Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you. These are helpful. What about the teacher who won’t respond to my emails asking about my kids? Do you just forward to the head of school after 24 hours (or what amount of time?)?
You have to give them more time. I don’t think it’s deliberate, unless you are pestering them. Teachers are crushed with time and I assume they wil get back to me eventually. If it has been a few days, I might send anther email.
Agree 24 hours seems like a short time, especially since you have no idea if the teacher is absent, dealing with a health issue, or slammed with other stuff. Also, it’s much easier to respond quickly to a message about “did you get the permission slip I sent in for Timmy’s field trip” than “how are my children doing in school following the death of a parent.” For the latter, I would want time to observe, think about my response, and then time to quietly craft a thoughtful email back and/or set up a check in phone call. This might not all be doable in a 1 day time frame. So I would assume the weight of the topic could affect the response time.
I think you should wait 72 hours or so and then follow up politely. Hopefully the teacher will respond within that time or at least give you an initial response like “hi, I have been watching her throughout the week and making some observations, I plan to follow up with a longer email this weekend.” If not, reach out to the school counselor or some sort of admin.
The best response by a teacher in that sort of situation is a quick response to confirm receipt of the email and then a mention about needing some time to properly consider the issue and when to expect a response.
When did we all become so distant?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you guys mean like, in the moment someone is ignoring you? Or like, you feel they disregarded your opinion on something?
I mean like when people literally don’t respond to something you ask them. Like, emailing a business partner or kid’s teacher, or sending a text to a kid’s team member’s parent and they don’t respond and it’s about something that affects your kid. Things like that.
Email them again. Then call. Then go up the chain (i.e. forward the email to the principal/manager).
For other parents, don't let them affect your kid. If they're supposed to bring something but they don't respond, then you bring it. I'm trying to figure out that scenario and how I couldn't just take the reins myself.
Anonymous wrote:I wish I knew. There is a mom I have to see frequently who does this to me a few times a year. I can’t wait until our kids aren’t on the same team and I can say bye biatch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you. These are helpful. What about the teacher who won’t respond to my emails asking about my kids? Do you just forward to the head of school after 24 hours (or what amount of time?)?
You have to give them more time. I don’t think it’s deliberate, unless you are pestering them. Teachers are crushed with time and I assume they wil get back to me eventually. If it has been a few days, I might send anther email.
Agree 24 hours seems like a short time, especially since you have no idea if the teacher is absent, dealing with a health issue, or slammed with other stuff. Also, it’s much easier to respond quickly to a message about “did you get the permission slip I sent in for Timmy’s field trip” than “how are my children doing in school following the death of a parent.” For the latter, I would want time to observe, think about my response, and then time to quietly craft a thoughtful email back and/or set up a check in phone call. This might not all be doable in a 1 day time frame. So I would assume the weight of the topic could affect the response time.
I think you should wait 72 hours or so and then follow up politely. Hopefully the teacher will respond within that time or at least give you an initial response like “hi, I have been watching her throughout the week and making some observations, I plan to follow up with a longer email this weekend.” If not, reach out to the school counselor or some sort of admin.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm sorry for your loss. Many people have horrible social skills and avoid people when they're uncomfortable with either the death or just saying no. It's no excuse, just an explanation.
How I proceed depends on the situation. Email teachers to have a record. Then you can forward it up the chain if they don't respond. If you say you can't seem to get a hold of Mr. X, then that leaves room for the supervisor to either have Mr. X respond or explain that he's out sick or whatever.
For coordinating with other parents, no response = not interested. Just move forward without them. If you need a ride for your kid, then their lack of response means they're not going to provide it. If you're trying to coordinate a group carpool, then just start a new thread with people who responded yes and say this is for the interested parents.
If you need input for work or something else, then put a deadline to provide input. Put it in email. If it's in a meeting then send a follow up email.
I'm sorry OP. Lots of people suck. Hugs to you and your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you. These are helpful. What about the teacher who won’t respond to my emails asking about my kids? Do you just forward to the head of school after 24 hours (or what amount of time?)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you. These are helpful. What about the teacher who won’t respond to my emails asking about my kids? Do you just forward to the head of school after 24 hours (or what amount of time?)?
You have to give them more time. I don’t think it’s deliberate, unless you are pestering them. Teachers are crushed with time and I assume they wil get back to me eventually. If it has been a few days, I might send anther email.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In any area of life, personal or professional. What strategies are effective? Especially when you can’t just walk away from the interaction/relationship, such as business partner or kid’s teacher.
I ask myself why I need so much attention
With people like you I always think wow....they must really be really unhappy to give responses like this. Why say anything.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you. These are helpful. What about the teacher who won’t respond to my emails asking about my kids? Do you just forward to the head of school after 24 hours (or what amount of time?)?