This is a 6th grade teacher brehs

Cynical Thoughts

All Star
Joined
May 17, 2012
Messages
6,962
Reputation
-870
Daps
12,308
Reppin
NULL
She ain’t contact them on social media. They probably made e-mails for school and she taught them how to send an e-mail as a lesson. She posted the funniest ones on Twitter. Her Twitter was full of inappropriate content.

Right, I don’t remember mentioning her email, she needs to disable what ever social media(twitter Facebook instagram snap etc.) the sexual contact is on.

That being said the school district also has access to emails. Every kid has a district email and so does every employee that can be checked by HR. So they can even see the inappropriate ones:francis:

someone created a fake twitter account at a school to curse the superintendent for not canceling school on a snow day. They tracked the girl down to the computer she was on.
 
Last edited:

Elle Seven

Superstar
Joined
Mar 31, 2017
Messages
3,700
Reputation
2,469
Daps
15,323
Judging by your spelling of "pay check" I'm assuming you're from over seas?

I don't know anything about that. In the 80's and 90's from kindergarten to 12th grade I went to school in midtown Kansas City, Missouri. The teachers for the most part didn't give a fukk and most of the school district lost accreditation at one point or another. Since I graduated half of the schools closed in the area. Including one of the high schools I went to.

So I'm pretty much :yeshrug: towards teachers shaking their asses on social media.

Fred.

Nah, I'm American and also a former English teacher, which explains the "paycheque" thing. I graduated HS in 1998, so it sounds like you and I were born on the same generation.

Reading about your experiences as well as others on here, I'm starting to think I was just exceptionally lucky with my years in grade school.

The majority of the schools I attended as a kid were, for all intents and purposes, in the hood and my teachers looked like me. The majority of them definitely seemed to care about us as kids, but maybe that was just my perception.

Also, my own mama stayed on me about making good grades and stayed talking to my teachers more often than not. I was afraid to bring home anything lower than a B. My mama only had a diploma herself and had me at 20, but she didn't play about me and school.

I say all this to say I think the issue with education falls both on what is happening at home and in the classroom. I don't see how it can be solely the fault of the teachers nor the parents, not when both of these groups of adults have the lives/minds of these kids in their hands. They ought to balance out the other.

On another note, in our country, children are compelled by law to attend school, so how can teachers not be compelled to educate them thoroughly? I'm not a fool and understand how the world works, but it is still frustrating to see a mentality that a teacher has to be adequately paid to do his/her job well, considering what is at stake.

Hell, even doctors have to take a moral oath to do no harm to their patients, and the average person would expect a doctor to appeal to his/her basic decency to treat a person well - just because s/he can - not based on what s/he is being paid. And if you are lucky, you are only seeing a doctor occasionally and voluntarily.

When you really think about it, it is surprising teachers are not held to a similar standard/oath, at least to a certain degree. That is why I said earlier if money is your primary motivator, working in the service industry might not be for you because those whom you serve will likely suffer in some way.

More so, when you think about it, if your kids are in school, their teachers are seeing them almost as much as you are and, thus, are influencing them just as much as you are.

When teaching, we have to remember they are literally investing in these kids because these same kids are going to be the ones running society when you get older.



Sorry for this long reply☹
 

Nicole0416_718_929_646212

The Prim Reaper
Bushed
WOAT
Supporter
Joined
Aug 10, 2017
Messages
69,608
Reputation
25,955
Daps
201,025
Reppin
NYC and FBA Riverboat Retaliation
Ain’t nothing worse than getting killed by an 8th grader with a screen name like diabetus2019.

My students started trolling me. Soon as my ass came outta deployment, I was getting sniped. ON. STREAM.


Hard to look em in the face the next day.:wow:

My students::ufdup::umad:
Me::beli::camby:
:mjlol::dead:.....:damn:
tweens are ruthless, idk what it is about that age group but they will fuk up your whole optics if you don't show that you're in control.
I don't even try to get into it with them. idk if it's that pre-teen angst or what but their clap back, interrogation and roasting skills are at level 1000
 

hex

Super Moderator
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
May 2, 2012
Messages
39,250
Reputation
20,352
Daps
201,371
Nah, I'm American and also a former English teacher, which explains the "paycheque" thing. I graduated HS in 1998, so it sounds like you and I were born on the same generation.

Reading about your experiences as well as others on here, I'm starting to think I was just exceptionally lucky with my years in grade school.

The majority of the schools I attended as a kid were, for all intents and purposes, in the hood and my teachers looked like me. The majority of them definitely seemed to care about us as kids, but maybe that was just my perception.

