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What teachers really want to tell parents...

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  • What teachers really want to tell parents...

    Came across this...

    A principal who was loved and adored by all told me she was leaving the profession because ” I just can’t deal with parents anymore; they are killing us.”


    Editor's note: Ron Clark, author of "The End of Molasses Classes: Getting Our Kids Unstuck -- 101 Extraordinary Solutions for Parents and Teachers," has been named "American Teacher of the Year" by Disney and was Oprah Winfrey's pick as her "Phenomenal Man." He founded The Ron Clark Academy, which educators from around the world have visited to learn.

    (CNN) -- This summer, I met a principal who was recently named as the administrator of the year in her state. She was loved and adored by all, but she told me she was leaving the profession.

    I screamed, "You can't leave us," and she quite bluntly replied, "Look, if I get an offer to lead a school system of orphans, I will be all over it, but I just can't deal with parents anymore; they are killing us."

    Unfortunately, this sentiment seems to be becoming more and more prevalent. Today, new teachers remain in our profession an average of just 4.5 years, and many of them list "issues with parents" as one of their reasons for throwing in the towel. Word is spreading, and the more negativity teachers receive from parents, the harder it becomes to recruit the best and the brightest out of colleges.

    So, what can we do to stem the tide? What do teachers really need parents to understand?

    For starters, we are educators, not nannies. We are educated professionals who work with kids every day and often see your child in a different light than you do. If we give you advice, don't fight it. Take it, and digest it in the same way you would consider advice from a doctor or lawyer. I have become used to some parents who just don't want to hear anything negative about their child, but sometimes if you're willing to take early warning advice to heart, it can help you head off an issue that could become much greater in the future.

    Trust us. At times when I tell parents that their child has been a behavior problem, I can almost see the hairs rise on their backs. They are ready to fight and defend their child, and it is exhausting. One of my biggest pet peeves is when I tell a mom something her son did and she turns, looks at him and asks, "Is that true?" Well, of course it's true. I just told you. And please don't ask whether a classmate can confirm what happened or whether another teacher might have been present. It only demeans teachers and weakens the partnership between teacher and parent.

    Please quit with all the excuses

    The truth is, a lot of times it's the bad teachers who give the easiest grades, because they know by giving good grades everyone will leave them alone. And if you really want to help your children be successful, stop making excuses for them. I was talking with a parent and her son about his summer reading assignments. He told me he hadn't started, and I let him know I was extremely disappointed because school starts in two weeks.

    His mother chimed in and told me that it had been a horrible summer for them because of family issues they'd been through in July. I said I was so sorry, but I couldn't help but point out that the assignments were given in May. She quickly added that she was allowing her child some "fun time" during the summer before getting back to work in July and that it wasn't his fault the work wasn't complete.
    Can you feel my pain?

    Some parents will make excuses regardless of the situation, and they are raising children who will grow into adults who turn toward excuses and do not create a strong work ethic. If you don't want your child to end up 25 and jobless, sitting on your couch eating potato chips, then stop making excuses for why they aren't succeeding. Instead, focus on finding solutions.

    Parents, be a partner instead of a prosecutor

    And parents, you know, it's OK for your child to get in trouble sometimes. It builds character and teaches life lessons. As teachers, we are vexed by those parents who stand in the way of those lessons; we call them helicopter parents because they want to swoop in and save their child every time something goes wrong. If we give a child a 79 on a project, then that is what the child deserves. Don't set up a time to meet with me to negotiate extra credit for an 80. It's a 79, regardless of whether you think it should be a B+.
    This one may be hard to accept, but you shouldn't assume that because your child makes straight A's that he/she is getting a good education. The truth is, a lot of times it's the bad teachers who give the easiest grades, because they know by giving good grades everyone will leave them alone. Parents will say, "My child has a great teacher! He made all A's this year!"

    Wow. Come on now. In all honesty, it's usually the best teachers who are giving the lowest grades, because they are raising expectations. Yet, when your children receive low scores you want to complain and head to the principal's office.

    Please, take a step back and get a good look at the landscape. Before you challenge those low grades you feel the teacher has "given" your child, you might need to realize your child "earned" those grades and that the teacher you are complaining about is actually the one that is providing the best education.

    And please, be a partner instead of a prosecutor. I had a child cheat on a test, and his parents threatened to call a lawyer because I was labeling him a criminal. I know that sounds crazy, but principals all across the country are telling me that more and more lawyers are accompanying parents for school meetings dealing with their children.

    Teachers walking on eggshells

    I feel so sorry for administrators and teachers these days whose hands are completely tied. In many ways, we live in fear of what will happen next. We walk on eggshells in a watered-down education system where teachers lack the courage to be honest and speak their minds. If they make a slight mistake, it can become a major disaster.

    My mom just told me a child at a local school wrote on his face with a permanent marker. The teacher tried to get it off with a wash cloth, and it left a red mark on the side of his face. The parent called the media, and the teacher lost her job. My mom, my very own mother, said, "Can you believe that woman did that?"

    I felt hit in the gut. I honestly would have probably tried to get the mark off as well. To think that we might lose our jobs over something so minor is scary. Why would anyone want to enter our profession? If our teachers continue to feel threatened and scared, you will rob our schools of our best and handcuff our efforts to recruit tomorrow's outstanding educators.

    Finally, deal with negative situations in a professional manner.

    If your child said something happened in the classroom that concerns you, ask to meet with the teacher and approach the situation by saying, "I wanted to let you know something my child said took place in your class, because I know that children can exaggerate and that there are always two sides to every story. I was hoping you could shed some light for me." If you aren't happy with the result, then take your concerns to the principal, but above all else, never talk negatively about a teacher in front of your child. If he knows you don't respect her, he won't either, and that will lead to a whole host of new problems.

