got in twice as much trouble at home. Many kids are intolerable in classrooms. It makes it difficult for all.