Bbgrizzle said:
There are NO instances where I would tell her to just up and leave the room without permission. She needs to explain to the teacher exactly what the problem is so that the teacher can make the right decision. I will never encourage my child to break the rules.
So if your 7th grade DD gets her period in class and asks to leave the room and the teacher says no, she's supposed to explain exactly what the problem is? Your child is MUCH mature than I ever was, because that would have completely upset me.
A teacher needs to make a judgment call based on past experience with that child. Based on the initial post, I'd say she should have allowed the kid to make the call. And yes, I tell my children that if they absolutely need to call me, then NO ONE tells them they can't, and that the teacher/principal should take it up with me afterwards. My kids are now 18 (college), 16 (Jr in HS), and 13 (MS). They are not in the habit of calling me from school...for good, bad or other reasons. And
of course I expect them to follow rules. Geez.
I did get REALLY annoyed when my DD played soccer in her Freshmen year of high school. The coach was a 19 yr old girl (former student from the HS) who was so immature and got so caught up in the drama of the cliques on the team, that the team had a huge falling out one day at practice. It was ridiculous. I went to pick my DD up after practice, and the team was nowhere to be found. I drove back and forth between the field and the HS, and was a wreck. There's a path through woods between the two locations, and a slew of awful thoughts crossed my mind. Finally, I found a bunch of girls from the team, and one teammate said that the team "had a big fight, and that (my DD) was so upset that she was going to get in trouble because she didn't call me to tell me where she was." (The coach had taken them to the other side of a large field, where other teams were practicing, and I didn't see them.) And why didn't she call? Because the team had left their bags at one location, and "the fight" went on well past the end of practice, and when my DD got up during "the fight" and said she had to go get her cell phone to call me, the coach told her to sit down and wait. I was EXTREMELY annoyed. I let it go as far as the coach goes...God only knows how that immature idiot would handle it with my DD...but that's when I gave my DD the speech about how, under NO circumstances, if she needs to call me, that ANYONE tells her "no"...not the coach, not a teacher, not the police.
Of course some will say that a 19 yr old coach doesn't compare with a professional teacher. I have excellent relationships with most teachers, but, believe it or not, I've met a jerky teacher once or twice before.
DD had an accident in 2nd grade because the class was told in the library that they couldn't leave to go to the bathroom...I did, and still do, have a great relationship with the librarian. She was very apologetic, and said that SOME kids are a problem about that...always asking to go...but not DD, and she should always know that she can tell her she needs to go.
I worked the school office right before DS was born, and we had many middle schoolers come to the office to use the phone. More often than not, they wanted to ask if so and so could come to their house after school, if they could go to so and so's house, or some sort of matter that should have been sorted out AT HOME.
And the "cool kid" cried in class over that? It sounds to me like your office needed to get a handle on phone calls, but it also sounds like a very different situation that the OP.