FlightlessDuck
Y kant Donald fly?
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2006
- Messages
- 21,800
Most teachers in the elementary school give out their home numbers.
I've never seen that in my kids' school, and I wouldn't expect it.
Most teachers in the elementary school give out their home numbers.

The teacher is not married and has no kids, as an fyi.
and she said, "I guess you don't want to talk to me" Honestly, I really don't at that time.This bothers me. I am not married and I don't have kids, but my time is just as important to me as my colleagues time is to them. The teacher should not be expected to do things that other teachers are not doing just because of her family makeup. I have a dog that I have to get home to. To me, that's just as important.
You have to be willing to work with the teacher and not blame her for not having time when you have time.
I mentioned that I do call parents from my cell phone (I don't openly hand out my number though) and some of them will call me back on that number because I don't block it. I had a parent recently that called me 4 times in one day and left messages at school. The secretary said she was getting nastier each time. The problem? That day I had a prep period in the morning. I didn't get the first message until lunch and I tried to call her on my lunch period, I got her voicemail and left a message saying I was trying to return her call. If I'm teaching, there is no option for me to call or answer a call. I tried again after school, went right to voicemail again. When I got home, I turned my cell phone off. When I turned it back on the next morning there was a voicemail message from the mother from 9:47 the night beforeand she said, "I guess you don't want to talk to me" Honestly, I really don't at that time.
Everyone deserves that! I'm sure you will find a way to get him taken care of while not unfairly infringing on the teacher's time. Our school system, does not allow phone calls, email or hand written notes concerning students. Any issues must be discussed face to face, they are available several different times during the week for conferences. We also can't set this up with teachers, only the office.
You know when you can speak with her so why don't you get a sitter to stay with your son while you are on the phone? Or his father? neighbor? No one ever relieves you other times?
You can't rearrange your clients by 15 minutes one day? but you want her to have the school find and pay for a sub so she can meet with you during the school day? As a tax payer I don't like that.
It also sounds like you are already blaming her for something that she hasn't done yet. You said other people at the school have said they would call and didn't-Has she ever done that?, you can't blame her for others actions.
I'm sorry but you do have some responsibility to arrange care so you can speak to her just as you would if you had a baby at home and needed to meet with the teacher.
Wow that is really strict! So how do you even schedule a conference then? Can you write a not that says 'we need to have a conference?" Or does that violate the policy? I would think that would be a pain in the rear.
it would also never survive an IEP. There is no reason for a face to face meeting with a teacher to discuss if there has been any change in behavior in the classroom during medication trials etc.. Its a waste of both the parents and teachers time, when a simple note home will suffice.
I understand the REASONING behind the rule (to protect student privacy), but the school would grow REAL tired of my family very quickly! (we see notes DAILY on my youngests behavior)
I have to call the school office and request conference, the secretaries have the teachers schedules and will make appt right away. The teachers will send a note home requesting a meeting if need be.
I was not a happy camper about it at first, but have since gotten with the program ; ), nothing else I can do.
as a parent- if you had a concern and the teacher and you were unable to connect before the end of the school day would you think a teacher would, in certain circumstances make a call outside of school hours?
OP here- In response to this and others- this ? seems to have taken on a life of its own. It would have taken pages to explain all the details and what has been tried.
The question was..
as a parent- if you had a concern and the teacher and you were unable to connect before the end of the school day would you think a teacher would, in certain circumstances make a call outside of school hours?
to a teacher- if you and a child with multiple complicated needs were unable to connect, would you make a phone call after school hrs?
OP here- In response to this and others- this ? seems to have taken on a life of its own. It would have taken pages to explain all the details and what has been tried.
The question was..
as a parent- if you had a concern and the teacher and you were unable to connect before the end of the school day would you think a teacher would, in certain circumstances make a call outside of school hours?
to a teacher- if you and a child with multiple complicated needs were unable to connect, would you make a phone call after school hrs?
A Couple clarifications-
I attempted to call her during those hours, she was unavailable. That is why the discussion is her calling me. I would never call her at home. No, there is no husband, neighbor etc, unfortunately. Which is why when I can only work when he attends school whioch is scattered, taking off is difficult for something that may happen. I take off all the time for meetings and have stated I am available any day ds is in school for a conference at 1. Then I know it will happen. Conferences sometimes take days/weeks to schedule and are a bit overkill for something that can happen in a 10 min conversation. And, there will probably be another need for a conversation this yr at some time. Yes, with my typical babies, I could leave them with someone else if need be, not DS. There is nothing I can do about the A.M. when I am with him, and it is possible only another parent of a special needs child who needs supervision every minute can get that. Email is the general mode of communication and has been all yr. The administration is who told me to talk to the teacher not the nurse about concerns in the class. I do talk to the nurse, who is available and genuinely cares about DS.
I'm sure I have missed some points but those are a few to demonstrate the impossibility of giving all the details here.
So, it seems the answer is, it really depends on the teacher if they would take that 10 mins out of their private life in order to have a conversation when email, talking to other staff, attempting phone calls, etc did not work. ( What makes me consistently available whenever a phone call were to come in the evening is that I have older children who are home that can watch him for 10 mins) My question was not looking for advice, although one PP made a good suggestion I will try, but out of curiosity-
Are the teachers this year typical or have the other 14 yrs I have had children in school (most private) been typical? I have never had this before. Although, I will say, in private school there was never a time that I felt like my child was just a number and that has been often these last 3 years in public. Unfortunately, private is no longer an option due to circumstances.
I'm not sure that they've done it every year but many, many years they have.
