Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they get overheated and puke or pass out because they were forced to wear a coat the teacher will learn the hard way.
Not that I’d ever make a child do something that would cause them to puke, but in general if you think a puking child has ever scared a teacher, you do not know what we see on the daily. Don’t threaten us.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. I make the kids wear jackets when it is cold, but they don’t have to zip them up. The ones that say they aren’t cold and don’t have a jacket come inside after recess and are freezing and can’t focus on their work. If it’s warmer, I let them take it off. I figure if a second grader’s parent sent them to school in a jacket, they want them to wear it. I don’t want any kid to be sweating like crazy and too hot, but if you send a coat and it’s winter, I ask them to wear it. And please please, put names
in coats and sweatshirts!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The point is most parents don't send their children to school with proper outdoor gear so the school has to make one-size-fits-all rules.
This. Tomorrow it will be around 25 degrees when kids arrive at my school. I’ll see kids wearing shorts and maybe a zip up hoodie and I’ll see kids dressed appropriately. The district rule is no recess below 40 degrees but even if it is 40 degrees, it’s still too cold for the kids in shorts. Stop making things harder for teachers.
They probably had to drop recess below 40 degrees because parents with no sense believe their children when they say they are fine with shorts in 25 degree weather.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The point is most parents don't send their children to school with proper outdoor gear so the school has to make one-size-fits-all rules.
This. Tomorrow it will be around 25 degrees when kids arrive at my school. I’ll see kids wearing shorts and maybe a zip up hoodie and I’ll see kids dressed appropriately. The district rule is no recess below 40 degrees but even if it is 40 degrees, it’s still too cold for the kids in shorts. Stop making things harder for teachers.
Anonymous wrote:The point is most parents don't send their children to school with proper outdoor gear so the school has to make one-size-fits-all rules.
Anonymous wrote:OP you have to understand that schools will never win with parents. Some parents would freak out if their child wasn’t made to wear a jacket when it’s 60 degrees out and some get mad that their kid was made to wear a jacket when it’s 60 degrees out. They have to choose a one size fits all policy made with health and safety in mind and it’s never going to make everyone happy.
Anonymous wrote:If they get overheated and puke or pass out because they were forced to wear a coat the teacher will learn the hard way.
Anonymous wrote:Or do they let them listen to their own body signals? My kid (3rd grader) came home from school today talking about how annoying it is that she was forced to wear her coat at recess since she only had short sleeves on underneath. She is running around and it's not that cold, and said she would've been fine without her jacket but when she took it off the supervisor told her she needed to put it back on and she said "but I'm hot" and she said "put your coat on now. It's a rule."
Anonymous wrote:No one has died wearing a long sleeve shirt and jacket in 50 degree weather
No one has died wearing a short sleeve shirt in 50 degree weather
You are talking about 30 freaking minutes. Whatever the rule is, if it makes the classroom run less chaotic, who the F cares?
Choose appropriate battles OP