I don't know of any teachers (personally) who would treat a homeschooling mom as an outsider. My SIL home schools her children and I have no problem w/that. I feel that it's a parents right to choose the best education for their children. If that means private school, great; public school, super; home school, excellent. I could care less how you go about educating your child just as long as your child is getting the best education you can provide!!!!! The most important thing is whether your child is getting a good education and if you can personally provide that, I think that's wonderful.Lisa loves Pooh said:For me I homeschool...and on the first day of dance class this year--there are 2 moms who are teachers. I already fear the day when they ask what school my kid goes too. While I am not a professional teacher and didn't go to school for it, I can teach my child. And often, I do get treated like an outsider.
I did send her a nice reply explaining, but should I have had to? 
MushyMushy said:I made a big mistake opening this thread.
I've spent the past two days as a first-time student teacher and I'm really depressed about it. I'm nervous and not at all sure if this is what I want to do now.
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Pretty good considering I came in without any prep time. I had no lesson plans, no books (still have none for one class) and I have no room. I am a floating teacher. The student body has outgrown the school. They are trying to build a new building, but it will take a couple of years. Maybe then, I'll have my own room. As it stands now, I move from room to room for my classes. Not ideal, but I'm managing. My curriculum super. told me the same thing! We will get the details during our in-service in September.polyfan said:Just an aside- here is something that has come up for us this year. We have been told we are no longer going to have a soda machine in the teachers lounge. All sodas have been removed and we are not to have them at school even if brought from home). Also we are no longer allowed to have pizza parties as rewards, cannot bring in cookies or cupcakes as treats, and we can not give any type of candy(for example many teacher will give a piece of candy out when kids are playing review games, etc..) Is anyone else being told this?
My first year was VERY overwhelming. I remember my "professional partner" telling me to teach the "meat and potatoes" first and then the creative projects, etc. will come later. I followed her advice and had a very successful year!!MushyMushy said:I made a big mistake opening this thread.
I've spent the past two days as a first-time student teacher and I'm really depressed about it. I'm nervous and not at all sure if this is what I want to do now.
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Since when is a teacher posting very specific and valid problems with their students' parents "bashing".Wishing on a star said:Not to step on your thread, but
Since when is a parent posting very specific valid problems with their childs teacher 'bashing'.![]()
You know, this is a public forum, not the teachers lounge. I would say that the majority of people here on the CB are parents. It is sad that parents can not post their concerns without being called 'teacher bashers'.
If teachers want to parent bash, I am sure that there are a lot of education/teachers boards online where purposeful parent bashing might be a bit more appropriate.
Yes...take a look at a few of the posters here.mickeysgal said:Good for you. Believe me, those other parents were listening and now consider that parent an absolute a**. Good grief - are people really that self-centered?![]()
Don't you just love when karma comes back to bite people on the butt???barkley said:when i was finishing the last of my student teaching one of the parents was a holy terror. she never approved of any of the teachers her dd had ever had and was constantly complaining to the teachers, the principal, the board of education. she was convinced her dd was 'gifted' and though the kid clearly did not meet the criteria the school let her take the academic test not once but twice-both times to moderate success. she would instruct the child which assignments were/were not worth 'her time' (the kids) to do-and instruct her to not to do some. she would take assignments and 'pull out' what she thought was of value and just have the child do those portions. constantly complaining that the 'inept teaching staff' was the reason her child was not succeeding-they were 'holding her back when she should be allowed to pursue/determine her own academic destiny'(she also thought whatever classroom her dd was in should have the curriculum/pace driven by her dd's individual ability "the other kids will just have to work to keep up"
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the kicker was she was enrolled in a teaching program at the time and constantly pointed it out, saying her profs. had reviewed the assignments and concurred with her postion- when she became a teacher she would never....i was never so glad for a teaching placement to end. (oh and the dd was a little primadonna p.i.t.a. too-carbon copy of the mom).
flash forward 10 or 12 years and my dd goes to preschool-GUESS WHO THE DIRECTOR WAS????? yup, 'momma'-and she was the most disorganized, inept educator i've ever encountered (no lesson plans, no goals/expectations-it was a nightmare). she did'nt remember me (i was also going by my now married last name) BUT I REMEMBERED HER-but she knew i had a teaching background and would occasionaly vent about parents who don't understand what teachers go through-don't support the teachers/undermind their good works, how everyone assumes their child is gifted even when the are obviously NOT.....i listened for a time until i finaly could'nt resist one day-after she vented i said 'yeah i feel your pain, when i student taught at x school there was a parent who...". she was so supportive, agreeing the parent was a 'nightmare', 'arrogant', 'hope she decided not to go into teaching'....then she said 'wait, my dd attended x school-what year were you there?" i told her. "hm thats the same period dd was there-what classroom were you in?"-i told her, and then said 'but back then i was 'miss x'. she looked confused for a minute, then you could see the blood drain from her face as she realized who i was, and more importantly who the 'nightmare parent' (her words in the conversation not mine) was.
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I'm a nurse. Yes I would.ilovepooh said:A friend of mine who is also a teacher has a husband who is a doctor. He shares a lot of patient stories with her and then she tells them to us. (Of course there are no names mentioned.) You wouldn't believe some of things that people do!!!!![]()

