Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Total BS. If you are being told that(which I doubt) then have your kid email the teacher and the counselor together asking for the grades. No teacher wants your kid to fail. And No administration is going to let teachers get away with what you said. If they continue to get no response the counselor intervenes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My question is, if your student hasn't seen a grade since November, why hasn't they or you, asked? If I take a test and don't get it back the next day, I ask when we are getting the grade back. I'm an AP in Arlington and I promise you that I would get a million emails if a teacher pulled that. I don't buy this.
Because we're told they're too busy. Not to bug them. Not to ask. They have work weekends. They don't have enough time, classes are too big, etc. etc. Parents are told to back off, not helicopter.
And now, we're supposed to do these things? Which is it?
I think it’s really cute that you think the counselor and admin are going to intervene. Do you actually have a kid in the school system or not? Nobody’s intervening anymore.
Maybe in your pyramid. Not in ours.
Please list your pyramid, so that we can agree or disagree with it happening.
No one agrees on anything here so . . . no.
And, I don't care if you agree or not. I've seen it first hand.
OK, so now I know you’re lying. You’ve seen for firsthand that every single school in the pyramid has an updated gradebook incest because the principal and counselor enforce it. Every single school. Such lies. 😊
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Total BS. If you are being told that(which I doubt) then have your kid email the teacher and the counselor together asking for the grades. No teacher wants your kid to fail. And No administration is going to let teachers get away with what you said. If they continue to get no response the counselor intervenes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My question is, if your student hasn't seen a grade since November, why hasn't they or you, asked? If I take a test and don't get it back the next day, I ask when we are getting the grade back. I'm an AP in Arlington and I promise you that I would get a million emails if a teacher pulled that. I don't buy this.
Because we're told they're too busy. Not to bug them. Not to ask. They have work weekends. They don't have enough time, classes are too big, etc. etc. Parents are told to back off, not helicopter.
And now, we're supposed to do these things? Which is it?
I think it’s really cute that you think the counselor and admin are going to intervene. Do you actually have a kid in the school system or not? Nobody’s intervening anymore.
Maybe in your pyramid. Not in ours.
Please list your pyramid, so that we can agree or disagree with it happening.
No one agrees on anything here so . . . no.
And, I don't care if you agree or not. I've seen it first hand.
OK, so now I know you’re lying. You’ve seen for firsthand that every single school in the pyramid has an updated gradebook incest because the principal and counselor enforce it. Every single school. Such lies. 😊
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Total BS. If you are being told that(which I doubt) then have your kid email the teacher and the counselor together asking for the grades. No teacher wants your kid to fail. And No administration is going to let teachers get away with what you said. If they continue to get no response the counselor intervenes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My question is, if your student hasn't seen a grade since November, why hasn't they or you, asked? If I take a test and don't get it back the next day, I ask when we are getting the grade back. I'm an AP in Arlington and I promise you that I would get a million emails if a teacher pulled that. I don't buy this.
Because we're told they're too busy. Not to bug them. Not to ask. They have work weekends. They don't have enough time, classes are too big, etc. etc. Parents are told to back off, not helicopter.
And now, we're supposed to do these things? Which is it?
I think it’s really cute that you think the counselor and admin are going to intervene. Do you actually have a kid in the school system or not? Nobody’s intervening anymore.
Maybe in your pyramid. Not in ours.
Please list your pyramid, so that we can agree or disagree with it happening.
No one agrees on anything here so . . . no.
And, I don't care if you agree or not. I've seen it first hand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Total BS. If you are being told that(which I doubt) then have your kid email the teacher and the counselor together asking for the grades. No teacher wants your kid to fail. And No administration is going to let teachers get away with what you said. If they continue to get no response the counselor intervenes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My question is, if your student hasn't seen a grade since November, why hasn't they or you, asked? If I take a test and don't get it back the next day, I ask when we are getting the grade back. I'm an AP in Arlington and I promise you that I would get a million emails if a teacher pulled that. I don't buy this.
Because we're told they're too busy. Not to bug them. Not to ask. They have work weekends. They don't have enough time, classes are too big, etc. etc. Parents are told to back off, not helicopter.
And now, we're supposed to do these things? Which is it?
