Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids are all younger but yes I think it’s normal.
Op here. Wow, that's really sad. It would never occur to me to not let my daughters take a lesson from a male for a reason like that. I suppose it makes sense, but it still doesn't seem right considering that most people have no qualms about letting a female give their child private lessons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, not normal. Just paranoid.
If you had been molested by a male teacher you might feel differently. How lucky you are!
Anonymous[b wrote:]No one on one situation where I could not see the lesson and instructor. This is weird, OP. [/b]I’ve been certified through a church licensing child safety program and we go o great lengths to never ever be alone with another child regardless of sex of child and adult. I taught Sunday School in the church gym and each “class” had one corner. Entirely open and w/o doors.
I also would never hire a male babysitter.
My teen nephews are in demand babysitters in their local neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Not normal. My kids would tell me if the guy did something creepy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids are all younger but yes I think it’s normal.
Op here. Wow, that's really sad. It would never occur to me to not let my daughters take a lesson from a male for a reason like that. I suppose it makes sense, but it still doesn't seem right considering that most people have no qualms about letting a female give their child private lessons.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are all younger but yes I think it’s normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not normal. My kids would tell me if the guy did something creepy.
Trust me from personal experience, once they've done something creepy it's too late. Not a good plan.
Anonymous wrote:Standard practice in safety training is to never have one child alone with one adult. It protects everyone. We try to make it a two-adult rule, but in a pinch multiple children also generally provides safety.