Anonymous wrote:OP here. I asked DD for details about the "crash outs". She explained that the teacher cries almost every day in class and that she will often pick up a classroom object and threaten to hit students with it (not misbehaving students, just random students). Worse than what I was expecting.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I asked DD for details about the "crash outs". She explained that the teacher cries almost every day in class and that she will often pick up a classroom object and threaten to hit students with it (not misbehaving students, just random students). Worse than what I was expecting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD (16) has a teacher who she describes as behaving in unusual ways. For instance, DD says that the teacher “crashed out” in class almost every day when describing her day after getting home from school, frequently over minor things. Then there are more extreme things. One time she ripped up a student’s homework assignment because she felt it was poorly done. Another time she belittled a student with a hearing impairment during a secure. DD doesn’t seem particularly disturbed by all this, but I am. What would you do?
Red flags all over. Why is she telling the students about her personal life after school? I know this type. High school teacher who never left high school herself.
Anonymous wrote:You gather the facts, and if you feel your daughter is a reliable reporter (my daughter is) you email the counselor and CC the Principal. Discrimination against disabled people is grounds for firing, OP. It's extremely serious.
Anonymous wrote:In high school, every year there was always one teacher who was very unprofessional (cursing, making rude sarcastic comments towards students, and more) that made me feel very uncomfortable, but it is so common.
Anonymous wrote:Crash out can mean anything to kids. You’re envisioning it being screaming and throwing desks and really it was probably just telling them to knock off some annoying behavior. During a secure, any student acting foolish and compromising safety is going to be reprimanded, even if they are hard of hearing. Your kid is dramatic and you’re 10x worse.
Anonymous wrote:DD (16) has a teacher who she describes as behaving in unusual ways. For instance, DD says that the teacher “crashed out” in class almost every day when describing her day after getting home from school, frequently over minor things. Then there are more extreme things. One time she ripped up a student’s homework assignment because she felt it was poorly done. Another time she belittled a student with a hearing impairment during a secure. DD doesn’t seem particularly disturbed by all this, but I am. What would you do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD (16) has a teacher who she describes as behaving in unusual ways. For instance, DD says that the teacher “crashed out” in class almost every day when describing her day after getting home from school, frequently over minor things. Then there are more extreme things. One time she ripped up a student’s homework assignment because she felt it was poorly done. Another time she belittled a student with a hearing impairment during a secure. DD doesn’t seem particularly disturbed by all this, but I am. What would you do?
Red flags all over. Why is she telling the students about her personal life after school? I know this type. High school teacher who never left high school herself.