Yes, they give graded pop quizzes in classes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child returned from being sick and had to immediately take a quiz that day with the class that they had been told when they were absent. My child explained to the teacher they had been sick and didn’t even know about the quiz. Didn’t matter. The teacher made them take it. They failed it. I guess the teacher felt sorry for my child and allowed them to retake it. But what a jerk making them take it in the first place and causing undue stress on my child.
Sounds reasonable on the part of the teacher. Other option: kid sits there while everyone else takes the quiz. I'd consider it a practice run.
How long was your child out? One day or week or more?
No it was absolutely not reasonable to have a kid take a quiz for which they didn’t even know about and were not prepared for on the day they returned from illness. That’s not compassionate or fair.
I wonder what the teacher’s explanation would be. Was the child out only one day, but present for the two weeks the material was covered? Was the quiz announced, but this child didn’t hear? Did she say, “why don’t you give it a try and if you need a retake, we’ll do it?”
I’m guessing there’s more to this.
My child was able to see the posting on schoology of what they missed, but was unable to do any of the work because they were sick all weekend.
Your seriously this worked up about a quiz. Get help.
Do teachers still give "pop quizzes?" Sometimes it is a way for them to evaluate what they need to repeat--in other words, are the students "getting it?"
As I recall, a "quiz" was not the same as a test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child returned from being sick and had to immediately take a quiz that day with the class that they had been told when they were absent. My child explained to the teacher they had been sick and didn’t even know about the quiz. Didn’t matter. The teacher made them take it. They failed it. I guess the teacher felt sorry for my child and allowed them to retake it. But what a jerk making them take it in the first place and causing undue stress on my child.
Sounds reasonable on the part of the teacher. Other option: kid sits there while everyone else takes the quiz. I'd consider it a practice run.
How long was your child out? One day or week or more?
No it was absolutely not reasonable to have a kid take a quiz for which they didn’t even know about and were not prepared for on the day they returned from illness. That’s not compassionate or fair.
I wonder what the teacher’s explanation would be. Was the child out only one day, but present for the two weeks the material was covered? Was the quiz announced, but this child didn’t hear? Did she say, “why don’t you give it a try and if you need a retake, we’ll do it?”
I’m guessing there’s more to this.
My child was able to see the posting on schoology of what they missed, but was unable to do any of the work because they were sick all weekend.
Your seriously this worked up about a quiz. Get help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child returned from being sick and had to immediately take a quiz that day with the class that they had been told when they were absent. My child explained to the teacher they had been sick and didn’t even know about the quiz. Didn’t matter. The teacher made them take it. They failed it. I guess the teacher felt sorry for my child and allowed them to retake it. But what a jerk making them take it in the first place and causing undue stress on my child.
Sounds reasonable on the part of the teacher. Other option: kid sits there while everyone else takes the quiz. I'd consider it a practice run.
How long was your child out? One day or week or more?
No it was absolutely not reasonable to have a kid take a quiz for which they didn’t even know about and were not prepared for on the day they returned from illness. That’s not compassionate or fair.
If they let them retake it I seriously do not see a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child returned from being sick and had to immediately take a quiz that day with the class that they had been told when they were absent. My child explained to the teacher they had been sick and didn’t even know about the quiz. Didn’t matter. The teacher made them take it. They failed it. I guess the teacher felt sorry for my child and allowed them to retake it. But what a jerk making them take it in the first place and causing undue stress on my child.
Sounds reasonable on the part of the teacher. Other option: kid sits there while everyone else takes the quiz. I'd consider it a practice run.
How long was your child out? One day or week or more?
No it was absolutely not reasonable to have a kid take a quiz for which they didn’t even know about and were not prepared for on the day they returned from illness. That’s not compassionate or fair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child returned from being sick and had to immediately take a quiz that day with the class that they had been told when they were absent. My child explained to the teacher they had been sick and didn’t even know about the quiz. Didn’t matter. The teacher made them take it. They failed it. I guess the teacher felt sorry for my child and allowed them to retake it. But what a jerk making them take it in the first place and causing undue stress on my child.
Sounds reasonable on the part of the teacher. Other option: kid sits there while everyone else takes the quiz. I'd consider it a practice run.
How long was your child out? One day or week or more?
No it was absolutely not reasonable to have a kid take a quiz for which they didn’t even know about and were not prepared for on the day they returned from illness. That’s not compassionate or fair.
I wonder what the teacher’s explanation would be. Was the child out only one day, but present for the two weeks the material was covered? Was the quiz announced, but this child didn’t hear? Did she say, “why don’t you give it a try and if you need a retake, we’ll do it?”
I’m guessing there’s more to this.
My child was able to see the posting on schoology of what they missed, but was unable to do any of the work because they were sick all weekend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child returned from being sick and had to immediately take a quiz that day with the class that they had been told when they were absent. My child explained to the teacher they had been sick and didn’t even know about the quiz. Didn’t matter. The teacher made them take it. They failed it. I guess the teacher felt sorry for my child and allowed them to retake it. But what a jerk making them take it in the first place and causing undue stress on my child.
Sounds reasonable on the part of the teacher. Other option: kid sits there while everyone else takes the quiz. I'd consider it a practice run.
How long was your child out? One day or week or more?
No it was absolutely not reasonable to have a kid take a quiz for which they didn’t even know about and were not prepared for on the day they returned from illness. That’s not compassionate or fair.
I wonder what the teacher’s explanation would be. Was the child out only one day, but present for the two weeks the material was covered? Was the quiz announced, but this child didn’t hear? Did she say, “why don’t you give it a try and if you need a retake, we’ll do it?”
