Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your daughter has good instincts to tell you about it. I would compliment her on her instincts. When kids say something was 'weird' they can be on to something that is 'wrong' but they don't know how to say it yet.
I would want to know why he needed to know her name and why he said 'hands up' to her. The earlier poster's suggestion asking the question of the teacher is a good one. We don't know the make up of the school, but I'm assuming it is majority white that he would find a hispanic girl and single her out (I agree with the PP who noted that even that part is odd).
I would tell my daughter that her instincts are correct and, even if it is flirting, it's not appropriate. It could be that he wasn't racial harassing her but is flirting with her (either way, your daughter is correct in giving voice to her instincts). Letting the resource officer know (indirectly) that you know what he did could get him to back off your daughter and not pay her extra attention.
Too often we tell kids to override their instincts when they meet someone and just play along or be nice. Your daughter did the right thing in saying something and you obviously have a good relationship that she wanted to share it with you.
+1
Anonymous wrote:If the propeller fits.......
DD and friends laughed it off, Spanish teacher obviously didn't think it was a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly do not understand the issue??
A person of authority singled out a student he didn't know and gave her an order from across the room. You don't understand what's wrong because you're not experiencing the low frequency stress of fearing that, on any given day, some authority could mistake your child for someone who should be arrested or worse.
Actually, the stress is high frequency these days. Whether the guy was flirting, just awkward or trying to make a joke, it's not funny.
For you, it's not something to concerned about. But every minority parent in a majority white environment has this extra concern. Some "mistakes" can't be undone.
Anonymous wrote:It is amazing to me that folks are trying to portray this as a helicopter situation.
This is not a situation where a kid in interacting with another kid or where a kid needs to deal with a teacher about an academic matter.
This is an adult authority figure at the school who went out of his way to make a borderline inappropriate "joke" to a teen girl he had never seen before. I am all for teaching kids that they need to self advocate and be independent. But time and time again, incidents between students and school employees have shown us that sometimes it is ok for an ADULT to ask a question or two. It is not helicoptering for a parent of a TEEN GIRL to ask about the context of a "weird" interaction between that girl and an ADULT MALE authority figure at the school.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly do not understand the issue??
A person of authority singled out a student he didn't know and gave her an order from across the room. You don't understand what's wrong because you're not experiencing the low frequency stress of fearing that, on any given day, some authority could mistake your child for someone who should be arrested or worse.
Actually, the stress is high frequency these days. Whether the guy was flirting, just awkward or trying to make a joke, it's not funny.
For you, it's not something to concerned about. But every minority parent in a majority white environment has this extra concern. Some "mistakes" can't be undone.
You're a racist.
And we aren't impressed with your 2 cent words.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like your daughter didn't think it was that big of a deal. It sounds like it was just an awkward comment he made in an attempt to joke/interact with your daughter.
If I pursued stuff like this, I would never get anything done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly do not understand the issue??
A person of authority singled out a student he didn't know and gave her an order from across the room. You don't understand what's wrong because you're not experiencing the low frequency stress of fearing that, on any given day, some authority could mistake your child for someone who should be arrested or worse.
Actually, the stress is high frequency these days. Whether the guy was flirting, just awkward or trying to make a joke, it's not funny.
For you, it's not something to concerned about. But every minority parent in a majority white environment has this extra concern. Some "mistakes" can't be undone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly do not understand the issue??
A person of authority singled out a student he didn't know and gave her an order from across the room. You don't understand what's wrong because you're not experiencing the low frequency stress of fearing that, on any given day, some authority could mistake your child for someone who should be arrested or worse.
Actually, the stress is high frequency these days. Whether the guy was flirting, just awkward or trying to make a joke, it's not funny.
For you, it's not something to concerned about. But every minority parent in a majority white environment has this extra concern. Some "mistakes" can't be undone.
You're a racist.
And we aren't impressed with your 2 cent words.