Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, you are going to really put her down, she's excited and wants to help. WTF. It doesn't take a genius to figure out she's a sn teacher and pictures of her students etc.... there is nothing wrong she didn't state names or the disability.
When you identify the school, you are making it clear where these kids can be found. While the chances some pedophile figures kids with SN are easier prey will come get the kids is below 1%, it should be the parent's decision whether the child's photo is posted and special needs status is revealed.
Ok you are reaching here, not all sn are easier prey. I guess we should shutdown all students photos.
Anonymous wrote:Holy hell she should know better. She's breaking the law. I'd email her principal ASAP.
Anonymous wrote:It is a great opportunity for her to learn about privacy. I would take a screen shot, get some time w the Principal an discuss.
It is clearly a message that needs to be reinforced to all teachers.
I would also connect w facebook and make them aware. Anything shared digitally has a life of its own.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks you for the feedback. I think I may start with her and if she doesn't seem to get why I am annoyed I will love up the chain. I agree they grew up with oversharing so it's a different mentality. On the other hand it's so unprofessional. I also hate that she seems to see kids with SN as some sort of charity and she is so giving and amazing to help our poor defective kids. I doubt she meant to come across like this, but that was my initial impression.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher. Don't tell her or embarrass her. Email the principal and she will talk to the teacher and tell her to remove pics of students from all social media. It isn't right, but she isn't being malicious and probably doesn't realize she shouldn't post pics without permission. The principal needs to handle it, and tell the principal you don't want her to use your name when she talks to the teacher because you want a good working relationship with the teacher throughout the year. Did you sign any type of no-photography consent form at the school? Most schools have them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, you are going to really put her down, she's excited and wants to help. WTF. It doesn't take a genius to figure out she's a sn teacher and pictures of her students etc.... there is nothing wrong she didn't state names or the disability.
When you identify the school, you are making it clear where these kids can be found. While the chances some pedophile figures kids with SN are easier prey will come get the kids is below 1%, it should be the parent's decision whether the child's photo is posted and special needs status is revealed.
Ok you are reaching here, not all sn are easier prey. I guess we should shutdown all students photos.
Anonymous wrote:Take screenshots before you talk to her. You may never need to do anything with them, but better to have that if it does come up in the future.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again. Are teachers told things like this are inappropriate? Is there a code of ethics or some list of regulations? If not, I would not want to see her get in trouble. I'm pissed and if she were seasoned I'd say it's inexcusable. She is young and probably doesn't get why this is highly inappropriate and offensive.
Yes, teachers know that there are expectations of confidentiality. This information is reviewed many times.b what you describe is a violation of FERPA.
I'm a veteran teacher in MCPS and the only times that my administrators have discussed social media with us are to:
a) ask us not to be in contact with students via social media, and
b) ask us to watch what we ut up about ourselves on social media (pictures with alcohol, profanity, etc) no matter how "private" our settings seem.
I have better sense than to post personal details about my students on social media, but I'm a 40-something mom as well. Even so, I'm FB friends and IG followers of probably 200 other teachers (including those in SPED) and see countless postings with photos of students and identifying details about them. So, if this young lady is violating FERPA, so are dozens of other teachers across the country. Doesn't make it right, but they are doing it. So man be the information isn't as well and widely reviewed as people think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, you are going to really put her down, she's excited and wants to help. WTF. It doesn't take a genius to figure out she's a sn teacher and pictures of her students etc.... there is nothing wrong she didn't state names or the disability.
When you identify the school, you are making it clear where these kids can be found. While the chances some pedophile figures kids with SN are easier prey will come get the kids is below 1%, it should be the parent's decision whether the child's photo is posted and special needs status is revealed.