I’m guessing there’s more to this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child returned from being sick and had to immediately take a quiz that day with the class that they had been told when they were absent. My child explained to the teacher they had been sick and didn’t even know about the quiz. Didn’t matter. The teacher made them take it. They failed it. I guess the teacher felt sorry for my child and allowed them to retake it. But what a jerk making them take it in the first place and causing undue stress on my child.
Sounds reasonable on the part of the teacher. Other option: kid sits there while everyone else takes the quiz. I'd consider it a practice run.
How long was your child out? One day or week or more?
No it was absolutely not reasonable to have a kid take a quiz for which they didn’t even know about and were not prepared for on the day they returned from illness. That’s not compassionate or fair.
I wonder what the teacher’s explanation would be. Was the child out only one day, but present for the two weeks the material was covered? Was the quiz announced, but this child didn’t hear? Did she say, “why don’t you give it a try and if you need a retake, we’ll do it?”
I’m guessing there’s more to this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child returned from being sick and had to immediately take a quiz that day with the class that they had been told when they were absent. My child explained to the teacher they had been sick and didn’t even know about the quiz. Didn’t matter. The teacher made them take it. They failed it. I guess the teacher felt sorry for my child and allowed them to retake it. But what a jerk making them take it in the first place and causing undue stress on my child.
Sounds reasonable on the part of the teacher. Other option: kid sits there while everyone else takes the quiz. I'd consider it a practice run.
How long was your child out? One day or week or more?
No it was absolutely not reasonable to have a kid take a quiz for which they didn’t even know about and were not prepared for on the day they returned from illness. That’s not compassionate or fair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not racist. I had students of all races take off for two or three weeks in January. Yes, white children, too. The family was always on another continent. Always.
It’s discrimination, if you prefer that word. I want to take my kid out for just three extra days so they can spend a little more time with their grandparents. They’re elderly, and I genuinely don’t know how much longer my child will have the chance to be with them. We’re white, and the grandparents live overseas and cannot travel.
And now I’m being told that these three days of school—during a period when teachers are mostly focused on supporting underachievers—are somehow more important than my straight-A+ student spending irreplaceable time with aging grandparents?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child returned from being sick and had to immediately take a quiz that day with the class that they had been told when they were absent. My child explained to the teacher they had been sick and didn’t even know about the quiz. Didn’t matter. The teacher made them take it. They failed it. I guess the teacher felt sorry for my child and allowed them to retake it. But what a jerk making them take it in the first place and causing undue stress on my child.
Sounds reasonable on the part of the teacher. Other option: kid sits there while everyone else takes the quiz. I'd consider it a practice run.
How long was your child out? One day or week or more?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Growing up, many years ago, if I was out sick I called a classmate to find out what my homework was. I don't recall any illnesses that kept me out for more than a day or two at a time. I'm sure that any teacher I asked would have been kind and compassionate, however.
Of course, that was before the internet and assignments available online.
And, I was a teacher. If kids were out sick, I helped them when they returned--I don't remember contacting mom to tell her what I was doing to help her kid. So, mom--you may not be aware of what is happening in class.
This is a good point. I always post my plans (daily and weekly) online. Each entry has links to the day’s notes, slides, and assignments.
Students don’t need to ask me what we did during their absence because it is already available online, including any necessary instructions.
Not really making a case for the “gift” of attendance here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Growing up, many years ago, if I was out sick I called a classmate to find out what my homework was. I don't recall any illnesses that kept me out for more than a day or two at a time. I'm sure that any teacher I asked would have been kind and compassionate, however.
Of course, that was before the internet and assignments available online.
And, I was a teacher. If kids were out sick, I helped them when they returned--I don't remember contacting mom to tell her what I was doing to help her kid. So, mom--you may not be aware of what is happening in class.
This is a good point. I always post my plans (daily and weekly) online. Each entry has links to the day’s notes, slides, and assignments.
Students don’t need to ask me what we did during their absence because it is already available online, including any necessary instructions.
Not really making a case for the “gift” of attendance here.
What’s the better alternative? Should I gatekeep everything so students are forced to sit though my lessons?
Of course it’s better to get the lesson during class, with examples and ample class discussion. But if you’re sick, I’d like you to get the second best option: complete access to everything we discussed in class.
I’m sorry that’s not acceptable to you. If it’s okay, I’ll keep doing it because it’s the right thing to do.
I mean you’re not making a case why it’s more valuable for a high achieving kid to be in your class than having enriching experiences with their family— they’re not missing anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Growing up, many years ago, if I was out sick I called a classmate to find out what my homework was. I don't recall any illnesses that kept me out for more than a day or two at a time. I'm sure that any teacher I asked would have been kind and compassionate, however.
Of course, that was before the internet and assignments available online.
And, I was a teacher. If kids were out sick, I helped them when they returned--I don't remember contacting mom to tell her what I was doing to help her kid. So, mom--you may not be aware of what is happening in class.
This is a good point. I always post my plans (daily and weekly) online. Each entry has links to the day’s notes, slides, and assignments.
Students don’t need to ask me what we did during their absence because it is already available online, including any necessary instructions.
Not really making a case for the “gift” of attendance here.
What’s the better alternative? Should I gatekeep everything so students are forced to sit though my lessons?
Of course it’s better to get the lesson during class, with examples and ample class discussion. But if you’re sick, I’d like you to get the second best option: complete access to everything we discussed in class.
I’m sorry that’s not acceptable to you. If it’s okay, I’ll keep doing it because it’s the right thing to do.
Anonymous wrote:My child returned from being sick and had to immediately take a quiz that day with the class that they had been told when they were absent. My child explained to the teacher they had been sick and didn’t even know about the quiz. Didn’t matter. The teacher made them take it. They failed it. I guess the teacher felt sorry for my child and allowed them to retake it. But what a jerk making them take it in the first place and causing undue stress on my child.