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.
I'm a teacher and while I would love to post photos of my students because they are awesome, I don't do it. It is against policy to do this even though other teachers do it. Take a screenshot in case there is an issue of whether or not she did it. Then email the principal. If he/she needs proof, you will have it.
Anonymous wrote:I am Facebook friends with a couple teachers who post pictures of their students all the time.
It's usually special events at school, such as when they had a reptile man come in, but sometimes just regular classroom pictures with captions like "I love these kids" or "what a fun day we had today!"
They are both public school elementary teachers. It's been going on for years. So probably not a law against it
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.
Anonymous wrote:I would just take a bunch of screen shots and send to the principal or AP and ask them to speak with her about removing the photos. No need to out yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Let's say your child's teacher posts a picture of him and says something like "Love working with my slowest readers! They are dumb but so cute!" That would be cool with you, right? Because you don't want to "shutdown" sharing of student photos.
She didn't say that did she
Anonymous wrote: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.
Let's say your child's teacher posts a picture of him and says something like "Love working with my slowest readers! They are dumb but so cute!" That would be cool with you, right? Because you don't want to "shutdown" sharing of student photos.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holy hell she should know better. She's breaking the law. I'd email her principal ASAP.
Oh come on^^^^!! While I agree that she "should know better", please remember how green and naive you yourself were at your first professional job. I am 1000% sure that you made stupid mistakes and those around you also thought "Hmmm....Larla should really know better" but your co-workers were kind enough to NOT go to your boss - or in this case the principal of the school.
OP needs to deal with this directly with the teacher. Treat her like the professional adult that she is. She is an educated professional who made a mistake so give her the opportunity to fix her mistake and don't be one of THOSE parents that makes this teacher sour on being a teacher, especially a SpEd teacher.
Some of these suggestions are over the top. Approach the teacher and tell her that you are aware of your child being on social media and you are requesting that she remove it immediately before you take further action. You can put it in writing or if she is approachable (which she seems to be) then have a conversation with her. The going to principal, Superintendent, and school board are all over the top and will make it more than what it is. It is a exuberant new teacher excited about working with your child and probably hasn't read the handbook yet about using student images.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does she identify the students or the school?Anonymous wrote: The new SN teacher strikes me as very green so I googled her to find out her past experience. (The school never shares this). I found her public FB and IG and she posts photos of students including mine and some self-congratulatory humble brag crap about how tough it is working with SN kids but just seeing their smiles blah blah. She's young and I doubt she meant to come across as full of herself and condescending about "special kids." We keep a low profile online and I'm highly annoyed she did this without permission. Names of kids are not there, but they are clearly identified as special needs and attending blah blah elementary. We don't want to offend her since DC gets lots of pull out and pull-in. I feel strange saying I found your FB and IG and please take down my kid's photo. On the other hand IMO she has no right and we want the photos taken down. There's an added piece I can't go into about why we don't post our photos online. WWYD?
She identifies where she teachers in her "about" section so it is easy to figure out where all these kids went to school.My kid was not even aware of being photographed because many seem to be candid photos.
Anonymous wrote: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.
I think that is a very mature way to handle it. Since she is quite young, I don't think she understands the complexity of the situation and the view from a parents perspective. As a teacher, we do get talks about boundaries and privacy. However, as someone who was once new, mistakes can happen. See if this stops what is happening. If not, definitely go to the principal or even if it does stop you may want to write him/her an anonymous note about how teacher's social media should reflect the schools best interests.
Anonymous wrote: The new SN teacher strikes me as very green so I googled her to find out her past experience. (The school never shares this). I found her public FB and IG and she posts photos of students including mine and some self-congratulatory humble brag crap about how tough it is working with SN kids but just seeing their smiles blah blah. She's young and I doubt she meant to come across as full of herself and condescending about "special kids." We keep a low profile online and I'm highly annoyed she did this without permission. Names of kids are not there, but they are clearly identified as special needs and attending blah blah elementary. We don't want to offend her since DC gets lots of pull out and pull-in. I feel strange saying I found your FB and IG and please take down my kid's photo. On the other hand IMO she has no right and we want the photos taken down. There's an added piece I can't go into about why we don't post our photos online. WWYD?