courtneymarieclare
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2009
- Messages
- 112
As a teacher, I have two things to add:
1.) Just because there were other kids in the class who also did not follow directions does not mean the directions were not clearly given by the teacher. I teach high school and I can explain things until I am blue in the face and even write it on the board and many, many of them still do not know what to do. It's because they were not listening. It's very frustrating to explain things over and over again and still have them done wrong. Yes, it's my job to explain things clearly. It's their jobs as students to listen. After an explanation, if something is not clear, the child needs to ask. I can't read minds.
2. To the poster that stated they are keeping all of their child's work because they are sure that the teacher is going to mess up because they are not putting grades in the computer in a timely manner--I agree with keeping everything, however, don't just assume the teacher is going to mess up. As a new teacher, she/he is probably very overwhelmed and may still be trying to learn the system. Also, I'll admit that I don't always put grades in the online system in a timely manner, but eventually I do and I can concretely say that I've never lost anything. Everytime a child has a missing assignment and they say they are sure they turned it in and that I have lost it, I tell them to look in their bookbag. They always find the supposed "lost" assignment. Have faith in your child's teacher!
1.) Just because there were other kids in the class who also did not follow directions does not mean the directions were not clearly given by the teacher. I teach high school and I can explain things until I am blue in the face and even write it on the board and many, many of them still do not know what to do. It's because they were not listening. It's very frustrating to explain things over and over again and still have them done wrong. Yes, it's my job to explain things clearly. It's their jobs as students to listen. After an explanation, if something is not clear, the child needs to ask. I can't read minds.
2. To the poster that stated they are keeping all of their child's work because they are sure that the teacher is going to mess up because they are not putting grades in the computer in a timely manner--I agree with keeping everything, however, don't just assume the teacher is going to mess up. As a new teacher, she/he is probably very overwhelmed and may still be trying to learn the system. Also, I'll admit that I don't always put grades in the online system in a timely manner, but eventually I do and I can concretely say that I've never lost anything. Everytime a child has a missing assignment and they say they are sure they turned it in and that I have lost it, I tell them to look in their bookbag. They always find the supposed "lost" assignment. Have faith in your child's teacher!

I played along and sent them back.





), I just cannot imagine not accepting math work that had the entire sheet done rather than just 5 problems.
So a 100% (A+)goes right to a 70%(D).
I know that in my case if I had told you to work on the specified problems in class, you would have gotten one warning. After that I would have taken up whatever you were working on and repeated my instructions to do what I asked. It wouldn't have mattered that you had already done it once. I would have expected you to do what I told you while you were in class.
What a wonderful lesson to teach a child.