No, they really don't. Anyone who deals with the public gets fed up sometimes, believe me. And they bash. And they vent. And it has nothing to do with professionalism or class. It has to do with being human.tiggersmom2 said:UH....I saw your link and exactly ONE doctor posted a "worst patient" story. Most doctors have more professionalism and class to post deragatory stories on a internet bb about patients.![]()

They don't need to because parents are very quick to unite and teacher bash on a thread without being told to!!!Lisa loves Pooh said:Truthfully--I don't know what threads are being referenced...but here and IRL I have yet to see a parent begin their complaint about something that happened to their child at school with their teacher with..."OKAY, let's unite, it's teacher bashing time".

I live by this rule:Dina said:I would have said something like that, but honest to goodness, I don't think she realized she was being mean. She's a pretty nice woman, just not the sharpest tool in the shed. I'm sorry I know that's mean, but seriously-- I don't know if she realized what she was saying-- she really thought she was having a nice conversation with me. You know sometimes when people say things and they are just don't get what they are saying.
Reminds me of a time in Disney (not a parent)-- I hadn't lost alot of the weight from DS#2, and a woman sitting next to us in Prime Time kept asking me if this one is a boy or a girl. Naturally I thought she was talking about my son sitting next to me rather than my son across from me (he was only a year old and his hair needed to be cut -- it wasn't really long (but I didn't keep it super short because I didn't want him to lose all of that baby fine hair yet). So I kept saying, no he's a boy-- looking at my son. She wasn't giving up, and I wasn't getting it. Finally she said, no the one you're pregnant with now (I wasn't pregnant). DH and I started cracking up, and her face got so white-- and her husband got mad at her. I felt bad, I felt like it ruined her meal. But, she just wasn't getting it, wouldn't you have dropped the question just in case the person wasn't pregnant-- kinda clueless-- I felt bad.
Lisa loves PoohFor me I homeschool...and on the first day of dance class this year--there are 2 moms who are teachers. I already fear the day when they ask what school my kid goes too. While I am not a professional teacher and didn't go to school for it said:Well, no offense, but if you aren't a professional teacher, then you aren't a professional teacher. You 're a parent who ahs teken on the huge responsibility of providing your child's education. In teaching circles, you are an outsider.
I can liken that to people who care for their fmaily members. They are "nursing" someone, but they are not nurses. So as far as being an "outsider" in a group of licensed nurses, they are. It's not good or bad. It just "is".
My mother thought I was gas when she was in labor with me.Lanshark said:I like to say I left a high paying job as a systems analyst because I felt a calling to be a teacher.
I'm beginning to think it was gas.

Disney Doll, you put that very well. ::agrees heartily::Disney Doll said:Well, no offense, but if you aren't a professional teacher, then you aren't a professional teacher. You 're a parent who ahs teken on the huge responsibility of providing your child's education. In teaching circles, you are an outsider.
I can liken that to people who care for their fmaily members. They are "nursing" someone, but they are not nurses. So as far as being an "outsider" in a group of licensed nurses, they are. It's not good or bad. It just "is".