badblackpug
<font color=blue>If you knew her you would be shoc
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2005
- Messages
- 4,088
I'm basing that part of my post on this:
AP tells me to talk to the teacher whenever there are any questions. A couple times I call the teacher and we don't reach eachother
I don't know if the teacher said she'd call, but it sounds like the OP has made several attempts to contact the teacher.
I would also assume that if the assistant principal is saying that the teacher should know, then that the teacher should know.
The problem being is that this wasn't the original post. The original post stated nothing about how the OP attempted to call the teacher "several times" without reaching her. The original post stated that she was unable to talk to the teacher during morning hours due to her son's needs, and unwilling to rearrange her afternoon work schedule because in the past another teacher has said they would call and did not. There was never a point where this teacher was supposed to call and did not. There was never a definitive time set up for a telephone call. The story evolved as the thread went along. It went more from "the teacher should call me when I am available because we have extraordinary issues." to "I have tried to communicate with the teacher and she is not communicating."
Subsequent posts went on to say that public school teachers treat children like numbers and private schools do not, and that teachers can't see beyond their own "bubble." At one point she suggested that people/teacher were "clueless."
I think the subsequent posts are what got people so riled up.
There are a lot of public school teachers that go the extra mile. There are a lot that give up their personal time for their students, but there are some that just can't or won't for whatever reasons. That needs to be respected. I don't think it is fair to expect a call outside of the teacher's posted hours. I know that teachers have been burned in the past by parents abusing the privilege of the after hours call or the private information. I am not saying the OP would do this, but maybe the teacher, like the OP (who was reluctant to change her work schedule because she had been burned in the past) has been in this situation.
Again, if I felt that this were an emergency that involved my child's safety you can bet I would be at the school in person. If the teacher is truly refusing to communicate, then that is wrong, and the VP should be involved and concrete plans set up for a date and time in which to meet or communicate.
I think the implied insult to public school teachers was what was offensive. Both to parents whose children attend public school, as if to suggest that we are offering our children a substandard education, and, especially, to public school teachers, who often times give their all with little or no appreciation.



