Anonymous wrote:Strict is good. It's sad that strictness is so rare these days as to be worthy of comment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems to me that OP's DD (and OP) has a hard time picking up the subtlety of a dry sense of humor. He sounds to me like a great teacher and in addition to learning to communicate appropriately perhaps the DD will learn a bit more about different styles of communicating.
FWIW, I would take what she reports as the teacher joking when it comes to the candy. Serious about the kids speaking appropriately in class and probably not likely to come down super hard on language slip-ups if he can tell the kids are sincerely working on it, apologize quickly after a mistake. I would be very surprised if the teacher is calling parents about it unless it is a repeated disrespect of class rules situation. Sure he's being super hard on them right now -- effective teachers have to be tough at the beginning of the year while setting expectations.
My DS griped all through the start of 6th grade about how "mean" his band teacher was. Then he liked her. Recently he was explaining to DD (who will be in band next year) that Ms. X is mean but great and it's ok because good band teachers have to be kind of mean.
I would have thought that too. But it does not appear that this is a dry sense of humor which I actually appreciate. He just seems very strict. He sent home a sheet with the classroom grading policy for parents to sign to be brought in the next day. A few kids did not bring it in the following day but the day later. This sheet counted as a grade and the ones who brought it in the second day received a 75% because it was a day late. This was the first week of school! I'd like to be proven wrong and hope that he is being so strict in the beginning to set the tone for the year. I will meet him next week at the Back-to-School night.
Anonymous wrote:It seems to me that OP's DD (and OP) has a hard time picking up the subtlety of a dry sense of humor. He sounds to me like a great teacher and in addition to learning to communicate appropriately perhaps the DD will learn a bit more about different styles of communicating.
FWIW, I would take what she reports as the teacher joking when it comes to the candy. Serious about the kids speaking appropriately in class and probably not likely to come down super hard on language slip-ups if he can tell the kids are sincerely working on it, apologize quickly after a mistake. I would be very surprised if the teacher is calling parents about it unless it is a repeated disrespect of class rules situation. Sure he's being super hard on them right now -- effective teachers have to be tough at the beginning of the year while setting expectations.
My DS griped all through the start of 6th grade about how "mean" his band teacher was. Then he liked her. Recently he was explaining to DD (who will be in band next year) that Ms. X is mean but great and it's ok because good band teachers have to be kind of mean.
Anonymous wrote:
OP here. I really do not think the teacher is trying to be humorous. He told the class that last year he received 300 candy bars from his students as if he expected the same this year. I just asked my daughter what the banished words/phrases are:
OMG
Oh my gosh
oh my God
literally
I hate
like
any text talk: LOL, legit, etc.
Someone got spoken to harshly for saying "LOL" yesterday.
He spoke harshly to a kid who said "LOL" He said "Why would you say LOL when you didn't laugh out loud?"
Anonymous wrote:It seems to me that OP's DD (and OP) has a hard time picking up the subtlety of a dry sense of humor. He sounds to me like a great teacher and in addition to learning to communicate appropriately perhaps the DD will learn a bit more about different styles of communicating.
FWIW, I would take what she reports as the teacher joking when it comes to the candy. Serious about the kids speaking appropriately in class and probably not likely to come down super hard on language slip-ups if he can tell the kids are sincerely working on it, apologize quickly after a mistake. I would be very surprised if the teacher is calling parents about it unless it is a repeated disrespect of class rules situation. Sure he's being super hard on them right now -- effective teachers have to be tough at the beginning of the year while setting expectations.
My DS griped all through the start of 6th grade about how "mean" his band teacher was. Then he liked her. Recently he was explaining to DD (who will be in band next year) that Ms. X is mean but great and it's ok because good band teachers have to be kind of mean.
So it is a micro aggression for some people...Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok..once more, listen carefully: This is NOT an issue with religion or cursing. It's tween-age disrespect...that's all. It has nothing to do with GOD.
This entire thread could be held up as an example as to why decisions made about education by people who ARE NOT educators never work. People are clueless as to what children are like today.
OH MY GOD!![]()
OP here. The teacher said that the restriction against Oh my God and Oh my gosh were specifically because it's insulting to others because of saying "God" or the substitute "Gosh" which is why he told the kids to say, "Oh my goodness gracious" instead. The others like OMG, LOL and Legit was because it's text talk. The others like "I hate" and "Shut up" were because it's rude (which I agree with).
As to some other questions people asked me:
This is my daughter's 3rd year in this middle school. She is in 8th grader. We haven't had this type of policy in any of her 6th or 7th grade classes or from the other 8th grade teachers this year.
This is not a school in the DC area (although we used to live there which is why I am on the board).
I haven't heard that this is a "beloved" teacher or otherwise. There are only two 8th grade math teachers and the other one won "teacher of the year" a couple of years back.
Anonymous wrote:Ok..once more, listen carefully: This is NOT an issue with religion or cursing. It's tween-age disrespect...that's all. It has nothing to do with GOD.
This entire thread could be held up as an example as to why decisions made about education by people who ARE NOT educators never work. People are clueless as to what children are like today.
OH MY GOD!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Lumpish codpiece is not appropriate for a child. You know what it means, so why recommend it?
Oh, good grief.
As far as I can tell, there is no "lumpish codpiece" in any of Shakespeare's writings. Lumpish yes, and codpiece yes, but not together.
Anonymous wrote:I'm from New York, and until recently I had never heard that Oh my God was any kind of curse or swearing unless you traveled back in time a few hundred years. Up there it is uttered so often and so constantly by absolutely everyone that even a priest wouldn't raise an eyebrow - and might actually use the phrase himself. So it is completely bizarre to me that people down here say it's swearing - to me that is a uber religious and old-fashioned idea. So when teachers here take offense to it, I get angry - I am an atheist and feel strongly that this is Christian imposition on everyone else (of the Jesus freak variety, not even the normal kind of Christian). I don't know if this is common down here in the south, but it really irks me, to the point of hoping someone brings a lawsuit or something.
Anonymous wrote:not worth critiquing. and "OMG" often comes with attitude from middle schoolers.