Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a slippery slope with letting one kid show off something they think is cool. Then every kid is going to want to. Or the questions start, and the teacher loses a solid half an hour that was already designated for a specific lesson. Sorry OP. It's a rock. Life goes on.
Plus 1 million. This in a nutshell!
-----Teacher
Yep.
Show & Tell are bygone days. I'm not even sure that "show & tell" is politically correct either.
So much for encouraging confidence, promoting speaking in a group setting, pride in ownership, and all the other positives from the 30 seconds of showing off something special to you as an impressionable kindergartner.
What do you mean by "politically correct"? Who is offended by the concept of show and tell?
Nobody. It's just PP's way of diminishing the rights of others who are legitimately marginalized by "non-PC" things. By suggesting somebody, somewhere is offended by something that is pretty much not offensive, it becomes easier to brush off those who complain about truly offensive things.
At our school, it is called "Share" and it happens during "Morning Meeting," and the kids know the time and place for it. Morning meeting is a time when every child in every grade is encouraged to speak in front of the class, every day. Also, at our school, OPs daughter would have been invited to add her fossil to the rock collection in the science area where everyone could explore it at the appropriate time (science rotations, independent study time, "choice" time, indoor recess on a bad weather day).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a slippery slope with letting one kid show off something they think is cool. Then every kid is going to want to. Or the questions start, and the teacher loses a solid half an hour that was already designated for a specific lesson. Sorry OP. It's a rock. Life goes on.
Plus 1 million. This in a nutshell!
-----Teacher
Yep.
Show & Tell are bygone days. I'm not even sure that "show & tell" is politically correct either.
So much for encouraging confidence, promoting speaking in a group setting, pride in ownership, and all the other positives from the 30 seconds of showing off something special to you as an impressionable kindergartner.
What do you mean by "politically correct"? Who is offended by the concept of show and tell?
Nobody. It's just PP's way of diminishing the rights of others who are legitimately marginalized by "non-PC" things. By suggesting somebody, somewhere is offended by something that is pretty much not offensive, it becomes easier to brush off those who complain about truly offensive things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a slippery slope with letting one kid show off something they think is cool. Then every kid is going to want to. Or the questions start, and the teacher loses a solid half an hour that was already designated for a specific lesson. Sorry OP. It's a rock. Life goes on.
Plus 1 million. This in a nutshell!
-----Teacher
Yep.
Show & Tell are bygone days. I'm not even sure that "show & tell" is politically correct either.
So much for encouraging confidence, promoting speaking in a group setting, pride in ownership, and all the other positives from the 30 seconds of showing off something special to you as an impressionable kindergartner.
What do you mean by "politically correct"? Who is offended by the concept of show and tell?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a slippery slope with letting one kid show off something they think is cool. Then every kid is going to want to. Or the questions start, and the teacher loses a solid half an hour that was already designated for a specific lesson. Sorry OP. It's a rock. Life goes on.
Plus 1 million. This in a nutshell!
-----Teacher
Yep.
Show & Tell are bygone days. I'm not even sure that "show & tell" is politically correct either.
So much for encouraging confidence, promoting speaking in a group setting, pride in ownership, and all the other positives from the 30 seconds of showing off something special to you as an impressionable kindergartner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was my exact thought when she told me today. Kindergarten isn't what it used to be. Sadly, I probably won't encourage her to send things in again. Sad.Anonymous wrote:I'm not a teacher but one thing I've noticed this year with my 1st grade dd is how strictly timed everything is. Like even the 8 seconds that each of them have to take a drink out of the water fountain or the timing of excess cleanup time that then gets subtracted from recess. (!!!)
So the first thing that popped into my head was that the teacher might not have/make time for "extras" which is a huge shame.
Honey. It's a rock. Buck up.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not a teacher, but as a mom of two, I see the problem. If one kid brings something, all will want to. Maybe you think the rock is cool, but my son collects sticks on our walks and would want to bring in a stick because he thinks it's cool. Multiply that by the number of kids in the class. I think the recess idea was a good one. She can still show it to anyone who is interested. Why does the teacher need to be involved with your daughters showing her rock?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. It's not just a rock, it's a fossil. It's cool but also educational. Shall we just extinguish any and all curiosity and desire to share something educational at school by kindergarten? Apparently, schools aren't for learning anymore, according to you people. They are just for turning children into mindless automatons.
Be a little more dramatic
A) There is pretty much no way it was actually a fossil
That's why it was such a teachable moment that was missed. It is rare to find a fossil and the teacher didn't care or didn't recognize it was a fossil. If the OP says it was a fossil, I believe her. The moral of the story is, if you find something cool, don't bring it to school.
And aren't most counties block scheduling these days to eliminate the jammed packed 45 min periods?
Anonymous wrote:You can't always trust a K's report of what exactly happened. Maybe the teacher wasn't annoyed at all, but the kid was annoyed she couldn't show it off the way she wanted. I wouldn't over think it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Middle school teacher here. I don't have time for that in a 45 minute class. There's just not.
I have my students sit down right away and start work. I do not let them come up to me in the beginning because they want to tell me a million things and ask questions. I have reminders posted on the board, and go over a few things verbally, which usually addresses most questions.
It may seem harsh but it is overwhelming when many students have different wants / needs / questions / concerns and your time is very limited. I understand where she is coming from. If they're not Learning about rocks right now; it just doesn't make sense. It brings the kids on a big tangent which is very hard to bring them back from and have them re focus.
Also, I don't want other students to think any day and be show and tell. Not when my class periods are 45 minutes long.
This is Kindergarten. Not middle school that OP is talking about.
And aren't most counties block scheduling these days to eliminate the jammed packed 45 min periods?