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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

MN Rules for Schools.

112 replies

eofa1 · 28/11/2013 10:25

So. From what can be gathered from recent Mumsnet threads, the A-Z of school priorities should be:
a) Not give out Star of the Week awards in case your child doesn’t win.
b) Not not give out Star of the Week awards because your child deserves to win.
c) Not go on school trips because somebody might get cold or you might forget to provide them with a drink and then dig about for ways to attack the legality of the trip.
d) Not do school trips targeted at particular groups of students in case your child isn’t one of them.
e) Not not do school trips because otherwise your child isn’t getting enough opportunities.
f) Never exclude a violent child (especially your child).
g) Always exclude a child that is violent towards your child.
h) Never do any sort of school production in case your child doesn’t get exactly the part they want.
i) Don’t not do a school production otherwise parents and children will be disappointed.
j) Never, ever tell a child off in case they find it “humiliating”.
k) If you do tell a child off, make sure you do it in full isolation from any other human beings (because of the “humiliation”).
l) Always tell a child off if they have been mean to your child.
m) Provide entertainment for your child if you’re late to pick them up, because you only do that a couple of times a term.
n) Never do lessons that have any distressing content unless you have arranged with all your spare staff members to individually supervise any child that decides they don’t want to participate.
o) Don’t force your child to eat their lunch.
p) Make sure your child eats their lunch.
q) Use your psychic powers to detect when a child is upset, even if they don’t tell you anything about it.
r) Stop other children being mean to your child.
s) Don’t stop your child from being mean to other children, because it’s just part of his/her quirky and adorable personality.
t) Stick carefully to health and safety rules.
u) Don’t stick to health and safety rules if they’ve been broken by your child, because they never behave in a way that could be dangerous to themselves or others.
v) Make specific children play with your child.
w) Don’t make your child play with specific children.
x) Don’t expect your child to sit anywhere near disruptive children.
y) If your child is disruptive, make sure the school accepts full blame.
z) Allow your child to follow only the bits of the uniform rules they think are sensible.

And finally, if you work in a school, don't EVER complain about your job because everybody knows it's dead easy and you only did it for the long holidays anyway.

OP posts:
RussTDaviesBear · 28/11/2013 17:34

All school performances should be in the evening so parents who work can go

Don't expect me to bring my child back to school in the evening - they've got Brownies/Swimming/can't be up late

tethersend · 28/11/2013 17:43

Well, as a teacher, I'm all for making things more like the private sector.

After all, teachers in the private sector tend to have longer holidays, get paid more and are not subject to constant criticism of their practice by the government.

Feenie · 28/11/2013 17:48

Ooh, yes - roll on even longer holidays just to ramp up the chelping

BoneyBackJefferson · 28/11/2013 18:00

As this has gone very wrong.

I'm going to join tethersend in wishing that teaching was more like the private sector because then when I get hit by a pupil I could have them permanently removed from the school, as per employees rights.

Heartbrokenmum73 · 28/11/2013 18:04

eofa

'Cause even racists got their rights, innit? So what if they want to go online and be bigoted - they're entitled and it's free speech.

KittyVonCatsington · 28/11/2013 21:52

Apart from mummymeister missing the point, this thread made me chuckle. Thank you, OP!

eofa1 · 28/11/2013 22:37

My pleasure!

OP posts:
SatinSandals · 28/11/2013 22:44

Spot on OP- well done, instantly recognised where it all came from!

eofa1 · 29/11/2013 14:22

Another few of recent corkers.

If a teacher dares to be absent, parents must be informed why.

Teachers must not leave their job in the middle of a school year.

Teachers must not job share.

OP posts:
eofa1 · 29/11/2013 14:24

And yet another child "destroyed" by the barbarity that is Star of the Week...

OP posts:
Arabesque1 · 29/11/2013 14:27

Teachers must not have babies because they always time it cunningly to coordinate maternity leave and Summer holidays.

eofa1 · 29/11/2013 14:28

Devious bastards!