Also, my own mama stayed on me about making good grades and stayed talking to my teachers more often than not. I was afraid to bring home anything lower than a B. My mama only had a diploma herself and had me at 20, but she didn't play about me and school.

I say all this to say I think the issue with education falls both on what is happening at home and in the classroom. I don't see how it can be solely the fault of the teachers nor the parents, not when both of these groups of adults have the lives/minds of these kids in their hands. They ought to balance out the other.

On another note, in our country, children are compelled by law to attend school, so how can teachers not be compelled to educate them thoroughly? I'm not a fool and understand how the world works, but it is still frustrating to see a mentality that a teacher has to be adequately paid to do his/her job well, considering what is at stake.

Hell, even doctors have to take a moral oath to do no harm to their patients, and the average person would expect a doctor to appeal to his/her basic decency to treat a person well - just because s/he can - not based on what s/he is being paid. And if you are lucky, you are only seeing a doctor occasionally and voluntarily.

When you really think about it, it is surprising teachers are not held to a similar standard/oath, at least to a certain degree. That is why I said earlier if money is your primary motivator, working in the service industry might not be for you because those whom you serve will likely suffer in some way.

More so, when you think about it, if your kids are in school, their teachers are seeing them almost as much as you are and, thus, are influencing them just as much as you are.

When teaching, we have to remember they are literally investing in these kids because these same kids are going to be the ones running society when you get older.

Sorry for this long reply☹

I graduated in '95.

I'm actually white, just from a predominantly black area (30th and Charlotte) so the schools (Longfellow, Central, Westport and Paseo) were damn near entirely black. I think Westport had like 10 white kids. :dead:

I can't put it all off on the teachers though. A lot of the students were fukking awful. Including me, at certain points. :manny:

Couple that with the fact that they aren't making much money and I can't really blame a lot of teachers for not giving a fukk. Middle school through graduation kids routinely had guns.....several were gang members and/or drug dealers (Crips and Bloods actually arrived in my city in the mid-80's, so that was in my middle school)....the shyt is a lot more to deal with than just teaching kids.

Anyway, all that factors into how teacher treat students and/or how they view their job.

A few of the teachers were good though. And those teachers did mostly get respect from everyone.

Fred.
 

stave

Superstar
Joined
Jul 18, 2017
Messages
6,934
Reputation
2,066
Daps
24,576
I don't see anything wrong besides the kids' awful spelling

Also would smash
 

stave

Superstar
Joined
Jul 18, 2017
Messages
6,934
Reputation
2,066
Daps
24,576
So what? I don't see what the problem is.

There are alot of thot teachers even worse than her.

Like this one right here.




She claims she is a teacher and supplements her income by "modelling".


Aisha is supposed to be a teacher since when??? I have never seen her do anything but post bikini pics taken during daytime ...how is she teaching :dead:
 

Maxine Shaw

#ColiFam gave more $ 2 my students than my school
Joined
Jan 10, 2014
Messages
3,234
Reputation
1,990
Daps
9,374
Reppin
Brooklyn, N.Y.
She's too stupid to be a teacher. This is 20 thousand goddamned 20. How many fukking times do we have to tell these younguns NOT to link your personal and professional life online?

"Oh, she cares about the kids!" Who GIVES a fukk? Is the bar that low nowadays for teaching? Is that all that makes a good teacher? Where's the professionalism? Where's the common sense!?!?
 

Crayola Coyote

Superstar
Joined
Jul 20, 2015
Messages
27,177
Reputation
2,460
Daps
62,273
I hear you. No argument from me and sorry for your experiences - I have a son and I know how disproportionate the treatment can be. I remember one teacher was trying to tell me that he wasn't ready for kindergarten bc he had problem tying his sneakers, despite having above average marks on his assessment reports. They will try to scrutinize ever little action for black boys. Didn't end well for her when she tried me with that. Just saying. I put him in private school for a little while, turned out to be worse than public school, as far as the teachers - they weren't meshing well at all.

THIS. Back in 3rd grade private school I was way ahead of the kids when it came to math because my dad was a civil engineer and was strongly put emphasis on math. I was not up there with reading and the teachers wanted me to hold me back a grade for it. My dad told them no I will be fine. He took me out of that school and placed me in public school. I had issue one black teacher, but other than ,that it was mostly white female teachers having issues with me. cause I wouldn’t talk much or converse with people, because my mentality was go to class, do cross country/track and go home. White teachers hated that.
 
Top