viernes, 20 de febrero de 2026

Parents, what do you feel you have learned from working relationships with teachers?

Hello, I am a (18y/o) college student who is studying to become a kindergarten teacher. I have an assignment that requires I interview a parent about their relationship with teachers. I decided that I would ask multiple people rather than just one. I’m hoping to get some good answers. As the title says, what do you feel that you have gained and learned from working with your children’s teachers? Do you feel like you can work well with them? Do you feel that working with teachers has helped you become a better parent? Do you feel that your relationship with the teacher has affected your child in any way? Do you feel they behave differently due to the relationship?



Submitted February 20, 2026 at 09:25AM by impulsecake https://ift.tt/tcYLqhv

Our nightmare with an AZ private school: When “prestige” protects the wrong people.

I’m sharing this because I’m still reeling from the discovery that private schools often operate with a level of immunity that public schools simply don’t have. If you are currently looking at private education for your kids, please learn from our experience at Summit School of Ahwatukee.

My daughter’s time there was short and, frankly, traumatic. After we left, I spoke with multiple other parents and realized what I believe to be a systemic issue with bullying and predatory behavior that has been shielded for far too long. In my opinion, money and "status" buy immunity at this school. It feels like an administration that is more worried about their reputation than the safety of the children.

The Retaliation

I did what any parent would do: I advocated for my child. The "consequence" was my daughter being abruptly expelled late on a Friday night through no fault of her own.

The most heartbreaking part? I later listened to a recording of a head admin telling staff that I was a "danger" to the school specifically because I am a military veteran. They were told to call the police if I was even seen near the campus.

I was a combat flight medic. My entire career was about saving lives, not harming them. I was a classroom mom—I brought the coffee, I planned the parties, I volunteered. I never once raised my voice at them; I only cried while trying to protect my kid.

The Legal & Police Involvement

Since the expulsion, I’ve had to deal with what I feel is legal harassment from their lawyers based on false statements. I’ve had to have police escorts just to pick up my daughter’s things and to deliver paperwork for a restraining order against my daughter’s attacker. Shout out to our local PD, who were incredibly empathetic and saw through the school’s narrative immediately.

The Lesson

I’m sharing this because the only way to stop this kind of abuse of power is to talk about it. Private schools often lack the oversight and safety procedures of public or charter schools.

I will never stop fighting for justice for my daughter. If you’re a parent, please: listen to your kids, trust your gut, and don’t let a "prestigious" name blind you to what’s happening behind closed doors.

Has anyone else dealt with private school administrations retaliating against parents for reporting safety issues?



Submitted February 20, 2026 at 08:15AM by Careless_Laugh_2294 https://ift.tt/NOcWKFm

jueves, 19 de febrero de 2026

I kept seeing the same logic mistakes in essays: looking for 50 students to test.

I've been grading essays for a bit, and then kept seeing so many students make the same sorts of mistakes (claims that didn't follow earlier ones, contradictions, etc.).

So I built a small Chrome extension that scans argumentative essays and highlights possible internal contradictions. It doesn't rewrite your work, just finds these logical inconsistencies.

It’s free and there's no catch; I just want real feedback from people who write argumentative essays regularly, and to help you with your next essays.

If you’re interested in trying it or stress-testing it, comment and I’ll send the link. Also happy if you try to break it.



Submitted February 19, 2026 at 11:59PM by weirderthanmagic https://ift.tt/XYGEOZv

Can I live in a student house as a non student?

Hello!

I’m 23M, and just finished my studies in Melbourne and am over in Manchester for 6 months to get to know the city and also take some time to write my masters thesis proposal for when I go back to Aus to study. I am in the process of taking over the lease of a for 6 months from a previous tenant.

I don’t think this place is technically student accomodation (at least not associated with any particular uni) but it is a house of uni students. All was going pretty well until the agency asked for student ID/registration, which I am unable to provide as I am not currently a student (maybe also should be noted I am a British citizen!)

This system is new to me and I’m not quite sure how to go about this! Should I just come clean right off the bat and tell them I’m not a student and maybe appeal that I am doing my own independent study? Is there perhaps a way to imply that I am a student here without providing necessary documentation?



Submitted February 19, 2026 at 04:27AM by Ecstatic-Tadpole-956 https://ift.tt/g80r5fJ

Career Move Suggestions?

I am currently in my 5th year in the classroom, and I’m trying to figure out my next move regarding my career trajectory and what I want to do. The majority of my teaching experience is in ESOL via sheltered content ELA and in Title I Schools.

I’m thinking about exploring curriculum instruction and development, with an emphasis on ESOL/ELA, as I’ve noticed that the ELA curricula we use often provide little support/guidance for working with this population of learners.

What advice would you give someone interested in this area? I should also mention I already have my EDs in ESOL, and I’m in the GA if that helps.

Thanks!



Submitted February 19, 2026 at 01:11AM by True_Ad_5157 https://ift.tt/dOyRYg4

miércoles, 18 de febrero de 2026

Causes of friction in Education?

I've recently come across the four curricular viewpoints by Schiro (and I'm sure others):

Scholar Academic- Learning to learn things

Student Cantered- Learning to teach kids what they want to learn

Social Efficiency- Teaching so students can get jobs

Social Reconstruction- making students aware of problems in the world, and shaping students into caring citizens.

It seems a lot of friction in education is due to conflicts in ideologies between various stakeholders (teachers, students, administrators, government, parents, media, etc.)

Am I out to lunch with this perspective?



Submitted February 18, 2026 at 09:03PM by pretendperson1776 https://ift.tt/aXkIhvn

Bad at school no matter what

I am so bad at school and I don't know why. Throughout middle school and high school I've always put effort into school and received below average grades. Sophomore year it was worse as I started failing and not caring about school. Junior year I decided to actually put in effort and would study for hours for minimal results, just short of passing. I'm in college for engineering now and still, just short of passing. I'm incredibly passionate about what I study but it seems no matter what I'm always a C student. Tried so many different strategies over the years none seem to work. Practice problems, tutors, practice tests, get good sleep, eat healthy, not stressed and still nothing. I have ADHD but I'm getting it treated and still see no results in my grades. I ask questions, understand the topics, practice over and over and no matter what there is something in the exam i didn't go over or something I forgot or some other thing and still Cs across the board. Am I just cursed with a brain not for school?



Submitted February 18, 2026 at 03:00PM by Final_Anteater_119 https://ift.tt/YiZLWVn