My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

not attending parents evening?

397 replies

GreenLantern53 · 09/10/2018 17:56

I told my child teacher I wouldnt be able to attend parents evening and she didnt look impressed. aibu not attending?

OP posts:
Report
SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius · 13/10/2018 13:50

@MMCQ - the issue here is not that the OP can’t make it to Parents’ Eveni g, but that she doesn’t see the need to explain why, to the teacher. If she was working, and couldn’t get away, why would she not simply say so? I am sure she wouldn’t be the first working parent who can’t get to PE that the teacher has encountered.

Similarly, if she has an appointment (medical or otherwise) that cannot easily be rearranged, why not say so. There is no need to go into detail - she could simply have said “I have an appointment I can’t reschedule - could I see you some other time?”

Frankly, I can’t think of any valid reason for missing Parents’ Evening that couldn’t be mentioned, if only in general terms, and this makes me suspect that the OP either can’t be bothered, or has some social engagement she is prioritising over Parents’ Evening.

Report
Lizzie48 · 13/10/2018 14:21

At our school, we have to choose our slot, and there are 3 days where there are possible slots to book online. I really can't believe that there won't be any slot that works for you. Okay, you might have a medical appointment on the first day, what about the other 2 days?

And even if you are very busy and can't get away from work on any of those days, surely you'd just arrange a mutually convenient time?

Report
Thesnobbymiddleclassone · 13/10/2018 16:51

@SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius I don't see why OP needs to explain her reasons to us or the teacher. She has told them she can't make it and that's that.

Report
SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius · 13/10/2018 17:02

She doesn’t have to explain her reasons, @Thesnobbymiddleclassone - but if she doesn’t explain to the teacher, she shouldn’t be surprised at being judged by her. As I said - to me, her refusal to given even the most basic of reasons gives me the impression that either she doesn’t care, can’t be bothered, or has some unimportant social event that means more to her.

If she is OK with the teacher thinking along these lines, that is her choice.

Report
PoxAlert · 13/10/2018 17:06

Our school does 2 parents evenings in a week.

One that's 3-6 and one that's 5-8

That way you've got two opportunities.

I'd miss most other stuff over a parents evening TBH.

Failing that is schedule another time to talk to the teacher.

From the fact you're being so cagey and not saying the reason you can't go is giving me the impression it's something you could easily get out of, you just for some reason find something else more important than your child's education.

Report
brizzledrizzle · 13/10/2018 17:20

Personally I'd make it a priority; I've never missed one and would only miss one if it was a life or death situation. The reason you say you can't go is very relevant; presumably you won't say what it is because it won't sound like a valid reason to miss such an important event.

What kind of message is not going sending to your child?

Report
GreenLantern53 · 13/10/2018 17:29

We can not book the slots online. its first come first served so whoever is there first gets the pick of the slots.

OP posts:
Report
GreenLantern53 · 13/10/2018 17:36

oh and btw my 4 year old wont care because he wont know.

OP posts:
Report
HackAttack · 13/10/2018 17:46

It's clear you cannot be bothered. Why are you still posting about it?

Report
Morgan12 · 13/10/2018 17:59

You can't get honest feedback and opinions about this if you are unwilling to state the reason for missing it.

Personally, nothing would make me miss my children's.

Report
GreenLantern53 · 13/10/2018 18:07

Haha! Still posting...this has randomly been bumped up again. It had disapeared off the first 4 pages. People keep bumping it. How about people stop commenting on it if they dont want me to Grin

OP posts:
Report
SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius · 13/10/2018 18:10

Be honest - you just can’t be arsed. Hmm

Report
MissEliza · 13/10/2018 18:10

Your dc is 4 so presumably in foundation. It's vital that you meet with the teacher. If you truly can't make it, you should ask if there's a time the teacher can see you.

Report
GreenLantern53 · 13/10/2018 18:13

Yep I cant be bothered too busy watching jeremy kyle if that makes you happy Grin

OP posts:
Report
GreenLantern53 · 13/10/2018 18:13

vital? reception isnt even compulsory Confused

OP posts:
Report
SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius · 13/10/2018 18:17

Reception is your child’s first experience of school - arguably a pretty important year, as it is the foundation for the rest of their time in school - I think that matters.

Report
brizzledrizzle · 13/10/2018 18:49

Of course he will know, he's not stupid.

Report
PoxAlert · 13/10/2018 19:56

Bloody hell.

So this is his first parents evening and you can't even make the effort?

That's really sad to read.

Report
brizzledrizzle · 13/10/2018 20:00

Why does it matter? All they do in Reception is paint pictures and play with toys. Going to the pub or out with mates is obviously far more important especially if you are that parent who can't be bothered because education is all the responsibility of the school

Report
sanityisamyth · 13/10/2018 20:04

My DS is in reception and he's achieved so much in the six weeks. His pen control is now phenomenal, he's writing legible letters and reading and recognising short words
I'd definitely consider his parents' evening one worth going to. YABU.

Report
Henryismyfriend · 13/10/2018 20:25

I totally agree that you should give a reason for not attending if you don't want to feel like you're being judged, it is important, even in reception to establish a good relationship with school.
That said I didn't go to DDs last one, through sheer lack of cooperation from the school. I emailed as soon as I knew the date (secondary school and it's a daytime thing) and knew I'd be between night shifts, and asked for the first, or last appointment and explained why. Due to the travel involved etc I'm looking at about 4 hours in total to get up and sorted, get there, see the teachers, get home and getting sorted again. That leaves me with about 2 hours broken sleep if it's in the middle of the day. Teacher agreed, then when it came to allocation of appointments promptly forgot and I got a middle of the day appointment. No good at all. When I asked to be changed I got attitude and 'well if your child's education is less important than your sleep' to which I lost it a bit and said they had been warned about this and before appointments allocated I'd requested what I'd need. And quite frankly doing my job on 2 hours sleep puts lives at risk.
So although I tried to compromise and make it because I wanted to, I was still judged. I didn't go, but spoke to her form tutor on the phone. All was well.

Report
MissEliza · 13/10/2018 21:37

Ime young dcs love their parents going into school, seeing their work and talking their teacher, who is a really important person in their life. Your dc will be aware that parents are going into the school and will wonder why you're not.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.