Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a teacher/chaperone is seen having a glass of wine after hours on a school trip, would they be fired or asked to resign?
There should be some disciplinary action for drinking while on duty and potentially jeopardizing safety of minors.
Same thing for sleeping aids or anti anxiety meds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a teacher/chaperone is seen having a glass of wine after hours on a school trip, would they be fired or asked to resign?
There should be some disciplinary action for drinking while on duty and potentially jeopardizing safety of minors.
Anonymous wrote:No. Any adult willing to take kids overnight should have a glass with dinner, let alone after hours and off duty.
But if you’re the teacher and you’re worried then err on the side of caution and don’t. If you can’t stop at one, then definitely don’t.
Anonymous wrote:Any teacher drinking on a school trip, regardless if it is after hours is an idiot. And, do we really want idiots teaching at our 40K+ private schools?
Anonymous wrote:If a teacher/chaperone is seen having a glass of wine after hours on a school trip, would they be fired or asked to resign?
Anonymous wrote:Going back to the OPs question (not whether there should be a rule against drinking on the trip, but whether having a glass of wine is a fireable offense even if there is such a rule):
There are a lot of possible disciplinary steps before firing, and a glass of wine at dinner should be met with any of those steps, not dismissal.
Anonymous wrote:Going back to the OPs question (not whether there should be a rule against drinking on the trip, but whether having a glass of wine is a fireable offense even if there is such a rule):
There are a lot of possible disciplinary steps before firing, and a glass of wine at dinner should be met with any of those steps, not dismissal.
Anonymous wrote:Going back to the OPs question (not whether there should be a rule against drinking on the trip, but whether having a glass of wine is a fireable offense even if there is such a rule):
There are a lot of possible disciplinary steps before firing, and a glass of wine at dinner should be met with any of those steps, not dismissal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a private school teacher who chaperones overnight trips. It’s written into our policy that we cannot drink when we are chaperoning, even when we are “off duty”’ in the evening. The reason for that, I’m guessing, is that we’re never really off duty. What if there’s an emergency at night?
I chaperone less than I used to. Not because I can’t drink. That’s fine. It’s because I have to pay for my own meals, my room, etc. It’s too much of a financial hit for me.
Doesn’t the school pay for your room and food? Isn’t it a school trip?
The school asks for teacher volunteers. Paying for the chaperones means that student prices go up, and we try to keep the trips affordable.
AKA work for free. Unionize.
I'm disgusted by this. Keeping the trips "reasonable" for people who can pay 60k a year on tuition by shifting the cost to people who live on 70k a year? I'd have a fit over this and we are in the former category.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a private school teacher who chaperones overnight trips. It’s written into our policy that we cannot drink when we are chaperoning, even when we are “off duty”’ in the evening. The reason for that, I’m guessing, is that we’re never really off duty. What if there’s an emergency at night?
I chaperone less than I used to. Not because I can’t drink. That’s fine. It’s because I have to pay for my own meals, my room, etc. It’s too much of a financial hit for me.
Doesn’t the school pay for your room and food? Isn’t it a school trip?
The school asks for teacher volunteers. Paying for the chaperones means that student prices go up, and we try to keep the trips affordable.
AKA work for free. Unionize.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a private school teacher who chaperones overnight trips. It’s written into our policy that we cannot drink when we are chaperoning, even when we are “off duty”’ in the evening. The reason for that, I’m guessing, is that we’re never really off duty. What if there’s an emergency at night?
I chaperone less than I used to. Not because I can’t drink. That’s fine. It’s because I have to pay for my own meals, my room, etc. It’s too much of a financial hit for me.