Kennigit
proud 2 boxer
just all around pointless weekend. I really squandered it, and this was coming off a not great week
If you ask me this teacher needs to be fired immediately. That may sound extreme,
"Shaming" comes from ridiculing someone in front of other. This is a private note, which would have remained private but for it being posted on the internet by the parents.... potentially damaging consequences. The two that immediately pop into mind is that this teacher is essentially shaming the child for being more advanced than her classmates and the teacher is undermining the authority of the child's parents by making the child think what her mother taught her is somehow "wrong" or "bad".
It is extreme. Assuming for the sake of argument that the teacher did something wrong, there's no need to immediately jump to termination. There's intermediate steps: verbal warning, written warning, suspension. Why, in the midst of a nationwide teacher shortage would you want to precipitously fire someone over something so trivial
"Shaming" comes from ridiculing someone in front of other. This is a private note, which would have remained private but for it being posted on the internet by the parents.
The teacher was not undermining the authority of the parents; rather, the parents were undermining the authority of the teacher, whose job it is to teach.
What the parents taught the girl was indeed wrong. Note that the "l" and the "s" are the same height and that the ending strokes of the "s" bisect the letter rather than being placed near the bottom of the letter.
It's also interesting to note that the parents reaction to seeing that their child has repeatedly ignored the teacher's instruction is not to either (a) contact the teacher and work things out or (b) reprimand their child for being disobedient in school, but rather they take the dispute to the internet in an attempt to shame the teacher.
BTW: I still remember when my teacher taught us how to make 8's. She demonstrated how to do it in one curvy line. The kid next to me grumbled under his breath, "Teacher, you don't know how to do it," and defiantly drew a big circle with a little circle on top of it.
Would the teacher be able to read any written warnings? I guess they'd better be typed or printed, since she's so averse to cursive. I wonder what she does when she's told to sign something.It is extreme. Assuming for the sake of argument that the teacher did something wrong, there's no need to immediately jump to termination. There's intermediate steps: verbal warning, written warning, suspension. Why, in the midst of a nationwide teacher shortage would you want to precipitously fire someone over something so trivial
So one person being reprimanded by another can never feel, or be manipulated to feel shame?"Shaming" comes from ridiculing someone in front of other. This is a private note, which would have remained private but for it being posted on the internet by the parents.
The parents are smart enough to understand that cursive writing is a necessary skill, and made the effort to teach their child to acquire it.The teacher was not undermining the authority of the parents; rather, the parents were undermining the authority of the teacher, whose job it is to teach.
What the parents taught the girl was indeed wrong. Note that the "l" and the "s" are the same height and that the ending strokes of the "s" bisect the letter rather than being placed near the bottom of the letter.
How do we know the parents haven't tried to work this out with the teacher and this is the last straw?It's also interesting to note that the parents reaction to seeing that their child has repeatedly ignored the teacher's instruction is not to either (a) contact the teacher and work things out or (b) reprimand their child for being disobedient in school, but rather they take the dispute to the internet in an attempt to shame the teacher.
Also, what is this teacher shortage you are talking about?
Shaming doesn't have to be public. In the right context, negative feedback from authority figures can be a form of shaming.
Teachers should have very limited authority over the children they teach and that authority should only extend to maintaining order in the classroom.
It was the girl's mother who taught her to write. I'd say that qualifies as parental support.Try Los Angeles. New teachers last an average of three years before burning out and quitting. Too many kids. Too many hours. Low pay. No respect. No support from the parents.
Heh, it looks like the teacher did indeed start to write the word "stop" in cursive. But it looks like she's got sloppy writing, too.the most astounding thing about the teacher is that they spelled their first word wrong and after scribbling it out had to start again... did they start in cursive
http://www.popsugar.com/moms/Little-Girl-Gets-Trouble-Writing-Cursive-38503998
It was the girl's mother who taught her to write. I'd say that qualifies as parental support.
She taught her daughter poor penmanship. Is that parental support? She failed to remind her daughter to mind the teacher. Is that parental support? When the teach again reminded the daughter of past instructions, the parent attempted to shame the teacher by posting the admonition online. Is that parental support?
I'd say the mother is doing everything humanly possible to undermine support for the teacher. ;thumbsdown:
I've mentioned elsewhere about how I prepare for my NaNoWriMo competitions. During the month prior to the contest's start, I do extensive outlines, notes, and literal character sketches. Some of the notes I make are printed, but most are written in cursive. After several instances of computer problems that have wiped out weeks' worth of work, I no longer rely on keeping everything in digital form.Is cursive used at all, other than in calligraphy? (and of course in your signature, but that is literally just two or three words and always the same)
I doubt i ever used it elsewhere, other than maybe some one-off assignment in elementary school.
I've mentioned elsewhere about how I prepare for my NaNoWriMo competitions. During the month prior to the contest's start, I do extensive outlines, notes, and literal character sketches. Some of the notes I make are printed, but most are written in cursive. After several instances of computer problems that have wiped out weeks' worth of work, I no longer rely on keeping everything in digital form.
I write every day, even if it's a couple of points about a story or character, or just my grocery list.