It's not an argument I enter into any more except to say, 'why don't you try it?'.
And loosely back on topic, when I meet a class of disaffected Year 11s for the first time and they ask me what we're going to do today Miss, I always say, "manners and deportment" and enjoy the reaction!
It's not an argument I enter into any more except to say, 'why don't you try it?'.
And loosely back on topic, when I meet a class of disaffected Year 11s for the first time and they ask me what we're going to do today Miss, I always say, "manners and deportment" and enjoy the reaction!
I have several friends who are teachers and I don't know any of them that have 13 weeks paid holiday.
They all work long hours (much longer than me) They all do work throughout the school holidays from organising and delivering summer schools to training their colleagues to lesson plans and the other teachery type things they do.
I don't resent a jot of their salary or envy their workload/hours.
Back to manners though. I think as a parent it is my job to instill manners. As my son gets older and older I have less and less contact with him on hourly basis. He has friends and a social life that I am not part of. But as a parent I need to get as involved as I can in the snap shot of time that I am with him I (hopefully) have also provided a good foundation that can be built on in 10 minute chats here and there.
I would no more expect a teacher to have responsibility than I would his friends and peer group. He is my son and my responsibility. If he does anything 'wrong' at any point then that is mine and his responsibility.
in edit. what he does 'right' is also mine and his responsibility too.