Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree w/ 20:52.
I am a teacher.
+1, I'm a teacher who had 50+ names to learn every year, many of which were similar sounding.
OP, shaking in anger over this is overreacting. Calm down and approach the teacher in a kind manner. This is not something that should be addressed in an email. Some of us are not as good with names as others, and it takes us a while to connect the name with the face.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you are calling a race card before actually finding out any information. OP why do you keep posting and making fun of this teacher before actually talking to her? You may be correct, but if you want others to be sensitive toward your daughter, you're not helping the situation. Teachers read these posts btw. Post back after you've had a talk with her.
OP here. How was I calling a race card? I mentioned we are minority simply to point out that dd's looks/features are visually different. I understand sometimes it's hard to tell Chinese/Asian students apart, but that's not the case here.
I have contacted the teacher and she has given me an explanation. She said it's been a busy year and she's sorry about the name mistakes. I am not asking for a lot here. I am asking her to remember one name.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you are calling a race card before actually finding out any information. OP why do you keep posting and making fun of this teacher before actually talking to her? You may be correct, but if you want others to be sensitive toward your daughter, you're not helping the situation. Teachers read these posts btw. Post back after you've had a talk with her.
Anonymous wrote:I know this is different as I am not a minority, but in 8th grade my English teacher called me a different name every day. But it was the name of my friend, first same initial and we both had long brown hair. I remember being annoyed at some times and furious in others, but I got over it. I think you making a big deal about this may give your daughter the impression that the way other people view her is more important than how she views herself. Give her the self confidence to know that she is important even if her idiot teacher doesn't think so.
Anonymous wrote:I would write a letter to the teacher and cc the principal. Explain that you are disappointed that after you had discussed this with her once before and that since your daughter corrects her everyday that you feel it is extremely disrespectful and unprofessional for this teacher to continue to call your child the wrong name. Reiterate that this is hurting your child's feelings and self-image and that teachers need to be a positive influence on their students, not a negative one. Say that you expect her to be more respectful and call your child by the correct name or your next step will be to lodge a complaint with both the teacher's union and the school board.