Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) You sound really tightly wound and so does your child. Take a deep breath. It's your anxiety and controlling nature talking. Unless your child has an LD or other kinds of special needs that would make them react abnormally to this situation they will be fine. 2) The teacher needs help. This is either because she's inexperienced or because the school is not helping her when she needs help. This is not on the students so stop fixating on them.
What the hell is this garbage response? OP does not sound "tightly wound".
Calm down OP. You sound hysterical.
I’m not OP and you’re an imbecile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. I agreed it’s not harassment yet, but the moment any of those kids screams directly in my child’s face, 100% I’ll do something about it. I usually will just write an email to the teacher, and if it repeats I’ll sent another one cc’ing the principal, letting them know I’m dead serious about escalating through a formal process. I’ve never had to do that, and to their credit, whatever issue my child had got resolved.
In this case there were at least 6 families complaining and threatening to leave the school which might have had some effect. The worst offender was missing school for the entire week so it’s possible disciplinary action was put in place. They also said there’s a new process for responding to class disruptions, we’ll have to wait and see how it works.
The suggestion to keep complaining to let them know you’re not ok with the situation is spot on. The teacher also needs backing to take action, she hinted that more can be done if parents complain and cc the principal.
Your posts make no sense. Public schools do not care if any families leave the school. Good riddance. I can't believe you have time to track when other kids miss school and speculate about disciplinary action. Your focus on describing these children as bad is getting kind of psychotic. This a problem with the teacher being incompetent or the school not giving her help. It is an adult problem that requires adult solutions.
Anonymous wrote:OP. I agreed it’s not harassment yet, but the moment any of those kids screams directly in my child’s face, 100% I’ll do something about it. I usually will just write an email to the teacher, and if it repeats I’ll sent another one cc’ing the principal, letting them know I’m dead serious about escalating through a formal process. I’ve never had to do that, and to their credit, whatever issue my child had got resolved.
In this case there were at least 6 families complaining and threatening to leave the school which might have had some effect. The worst offender was missing school for the entire week so it’s possible disciplinary action was put in place. They also said there’s a new process for responding to class disruptions, we’ll have to wait and see how it works.
The suggestion to keep complaining to let them know you’re not ok with the situation is spot on. The teacher also needs backing to take action, she hinted that more can be done if parents complain and cc the principal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just ask for your child to be moved to another classroom. We had a year like that and it was totally fine. Child still learned, made friends and had a fun year.
It sounds like you or your child have a lot of anxiety and in that case the focus should be on your child not on criticizing the other children.
LOL. No. “The focus” needs to be on disciplining the kids who are disrupting other kids’ ability to learn, not on OP kid’s nonexistent internet-loon-created diagnosis of “anxiety.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) You sound really tightly wound and so does your child. Take a deep breath. It's your anxiety and controlling nature talking. Unless your child has an LD or other kinds of special needs that would make them react abnormally to this situation they will be fine. 2) The teacher needs help. This is either because she's inexperienced or because the school is not helping her when she needs help. This is not on the students so stop fixating on them.
What the hell is this garbage response? OP does not sound "tightly wound".
Calm down OP. You sound hysterical.
I’m not OP and you’re an imbecile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) You sound really tightly wound and so does your child. Take a deep breath. It's your anxiety and controlling nature talking. Unless your child has an LD or other kinds of special needs that would make them react abnormally to this situation they will be fine. 2) The teacher needs help. This is either because she's inexperienced or because the school is not helping her when she needs help. This is not on the students so stop fixating on them.
What the hell is this garbage response? OP does not sound "tightly wound".
Calm down OP. You sound hysterical.
Anonymous wrote:1) You sound really tightly wound and so does your child. Take a deep breath. It's your anxiety and controlling nature talking. Unless your child has an LD or other kinds of special needs that would make them react abnormally to this situation they will be fine. 2) The teacher needs help. This is either because she's inexperienced or because the school is not helping her when she needs help. This is not on the students so stop fixating on them.
Anonymous wrote:Just ask for your child to be moved to another classroom. We had a year like that and it was totally fine. Child still learned, made friends and had a fun year.
It sounds like you or your child have a lot of anxiety and in that case the focus should be on your child not on criticizing the other children.
Anonymous wrote:This happens in every school OP. Get a grip.
This is a teacher and school problem. The teacher needs to learn better ways of managing the kids and the school needs to help her by separating those kids or moving some of those kids out of her classroom or providing another adult in the room.
This is not harassment and you are a fool if you think reporting it as such will get what you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s NOT normal.
It is these days. There are no real consequences for this type of behavior anymore.
My kids are in public ES--they haven't experienced anything like this. I volunteer and I don't see it either.
Anonymous wrote:OP. I agreed it’s not harassment yet, but the moment any of those kids screams directly in my child’s face, 100% I’ll do something about it. I usually will just write an email to the teacher, and if it repeats I’ll sent another one cc’ing the principal, letting them know I’m dead serious about escalating through a formal process. I’ve never had to do that, and to their credit, whatever issue my child had got resolved.
In this case there were at least 6 families complaining and threatening to leave the school which might have had some effect. The worst offender was missing school for the entire week so it’s possible disciplinary action was put in place. They also said there’s a new process for responding to class disruptions, we’ll have to wait and see how it works.
The suggestion to keep complaining to let them know you’re not ok with the situation is spot on. The teacher also needs backing to take action, she hinted that more can be done if parents complain and cc the principal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s NOT normal.
It is these days. There are no real consequences for this type of behavior anymore.
Anonymous wrote:That is not harrassment. I have not volunteered at my child's recess/lunch hours, but I can imagine it is loud and chaotic with many kids. They always ask for parent volunteers to help out. Except raising the concerns to school teachers/principal, or ask for the switch of seats or classroom, there's nothing much more parents can do for their being loud and screaming behaviors.