Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers don’t GIVE grades. Students EARN the grade they get.
+1 I already commented on this thread earlier, but I'll add that I don't dislike ANY Of my students; I check my emotions at the door because all teenagers act in crazy ways at least some of the time. I've been shocked in the past to learn that a student thought I hated him/her: this was never the case.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers don’t GIVE grades. Students EARN the grade they get
Ha! Not this student, or this situation ... but teachers fit the class into a grade distribution bell curve, one that was been enforced by the school and school system. It's not about what they earn, only in relation to their peers and what grade the school allows them to earn (except for the very outliners)
Anonymous wrote:Teachers don’t GIVE grades. Students EARN the grade they get.
Anonymous wrote:Is this MCPS? If so, your DC can’t be graded on behavior so you can get the grade changed via the principal. The downside is that your child will think that his “funny behavior” is above reproach and he has FACS for the rest of the semester if not the year.
Teachers don’t GIVE grades. Students EARN the grade they get
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I am pissed for you! Fight back. It is not okay that she was vindictive, which she clearly was. At some point parents need to fight back. You may not be able to get grade changed and even though that stings now, it is not a huge deal In long run. But the administration needs to know who she is. Schedule meeting with Principal immediately. Most teachers are professional but this one is not. The last lab of quarter she got to stick it to an 11 year old that she doesn't like. What a bitch, call her out!
I absolutely would reach out to the teacher and request a meeting. And in that meeting, if she is unable to effectively defend giving him that F, I would be willing to call her out and say “based on what you have described, the grade you assigned to my son seems doesn’t seem based on what he actually earned. It feels punitive and a bit vindictive, frankly.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am shaking my head in disbelief.
The kid got a bad grade.
Who I here doesn't have a similar story? And did we all survive? Looks like we did!
OP, the amount of helicoptering you are doing is going to be 10 times more damaging to your child than a poor grade in a cooking class. This child will have zero resilience if his mother gets this worked up over the "injustice"! A teacher doesn't like your kid, so what? We all had teachers like that! It's not necessarily the ADHD, she just doesn't like him. So what? That will happen over and over to him and all of us in life.
Teach him to cope. Teach him that life isn't "fair". Teach him to shake it off. That's a far better use of your time than this eternal nonsense!
Completely agree. Also teaches him that behavior matters significantly, as it does every day in the real world. He's not 3 - 11 is old enough to know this, and learn the ramifications.