+1Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1 The 6th grade male teachers are disorganized, do not even decorate their walls, don’t have organized bookshelves, and teach poorly off of Google slides. The female 6th grade teacher is the most competent and organized. Her bookshelves are all labeled, her room is decorated, she responds to email timely and writes weekly announcements, and she is highly organized.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably IS a great teacher which is why they have her a high needs class like this. The better the teacher you are, the harder the classes they give you because they know you can handle it. Parents think the good teachers are in the honors/AP classes which could not be more wrong. That’s where they stick the men who can’t do anything besides lecture and give notes because they assume the kids will be fine either way.
Why did you gender your comment?
-Male teacher
Because very few male teachers I’ve met or worked with have actually been good at teaching. They don’t know anything about scaffolding, avoid coteaching, and show weaponized incompetence when given lower grade level and/or higher needs classes until admin finally says “oh he can’t work with anyone but the seniors / the honors kids / the electives.” The heaviest lifting and labor in schools is generally put on women.
+1 I completely agree with you. My DS had a male 6th grade teacher who was totally incompetent. It was one of the worst years ever. However, the kids all liked the teacher because it was such a free for all and they could get away with just about anything in class.
This sounds like our experience as well. Maybe it’s the same school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably IS a great teacher which is why they have her a high needs class like this. The better the teacher you are, the harder the classes they give you because they know you can handle it. Parents think the good teachers are in the honors/AP classes which could not be more wrong. That’s where they stick the men who can’t do anything besides lecture and give notes because they assume the kids will be fine either way.
Why did you gender your comment?
-Male teacher
+1
That stood out to me too.
Male ES Teacher
+1
This really took an ugly turn. Another Male ES teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably IS a great teacher which is why they have her a high needs class like this. The better the teacher you are, the harder the classes they give you because they know you can handle it. Parents think the good teachers are in the honors/AP classes which could not be more wrong. That’s where they stick the men who can’t do anything besides lecture and give notes because they assume the kids will be fine either way.
Why did you gender your comment?
-Male teacher
+1
That stood out to me too.
Male ES Teacher
+1
Everything about teachers on DC Mum is pretty ugly.
This really took an ugly turn. Another Male ES teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably IS a great teacher which is why they have her a high needs class like this. The better the teacher you are, the harder the classes they give you because they know you can handle it. Parents think the good teachers are in the honors/AP classes which could not be more wrong. That’s where they stick the men who can’t do anything besides lecture and give notes because they assume the kids will be fine either way.
Why did you gender your comment?
-Male teacher
+1
That stood out to me too.
Male ES Teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably IS a great teacher which is why they have her a high needs class like this. The better the teacher you are, the harder the classes they give you because they know you can handle it. Parents think the good teachers are in the honors/AP classes which could not be more wrong. That’s where they stick the men who can’t do anything besides lecture and give notes because they assume the kids will be fine either way.
Why did you gender your comment?
-Male teacher
Because very few male teachers I’ve met or worked with have actually been good at teaching. They don’t know anything about scaffolding, avoid coteaching, and show weaponized incompetence when given lower grade level and/or higher needs classes until admin finally says “oh he can’t work with anyone but the seniors / the honors kids / the electives.” The heaviest lifting and labor in schools is generally put on women.
Anonymous wrote:She probably IS a great teacher which is why they have her a high needs class like this. The better the teacher you are, the harder the classes they give you because they know you can handle it. Parents think the good teachers are in the honors/AP classes which could not be more wrong. That’s where they stick the men who can’t do anything besides lecture and give notes because they assume the kids will be fine either way.
Why did you gender your comment?
-Male teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably IS a great teacher which is why they have her a high needs class like this. The better the teacher you are, the harder the classes they give you because they know you can handle it. Parents think the good teachers are in the honors/AP classes which could not be more wrong. That’s where they stick the men who can’t do anything besides lecture and give notes because they assume the kids will be fine either way.
Why did you gender your comment?
-Male teacher
Because very few male teachers I’ve met or worked with have actually been good at teaching. They don’t know anything about scaffolding, avoid coteaching, and show weaponized incompetence when given lower grade level and/or higher needs classes until admin finally says “oh he can’t work with anyone but the seniors / the honors kids / the electives.” The heaviest lifting and labor in schools is generally put on women.
You forgot the part where the male teacher goes on to become a principal, then moves into central administration and ends up running the district.
True true . The male history teacher who taught for 4 years to principal pipeline is strong.
