Anonymous wrote:"Disruptive kids. Who is at fault, the parents or the kid?"
There. I fixed your title. This is an absolutely ridiculous post aimed at, once again, blaming teachers.
Everyone thinks they know how to teach since they went to school once. Schools have changed dramatically in the last 50 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty much the only punishment teachers are allowed to use is taking away recess, and the parents absolutely howl if you do that because “it’s not developmentally appropriate for kids full of energy” so I’d love to know what punishment they’d accept for their darlings. They are terribly disruptive and the parents just excuse it with “they’re social and love talking with their friends” provided that the friends are the right ones from the good neighborhood.
I’m envious of any teacher that is allowed to take away recess.
Even when I started teaching in public school 20 years ago, we weren’t allowed to take away recess
Teachers truly have their hands tied in trying to deal with misbehavior.
It’s for this reason, along with parents like the OP I walked away from teaching without a means of earning a comparable income.
Anonymous wrote:Tell us about these many situations where you’ve seen teachers and yet you’re not a teacher. Doubt it.
It’s the PARENTS fault. Parenting has shifted massively. They are afraid of making their kids sad so they give them what they want. They allow kids to negotiate everything—bedtime, meals, screen time. I’ve seen kids in stores whine because they want a toy and the parent gets it for them so they don’t have to hear the whining. Nowadays strollers have babies holding phones instead of looking at the world. Parents put on videos instead of reading to their kids. It’s absolutely insane. I was in another country over spring break and didn’t see a single child—baby, toddler, elementary school aged kid, even tween—with a device in their hands. Not one. And over here? It’s common place. No more delayed gratification. No more “you better listen to your teacher,” now it’s “why did the teacher yell at you? I’ll go talk to them.”
It’s really really bad now.
Anonymous wrote:Pretty much the only punishment teachers are allowed to use is taking away recess, and the parents absolutely howl if you do that because “it’s not developmentally appropriate for kids full of energy” so I’d love to know what punishment they’d accept for their darlings. They are terribly disruptive and the parents just excuse it with “they’re social and love talking with their friends” provided that the friends are the right ones from the good neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents are to blame for not teaching discipline and manners and following through. Put the blame where it belongs: at home.
While I do think parents need to do more, kids often act different at school than at home. We absolutely would back any punishment a teacher doled out.
My middle child is very difficult at home, but apparently is an angel and even a leader at school. It boggles our mind. The kid that the teacher sees is not necessarily the kid that the parents see.
Anonymous wrote:The parents are to blame for not teaching discipline and manners and following through. Put the blame where it belongs: at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The parents are to blame for not teaching discipline and manners and following through. Put the blame where it belongs: at home.
They also don’t back up teachers when their child misbehaves. They stamp their feet and say “not little Jackson!”
When I lifeguarded in my teens, we would put kids in timeout for breaking the rules and their parents were fine with it. Now parents protest when a guard blows a whistle to tell a kid to stop jumping off the board when another child is still in the well.
It’s the parents.
Anonymous wrote:The parents are to blame for not teaching discipline and manners and following through. Put the blame where it belongs: at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s awful. I’m on a group chat for the grade and the moms are constantly complaining about one teacher. “Jackson says she yells all the time and he feels uncomfortable at school. I’ve complained to the principal but nothings getting done. She won’t let him sit with his friends” Jackson is a disruptive little jerk and the teacher is at her wits end!!! Tell your kid to listen to his teacher instead of always taking his side!
This is kind of the point though. How is the parent actually supposed to know what is happening in the classroom? How does she from afar "correct" the kid for conduct she can't see and doesn't know about? Jackson is manipulating mom, or maybe truly feels they way he does and can't see the bigger picture. What is the teacher telling mom?
Jackson’s mom needs to contact the teacher directly instead of gossiping in the chat. Find out what is going on and work with teacher to improve the situation.
More likely Jackson’s mom thinks her kid is just amazing and can do no wrong. Or simply can’t be bothered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s awful. I’m on a group chat for the grade and the moms are constantly complaining about one teacher. “Jackson says she yells all the time and he feels uncomfortable at school. I’ve complained to the principal but nothings getting done. She won’t let him sit with his friends” Jackson is a disruptive little jerk and the teacher is at her wits end!!! Tell your kid to listen to his teacher instead of always taking his side!
This is kind of the point though. How is the parent actually supposed to know what is happening in the classroom? How does she from afar "correct" the kid for conduct she can't see and doesn't know about? Jackson is manipulating mom, or maybe truly feels they way he does and can't see the bigger picture. What is the teacher telling mom?