OP posts:
DrankSangriaInThePark · 29/11/2013 14:29

Excellent work OP!

Don't forget that just because teacher can't see Junior's halo, doesn't mean, in the eyes of his mammy, he hasn't got one.

friday16 · 29/11/2013 14:48

You should read Ofsted reports, and not send your child anywhere that has a bad one.

Ofsted reports are meaningless: my children's school is great, and the special measures are obviously politically motivated.

eofa1 · 29/11/2013 18:33

Fucking HELL there are some classic threads in just this vein popping up today...

OP posts:
Nibledbyducks · 29/11/2013 19:02

Don't forget that a teacher must never ever go on maternity leave, and the whole list of rules pertaining to book bands....

stepfordwifey · 29/11/2013 19:13

Two production tickets per family.
Divorced couples take priority and will of course be treated differently regardless of space restrictions.
Babies and toddlers welcome to participate throughout entire performance.
Children should be silent when my child speaks
No photographs dazzling my child
My i pad is fine and the person behind me is happy to view the performance through my screen

Laurel1979 · 29/11/2013 19:23

Haha so true!!

stepfordwifey · 29/11/2013 19:30

Why can't my child go and play out in the snow? They rarely have the opportunity to experience it and are fine with -5 and a rainmac.

I am appalled that my child was exposed to subzero conditions and allowed to go out without anyone personally checking she had her scarf knotted tightly and her vest tucked into her knickers.

gemma78 · 29/11/2013 20:06

How about if you haven't been in a school since you we're a pupil, don't act like you have any idea what you are talking about. If it's so easy why doesn't everyone become a teacher?

pianodoodle · 29/11/2013 20:29

Timmy's too clever and isn't being being stretched enough. That's why he punches other kids.

Timmy's finding it hard to keep up in class with too much work. That's why he punches other kids.

CitrusyOne · 30/11/2013 07:05

This very much sums up my autumn term experience so far. The best part of my job is the children- they're eager to learn, work hard in class and are lively and entertaining. The most difficult part of my job is trying to keep all the parents happy.

grumpyoldbat · 30/11/2013 07:23

If the don't telling a child off, humiliation thing is in reference to my thread you've completely misunderstood why I'm annoyed. If my dd misbehaves I bloody well hope she's told off she would deserve it

I don't however want her told off when she's done nothing wrong, the thing the teacher's annoyed about is outwith dd's control and yes I do think the teacher telling my dd's classmates that we are poor in unecessarily humiliating

PansOnFire · 30/11/2013 08:27

grumpyoldbat I'm sure it's not, I think there was only one poster who suggested it was because organising trips are hard work and that you were BU. I'm a teacher, that situation was horribly unprofessional and doesn't demonstrate the pickiness that eofa1 is referring to unless I've misinterpreted again.

This thread is brilliant. The responses are too, I'm laughing my head off. It also seems that teachers can't complain about any aspect of the job and should just leave the profession if they dislike any part of it. I'm sure every other job in the world has it's rubbish bits and it's good bits, obviously teaching doesn't then?

I'm shocked at how many posters think that all teachers have an agenda, please recognise that teachers work bloody hard for the good of your child because they care. Of course there are some rubbish teachers out there, that's life, but why judge based on the absolute worst examples?

Another suggestion OP:
Send in passive aggressive notes re. reprimands, which state that if the teacher is taking during silent time then little Timmy should be allowed.

If the teacher is wearing make up then little flossy should be allowed to be caked in it, it's only fair and the teacher is teasing.

I love my profession but the parents are certainly the challenge, I know it comes from caring for their DC and I'd much prefer this than for the parents to take no interest most of the time but it's exhausting and no one is ever happy, ever.

Eminybob · 30/11/2013 08:29

I am neither a teacher nor yet a parent, but I have seen the contradictory opinions mentioned in the OP frequently on MN. I thought it was very funny and anyone who read it differently is a miserable git Grin

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