Anonymous wrote:+1 The 6th grade male teachers are disorganized, do not even decorate their walls, don’t have organized bookshelves, and teach poorly off of Google slides. The female 6th grade teacher is the most competent and organized. Her bookshelves are all labeled, her room is decorated, she responds to email timely and writes weekly announcements, and she is highly organized.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably IS a great teacher which is why they have her a high needs class like this. The better the teacher you are, the harder the classes they give you because they know you can handle it. Parents think the good teachers are in the honors/AP classes which could not be more wrong. That’s where they stick the men who can’t do anything besides lecture and give notes because they assume the kids will be fine either way.
Why did you gender your comment?
-Male teacher
Because very few male teachers I’ve met or worked with have actually been good at teaching. They don’t know anything about scaffolding, avoid coteaching, and show weaponized incompetence when given lower grade level and/or higher needs classes until admin finally says “oh he can’t work with anyone but the seniors / the honors kids / the electives.” The heaviest lifting and labor in schools is generally put on women.
+1 I completely agree with you. My DS had a male 6th grade teacher who was totally incompetent. It was one of the worst years ever. However, the kids all liked the teacher because it was such a free for all and they could get away with just about anything in class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably IS a great teacher which is why they have her a high needs class like this. The better the teacher you are, the harder the classes they give you because they know you can handle it. Parents think the good teachers are in the honors/AP classes which could not be more wrong. That’s where they stick the men who can’t do anything besides lecture and give notes because they assume the kids will be fine either way.
Why did you gender your comment?
-Male teacher
Because very few male teachers I’ve met or worked with have actually been good at teaching. They don’t know anything about scaffolding, avoid coteaching, and show weaponized incompetence when given lower grade level and/or higher needs classes until admin finally says “oh he can’t work with anyone but the seniors / the honors kids / the electives.” The heaviest lifting and labor in schools is generally put on women.
You forgot the part where the male teacher goes on to become a principal, then moves into central administration and ends up running the district.
Anonymous wrote:+1 The 6th grade male teachers are disorganized, do not even decorate their walls, don’t have organized bookshelves, and teach poorly off of Google slides. The female 6th grade teacher is the most competent and organized. Her bookshelves are all labeled, her room is decorated, she responds to email timely and writes weekly announcements, and she is highly organized.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably IS a great teacher which is why they have her a high needs class like this. The better the teacher you are, the harder the classes they give you because they know you can handle it. Parents think the good teachers are in the honors/AP classes which could not be more wrong. That’s where they stick the men who can’t do anything besides lecture and give notes because they assume the kids will be fine either way.
Why did you gender your comment?
-Male teacher
Because very few male teachers I’ve met or worked with have actually been good at teaching. They don’t know anything about scaffolding, avoid coteaching, and show weaponized incompetence when given lower grade level and/or higher needs classes until admin finally says “oh he can’t work with anyone but the seniors / the honors kids / the electives.” The heaviest lifting and labor in schools is generally put on women.
+1 I completely agree with you. My DS had a male 6th grade teacher who was totally incompetent. It was one of the worst years ever. However, the kids all liked the teacher because it was such a free for all and they could get away with just about anything in class.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dear teachers, in case you didn't know, students talk amongst themselves. So when the highest grade in an non-honors class is a B- and majority of the class are Cs and Ds, maybe question if there is anything wrong with the way you teach.
I'm a teacher and I agree. If it's honors, OK, they signed up for something demanding. But if it's not, then there is something wrong if the average grade isn't at least in the low B's, high C's.
My child has a language-based learning disability, so she signed up for a regular English class this year (she does not receive IEP service hours during Engliah, but is instead monitored through her Strats class).
She tells me all the time how bad she feels for the teacher of that class. From what she can tell, at least 2/3 of the class are English learners, and she suspects that almost everyone else in the class has an IEP. She said at least 10%-20% of the class is absent each day, and the teacher has to give at least 20 reminders every day to make students close games on their computers or phones.
On a regular basis, she hears the other kids in the class say things such as:
"I don't do writing."
"I don't do projects."
"I'm not reading that book, story, poem, etc."
"I don't care if I fail."
How could grades possibly be a B average in an ENGLISH class if there are students who refuse to read, write, or do projects?
How could grades possibly be a B average if almost everyone in the class is learning English or has an IEP ?
How could grades possibly be a B average if 10%-20% of the class misses the class every day?
If my daughter's observations are correct, I feel bad for the teacher too. How discouraging to teach a class where the students refuse to engage. How do you teach kids ENGLISH if they refuse to read or write?