I think it’s really cute that you think the counselor and admin are going to intervene. Do you actually have a kid in the school system or not? Nobody’s intervening anymore.
Maybe in your pyramid. Not in ours.
Please list your pyramid, so that we can agree or disagree with it happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Total BS. If you are being told that(which I doubt) then have your kid email the teacher and the counselor together asking for the grades. No teacher wants your kid to fail. And No administration is going to let teachers get away with what you said. If they continue to get no response the counselor intervenes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My question is, if your student hasn't seen a grade since November, why hasn't they or you, asked? If I take a test and don't get it back the next day, I ask when we are getting the grade back. I'm an AP in Arlington and I promise you that I would get a million emails if a teacher pulled that. I don't buy this.
Because we're told they're too busy. Not to bug them. Not to ask. They have work weekends. They don't have enough time, classes are too big, etc. etc. Parents are told to back off, not helicopter.
And now, we're supposed to do these things? Which is it?
I think it’s really cute that you think the counselor and admin are going to intervene. Do you actually have a kid in the school system or not? Nobody’s intervening anymore.
Maybe in your pyramid. Not in ours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Total BS. If you are being told that(which I doubt) then have your kid email the teacher and the counselor together asking for the grades. No teacher wants your kid to fail. And No administration is going to let teachers get away with what you said. If they continue to get no response the counselor intervenes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My question is, if your student hasn't seen a grade since November, why hasn't they or you, asked? If I take a test and don't get it back the next day, I ask when we are getting the grade back. I'm an AP in Arlington and I promise you that I would get a million emails if a teacher pulled that. I don't buy this.
Because we're told they're too busy. Not to bug them. Not to ask. They have work weekends. They don't have enough time, classes are too big, etc. etc. Parents are told to back off, not helicopter.
And now, we're supposed to do these things? Which is it?
I think it’s really cute that you think the counselor and admin are going to intervene. Do you actually have a kid in the school system or not? Nobody’s intervening anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Former FCPS teacher. This has to be a troll post, but I'm happy to address what's been discussed across this thread.
Though not the majority, there ARE certainly teachers who are this lazy about posting grades and won't update for months. I don't recall if this is blatantly against policy, but at the very least it's against the guideline of one week turnaround time. Since I could see students' gradebooks for all classes, I had a good idea of which teachers were d!(king around, and it pissed me off because it makes teachers as a whole look bad. Unfortunately, guidelines and policies are only as good as admin's willingness to hold their teachers to them.
As to teacher quality, there is still a decent number of dedicated, intelligent, highly professional teachers keeping at it, no matter how hard the job has gotten. But let's face it - the bar to entry in teaching has always been pretty low, and with the exodus over recent years, has only gotten lower as districts take more desperate measures to fill positions (e.g. the teacher trainee program). As more underqualified people replace veterans, yes, on average the quality will drop.
But I have to laugh at anyone saying that teachers couldn't hack it in a "typical" job. Having been blindsided by the laziness and unprofessionalism that abounds in the "real world," I would say that many of the laziest teachers would do just fine.
I'm literally sitting here on the job, posting on DCUM, making more than teaching, while practically begging my manager for something relevant to do. Either my job isn't "typical," or people just have way overinflated opinions of what they do.
Anonymous wrote:Request a meeting with the teacher to discuss your student's performance in the class, and potential remedial help he may need. Clearly he's not getting the subject, so get to the bootn of what's preventing him. If he got a D, then he's likely in the bottom quarter of the class, and 3/4 th of class is doing better than him, without worrying about the mechanics of gradebook updates.
Anonymous wrote:Total BS. If you are being told that(which I doubt) then have your kid email the teacher and the counselor together asking for the grades. No teacher wants your kid to fail. And No administration is going to let teachers get away with what you said. If they continue to get no response the counselor intervenes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My question is, if your student hasn't seen a grade since November, why hasn't they or you, asked? If I take a test and don't get it back the next day, I ask when we are getting the grade back. I'm an AP in Arlington and I promise you that I would get a million emails if a teacher pulled that. I don't buy this.
Because we're told they're too busy. Not to bug them. Not to ask. They have work weekends. They don't have enough time, classes are too big, etc. etc. Parents are told to back off, not helicopter.
And now, we're supposed to do these things? Which is it?