I have worked in a public elementary school for over 10 years. The only way bad teachers end up leaving is if enough parents complain. So I would suggest you not only insist your child not be in the class of the yelling, mean teacher but you should also get your friends to do the same. Then maybe that teacher will either be gone or at least will be remediated and watched.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I taught school. One year I had an impossibly perfect group of kids. Seriously. They were fun, but every one of them was respectful. If they got rowdy--I could quickly calm them down. Not only were they respectful from me--they were respectful of one another.
My dad became ill and I had to go away for a week. The sub was a neighborhood person. They were great for her and she went back and told everyone what a wonderful teacher I was. The next year over half of my class were requests--we had a principal that year who honored requests--and, guess what? It was the year from hell. There were a couple of seriously disturbed kids in the class and it was one of the worst years of my teaching career. The moral: be careful what you wish for.
Sometimes the parents who are so determined to choose the teacher have the worst kids.
The worst kids? What does that even mean, teacher?
You know exactly what it means.
#realitycheck
#stopbeingsosensitive
The numbskulls who can't keep quiet in class, disrupting the other students who are there to learn.
Happy?
No, I actually don't. But I'd love for you to elaborate... Oh, you can't?
#growup
).
Anonymous wrote:My son got the horrible mean yelling teacher for math. She was fantastic and the best teacher so far that he has had.
The mothers who all warned us about her either had well behaved daughters.
All tht trouble boys (my son included) ended up in her class and every one of them loved her. They still talk about what a great teacher she was and how much they learned.
Some teachers are bad but some teachers are just a bad fit for certain personalities of kids.
On the note of requesting teachers, I always list areas we want to see our kids improve, what type of learner they are, and then complimemt the current teacher and say something like "Ms Z did a great job connecting wity my child and understanding how he learns. Please reach out to Ms.Z to see what type of teacher she recommends for my child."
Every one of my kids' teacher placements uave been fantastic for them and none of my kids have ended up with the same teachers.
Remember, coming out of K just about every parent will write "Larla needs a nuturing, creative teacher who is professional, organized, runs a calm, orderly and quiet classroom, and gets results by being loving amd encouraging." Especially if one teacher is known as a disorganized, disorderly yeller. You might ask for any teacher that is not like that teacher, but so is every single other parent coming out of K.[b]
Anonymous wrote:
So glad I'm out of Fairfax County....
Yes, all the other systems have perfect teachers and principals.
+1 = My child has a yelling teacher this year. He has turned from a fun-loving, happy kid who loved school into a bitter, grouchy kid with angry outbursts who dislikes school. These yelling teachers should be teaching older kids who they do not have such an influence on... Or better yet, find another career.