By the way, my son had this same English teacher two years ago, and she was a wonderful teacher. My son consistently reports that this teacher was one of the two best teachers he has had through all of school. He was also in a standard English class but his class was more typical than the one my daughter seems to be in this year.
IEP's and ESOL status don't lower grades. Grades in those cases are based on progress and meeting goals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably IS a great teacher which is why they have her a high needs class like this. The better the teacher you are, the harder the classes they give you because they know you can handle it. Parents think the good teachers are in the honors/AP classes which could not be more wrong. That’s where they stick the men who can’t do anything besides lecture and give notes because they assume the kids will be fine either way.
Why did you gender your comment?
-Male teacher
Because very few male teachers I’ve met or worked with have actually been good at teaching. They don’t know anything about scaffolding, avoid coteaching, and show weaponized incompetence when given lower grade level and/or higher needs classes until admin finally says “oh he can’t work with anyone but the seniors / the honors kids / the electives.” The heaviest lifting and labor in schools is generally put on women.
You forgot the part where the male teacher goes on to become a principal, then moves into central administration and ends up running the district.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dear teachers, in case you didn't know, students talk amongst themselves. So when the highest grade in an non-honors class is a B- and majority of the class are Cs and Ds, maybe question if there is anything wrong with the way you teach.
I'm a teacher and I agree. If it's honors, OK, they signed up for something demanding. But if it's not, then there is something wrong if the average grade isn't at least in the low B's, high C's.
My child has a language-based learning disability, so she signed up for a regular English class this year (she does not receive IEP service hours during Engliah, but is instead monitored through her Strats class).
She tells me all the time how bad she feels for the teacher of that class. From what she can tell, at least 2/3 of the class are English learners, and she suspects that almost everyone else in the class has an IEP. She said at least 10%-20% of the class is absent each day, and the teacher has to give at least 20 reminders every day to make students close games on their computers or phones.
On a regular basis, she hears the other kids in the class say things such as:
"I don't do writing."
"I don't do projects."
"I'm not reading that book, story, poem, etc."
"I don't care if I fail."
How could grades possibly be a B average in an ENGLISH class if there are students who refuse to read, write, or do projects?
How could grades possibly be a B average if almost everyone in the class is learning English or has an IEP ?
How could grades possibly be a B average if 10%-20% of the class misses the class every day?
If my daughter's observations are correct, I feel bad for the teacher too. How discouraging to teach a class where the students refuse to engage. How do you teach kids ENGLISH if they refuse to read or write?
By the way, my son had this same English teacher two years ago, and she was a wonderful teacher. My son consistently reports that this teacher was one of the two best teachers he has had through all of school. He was also in a standard English class but his class was more typical than the one my daughter seems to be in this year.
IEP's and ESOL status don't lower grades. Grades in those cases are based on progress and meeting goals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dear teachers, in case you didn't know, students talk amongst themselves. So when the highest grade in an non-honors class is a B- and majority of the class are Cs and Ds, maybe question if there is anything wrong with the way you teach.
I'm a teacher and I agree. If it's honors, OK, they signed up for something demanding. But if it's not, then there is something wrong if the average grade isn't at least in the low B's, high C's.
My child has a language-based learning disability, so she signed up for a regular English class this year (she does not receive IEP service hours during Engliah, but is instead monitored through her Strats class).
She tells me all the time how bad she feels for the teacher of that class. From what she can tell, at least 2/3 of the class are English learners, and she suspects that almost everyone else in the class has an IEP. She said at least 10%-20% of the class is absent each day, and the teacher has to give at least 20 reminders every day to make students close games on their computers or phones.
On a regular basis, she hears the other kids in the class say things such as:
"I don't do writing."
"I don't do projects."
"I'm not reading that book, story, poem, etc."
"I don't care if I fail."
How could grades possibly be a B average in an ENGLISH class if there are students who refuse to read, write, or do projects?
How could grades possibly be a B average if almost everyone in the class is learning English or has an IEP ?
How could grades possibly be a B average if 10%-20% of the class misses the class every day?
If my daughter's observations are correct, I feel bad for the teacher too. How discouraging to teach a class where the students refuse to engage. How do you teach kids ENGLISH if they refuse to read or write?
By the way, my son had this same English teacher two years ago, and she was a wonderful teacher. My son consistently reports that this teacher was one of the two best teachers he has had through all of school. He was also in a standard English class but his class was more typical than the one my daughter seems to be in this year.