    We know you love your children. We love them, too. We just ask -- and beg of you -- to trust us, support us and work with the system, not against it. We need you to have our backs, and we need you to give us the respect we deserve. Lift us up and make us feel appreciated, and we will work even harder to give your child the best education possible.
    That's a teacher's promise, from me to you.
    Token Split Tail

    Originally posted by slow99
    Lmao...my favorite female poster strikes again.
    Originally posted by Pokulski-Blatz
    You are a moron .... you were fucking with the most powerful vagina on DFW(MU)stangs.

  • #2
    Parents just don't want to believe their kid or kids are bad in school or whatever it is.

    They seem to forget they use to do the exact same thing or knew someone that did those things. They just don't want to believe it's their child.


    Heck I would believe the teacher over my child if I had some. I was a problem kid in school and I know my parents hated it

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    • #3
      Teachers should be paid $10,000 for each job the REALLY do.

      My parents would be millionaires by now..

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      • #4
        Teaching is one of the most underrated underpaid jobs in America. All you teachers out there, keep kickin ass, there are those of us who definitely support you and realize what it is you do

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        • #5
          lol...my wife has already printed this out and has plans of posting it all over the conference room at her school.

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          • #6
            kids are usually a reflection of their parents

            parents are usually the first to blame someone else

            The parents that wont accept responsibility are usually the ones that are unemployed and just milking the system.

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            • #7
              Kids are not the angels parents think they are.

              Parents don't do their part to continue the child's education and/or support them with their homework, studies and life skills in general (thinking it's the teacher's job to teach it all). They also don't hold their children accountable for their short comings.

              Teachers, for the most part, have become either disgruntled, complacent, lazy or fed up with their duties. Being forced to teach to a standardized test, leaving hardly any room for much else. Teaching to the lowest common denominator (NCLB). Being held to the results of these stupid tests. Minds saturated in the stupid union mentality. And most of all, lack of support from the administration they report to, the parents and the children. I can't really blame them totally for the way public education has been going down hill.

              All of this yeilds one result... our kids not getting a good education, thus leaving all of our future in the hands of shit.

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              • #8
                Parents and teachers alike are not perfect. Believe me, there is enough blame to go around.

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                • #9
                  Sometimes I just want to punch the parents of people I hear saying things like mentioned in the article. The whole system is fucked, and my kids will not be attending public school because of the way things are turning out. I'm not blaming the teachers, or the administrators, I'm blaming the parents of stupid little fucks who whine and complain so much that it turned the system to shit.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Ratt View Post
                    Sometimes I just want to punch the parents of people I hear saying things like mentioned in the article. The whole system is fucked, and my kids will not be attending public school because of the way things are turning out. I'm not blaming the teachers, or the administrators, I'm blaming the parents of stupid little fucks who whine and complain so much that it turned the system to shit.
                    Don't be shy. Blame them all. This was a collective effort to get us here.

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                    • #11
                      IMO, this is why teachers get kids doped up as ADHD students. Because it's the only way to get disorderly students to be complacent since nobody else will discipline the kids.
                      "Self-government won't work without self-discipline." - Paul Harvey

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Denny View Post
                        Don't be shy. Blame them all. This was a collective effort to get us here.
                        Okay, fine. It was a collective effort.

                        I graduated high school in 2003. I remember never doing homework....ever....and came out of that shit-hole of an "educational institution" with a near-as-makes-no-difference 4.0 GPA. It was a joke. This isn't to say that the public school systems EVERYWHERE in the USA are terrible, because that would be casting too broad a net, but around here they are all pretty much terrible.

                        My mom just accepted a teaching job again because her and my father's savings went down the shitter with the economy. She teaches art, which is not a very rewarding class to teach. There are three kids in particular that have already voiced their negative opinions on art and are only there to wait on their transfer to "athletics." They are constantly causing a disturbance and making it harder for the other kids to concentrate on their assignments. My mom called the three boy's parents and explained to them what was going on, and the parents all echoed each other saying that there boys would never be so mean-spirited and could never do anything like that. Really? Do you need me to tape it for you? Are you calling me a liar? Fuck you!

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                        • #13
                          A lot of the bad teachers I had to put up with came across as petty, immature and arrogant when it came to dealing with the kids. You can see it in this article with the labeling of a student as a "criminal" for cheating at school. Along with the comment that a parent shouldn't question someone who says their child was misbehaving. Yet this same article complains that they aren't treated as "professionals". The teachers who act like this deserve everything they get.

                          Kids act like little assholes sometimes. Every kid does it. The attitude I described above doesn't do anything but add another problem to the mix.
                          Originally posted by racrguy
                          What's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?
                          Originally posted by racrguy
                          Voting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.

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                          • #14
                            I'm reading an article in the Smithsonian about Finland's public schools and how they whoop our ass while have no standardized testing and spend 30% less per student. They have a 93% high school graduation rate compared to 75.5% in the US.

                            All in credit to the teachers.

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                            • #15
                              You think the public schools are bad, go spend some time in a community college these days. I don't think that we are genuinely becoming dumber as a species, but I think there is a sharper and more obvious divide between intelligence and idiocy. Last year in my LOGIC class, upon learning the girl sitting next to her was from Houston, the girl sitting behind me said,"Oh, do they have a Tarrant County College there?" I wanted to take her jaw off with a right hook so she wouldn't pollute the world with her stupidity ever again.

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