SK> This is the problem. Kids are not stupid. If they know that their
SK> parents "give in" when they are tired, then they will step up
SK> their insistent nagging and pleas until Mommy or Daddy gives in.
-> I think some of their teachers do, too. At least the kids claim it's
-> so. (But Mr/Ms. So & So lets us watch MTV/have free-time every
-> day/doesn't make us do work on half-days/lets ten people go to the
-> restroom at the same time
I think there is some element of truth to this type of thing, but the
kids certainly embellish on it (exaageration runs rampant?).
-> SK> Oh, I know. The one thing that really bugs me, is that if I'm out
-> from SK> school for a day and then return, the students drill me
-> about where I SK> was and why I was out. I've usually told them that
-> that is not SK> appropriate, and that they could more appropriately
-> say something like, SK> "How are you feeling?" or something like
-> that.
-> You're MUCH kinder than I. I once asked one insistent soul if he
-> wanted me to puke on him to prove it. He didn't take me up on it &
-> backed off.
Oh, I can just see how "Sam" (the student I can recall saying this to)
would've reacted to THAT type of thing. He already got bent about what I
actually said to him (got all insulted and hurt and didn't like the fact
that I was telling him he was being nosy and too personal).
-> A couple I've called home about or informed the admin about (one
-> sophomore girl who announced during class that I was supposedly
-> having an affair with a student in the class.)
How nice of her. Do you have any idea what her motivation was?
-> Mine asked me this year if the two women PE teachers were, ahem,
-> seeing each other as a couple. But they used a more graphic word.
-> One's married & the other is a happy 40 year old bachelorette, but
-> they said that being married _doesn't matter._
Geez. What is shaping kids attitudes these days?!?! (rhetorical
question)
SK> On a related note, at about the same time, my Dept. Head came to
SK> me (privately) and said "I have to ask you something..." SK> He
SK> wanted to know if _I_ was pregnant (I'd been wearing a lot of
SK> loose,
......
-> SK> tell my employer so that they would have enough time to find a
-> SK> replacement for me?
-> YOU feel that way, _I_ feel that way, but we had a few teachers in
-> the past couple of years just take off in the middle of the year with
-> no or very little notice & in a couple of cases, just strung the
-> principal along about when/whether they would be back. A couple were
-> so
-> unprofessional I felt that the district would have been justified in
-> going after their certificates.
Yah, but this guy knows me personally (we've been colleagues for 13
years and he's been my department head for 4 years, and relies on my
heavily to do things for the department). If he can't distinguish my
level of professionalism from others by this point, well he'll never be
able to do it. I had both of my children after I was working for this
employer and told my department head usually around the 3rd month when I
was planning to work right up until the end (asked her to keep it
confidential until I had to switch to a maternity wardrobe).
-> Oooh, my school law prof would have had a field day with this one.
-> This could have been handled MUCH more discreetly.
Yeah, well there's that, too. I just remember being upset about it for
several weeks. I kind of think that there is a good possibility that he
"made up" the part about someone else asking him, and that really _he_
just wanted to know. How do you think he should've handled it? (I'm
curious, since you say it could've been much more discreet.)
Sheila
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* Origin: Castle of the Four Winds...subjective reality? (1:218/804)
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