Anonymous wrote:Why are people complaining about nothing graded since Dec. 17th? That was the Wed before winter break. Maybe the teacher didnt want to sacrifice family time to grade over break. Maybe they input grades at the end of the month so that is this week.
If parents want grades reported faster, complain about how many meetings teachers have to attend and all the extra duties they have to do like supervision.
Anonymous wrote:My child has multiple teachers who haven’t graded things since November. My child emails them multiple times giving three to five days space to honor them juggling multiple tasks (I have seen child’s emails). However, now that it’s end of quarter there are multiple items that have still yet to be resolved in multiple classes. The teachers tell students they have plenty of time don’t worry, but this is inadequate. It’s undue stress on the student.
Should I contact the principal or counselor if the teachers aren’t keeping up with grade book and it’s been more than 8 weeks or 6 weeks? What is the proper escalation process when teachers say students must advocate for themselves and then they ignore the student actively requesting a retake or asking for access to complete an assignment they need to complete?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are people complaining about nothing graded since Dec. 17th? That was the Wed before winter break. Maybe the teacher didnt want to sacrifice family time to grade over break. Maybe they input grades at the end of the month so that is this week.
If parents want grades reported faster, complain about how many meetings teachers have to attend and all the extra duties they have to do like supervision.
Nov 17 for us. What’s the justification for that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm spending my snow day grading the 230984573908457 late assignments kids handed me friday afternoon that I am required to accept. Some of them are from...October.
I grade work submitted on time within a few days of it being submitted. I grade late work when I get free time, which lately has been really hard to find. It takes twice as long to grade a bunch of one off late assignments as a stack of 30 on time assignments.
I'm still getting angry emails from parents saying that their kid has 14 missing assignments from this quarter but they swear they turned them in, and why am I not updating them? (Because I'm busy grading the on time work).
But if your child's teacher isn't grading even on time work? Go to the AP in charge of the department. Counselors aren't in supervisory roles. Department chairs certainly aren't in supervisory roles. The AP in charge can get the teacher a sub day if they need that to catch up on grading, or can put pressure on them to catch up if they're just not doing their job. The teachers who are doing their job fully are sick of the ones who aren't.
DP and I definitely agree with your last paragraph. I’m grading seven days a week (and that’s not an exaggeration). I’m livid that there are teachers who don’t grade at all. They make my life harder; I have the same students and I have to hear the complaints, knowing I can do nothing about it. And no, it isn’t fair that students do work that isn’t reviewed.
But I’m also livid that I’m grading seven days a week. Those shouldn’t be my choices: work to contract and disappoint my students vs. giving up my outside obligations to grade.
Anonymous wrote:Another reason we switched to private
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has your child talked to the teacher in person before or after class?
I didn't think so. Come back after your child learns to talk to adults.
Yes, multiple times. The teacher dismisses the question and has also preemptively told the class not to approach her to discuss grades.
I regularly receive emails from other teachers praising my child’s maturity and hard work, so please stop trying to find an avenue to blame this on the student.
Anonymous wrote:I'm spending my snow day grading the 230984573908457 late assignments kids handed me friday afternoon that I am required to accept. Some of them are from...October.
I grade work submitted on time within a few days of it being submitted. I grade late work when I get free time, which lately has been really hard to find. It takes twice as long to grade a bunch of one off late assignments as a stack of 30 on time assignments.
I'm still getting angry emails from parents saying that their kid has 14 missing assignments from this quarter but they swear they turned them in, and why am I not updating them? (Because I'm busy grading the on time work).
But if your child's teacher isn't grading even on time work? Go to the AP in charge of the department. Counselors aren't in supervisory roles. Department chairs certainly aren't in supervisory roles. The AP in charge can get the teacher a sub day if they need that to catch up on grading, or can put pressure on them to catch up if they're just not doing their job. The teachers who are doing their job fully are sick of the ones who aren't.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, why don't parents just out these high schools in DCUM? Maybe if it's all the same high school, then it's a systemic issue going on and it warrants full scale parent intervention. It's hard to tell whether this is just an isolated case at a particular high school or whether it's multiple high schools where this is occuring. It'll serve as a warning for future parents of that high school as well.
Anonymous wrote:Has your child talked to the teacher in person before or after class?
I didn't think so. Come back after your child learns to talk to adults.