Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools take pictures all the time not a big deal
This is taken a step further. The children are identified as special needs. That is confidential information.
Who is sn and who isn't sn is hardly a state secret
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools take pictures all the time not a big deal
This is taken a step further. The children are identified as special needs. That is confidential information.
Who is sn and who isn't sn is hardly a state secret
I'm detecting a troll-like pattern of posts. It is confidential information.
It really isn't. The whole school knows who is and who isn't.
And now the whole world knows too! Awesome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools take pictures all the time not a big deal
This is taken a step further. The children are identified as special needs. That is confidential information.
Who is sn and who isn't sn is hardly a state secret
I'm detecting a troll-like pattern of posts. It is confidential information.
It really isn't. The whole school knows who is and who isn't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools take pictures all the time not a big deal
This is taken a step further. The children are identified as special needs. That is confidential information.
Who is sn and who isn't sn is hardly a state secret
I'm detecting a troll-like pattern of posts. It is confidential information.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools take pictures all the time not a big deal
This is taken a step further. The children are identified as special needs. That is confidential information.
Who is sn and who isn't sn is hardly a state secret
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools take pictures all the time not a big deal
This is taken a step further. The children are identified as special needs. That is confidential information.
Who is sn and who isn't sn is hardly a state secret
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools take pictures all the time not a big deal
This is taken a step further. The children are identified as special needs. That is confidential information.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: The new SN teacher strikes me as very green so I googled her to find out her past experience. (The school never shares this). I found her public FB and IG and she posts photos of students including mine and some self-congratulatory humble brag crap about how tough it is working with SN kids but just seeing their smiles blah blah. She's young and I doubt she meant to come across as full of herself and condescending about "special kids." We keep a low profile online and I'm highly annoyed she did this without permission. Names of kids are not there, but they are clearly identified as special needs and attending blah blah elementary. We don't want to offend her since DC gets lots of pull out and pull-in. I feel strange saying I found your FB and IG and please take down my kid's photo. On the other hand IMO she has no right and we want the photos taken down. There's an added piece I can't go into about why we don't post our photos online. WWYD?
OP,
Our schools explicitly forbids posting kids pictures on social media. If this were my kid's school she'd be fired. I would tell her straight out to stop posting. I would also report it to the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Facebook friends with a couple teachers who post pictures of their students all the time.
It's usually special events at school, such as when they had a reptile man come in, but sometimes just regular classroom pictures with captions like "I love these kids" or "what a fun day we had today!"
They are both public school elementary teachers. It's been going on for years. So probably not a law against it
Just because they do it doesn't make it ethical and it doesn't mean they are in compliance with school regulations. If there are no identifiable faces and it's just the backs of their heads as they watch reptile man introduce his critters then NBD. I'm not a fan of people plastering their own children all over public FB and IG accounts, but I'd rather see that then taking photos of other people's kids and displaying them without permission. It's creepy. You can say you love your job and post a selfie in front of your chalkboard. No need to violate the privacy of your students.
I'm just saying that they are veteran teachers who have hundreds of Facebook friends, including other teachers, and they have been doing it for years. No back of heads, clear as day pictures of kids faces. I am not a teacher and my children are not in public school, just adding to the conversation. Schools are public places, I wonder is that is part of the issue here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Facebook friends with a couple teachers who post pictures of their students all the time.
It's usually special events at school, such as when they had a reptile man come in, but sometimes just regular classroom pictures with captions like "I love these kids" or "what a fun day we had today!"
They are both public school elementary teachers. It's been going on for years. So probably not a law against it
Just because they do it doesn't make it ethical and it doesn't mean they are in compliance with school regulations. If there are no identifiable faces and it's just the backs of their heads as they watch reptile man introduce his critters then NBD. I'm not a fan of people plastering their own children all over public FB and IG accounts, but I'd rather see that then taking photos of other people's kids and displaying them without permission. It's creepy. You can say you love your job and post a selfie in front of your chalkboard. No need to violate the privacy of your students.