My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Join our Primary Education forum to discuss starting school and helping your child get the most out of it.

Primary education

Favouritism

37 replies

pollylocketpickedapocket · 08/03/2021 15:51

How do you deal with favouritism? My dd is in reception and the teacher, newly qualified and in her first job, is generally lovely but she blatantly has 2 favourites and I find it really unprofessional. Anyone else dealt with this?

OP posts:
Report
pollylocketpickedapocket · 09/03/2021 10:20

@ilovesooty

"Behave"?

I wondered how you'd found this information.

It’s common knowledge, no big secret
OP posts:
Report
Method · 09/03/2021 10:47

A lot of the awards at primary school tend to be on a rota... At our school everybody will be star of the week at some point, some parents brag about it when others don't, so it often seems to be the same people when it isn't always. It's true though that some children will get the awards/lead roles/prizes more often. My DDs are what you would describe as the favourite. However, I think it's often quite a lot about the child's personality. Mine love performing and will always volunteer for the solo/lead role in the nativity. They are always willing to please and always well behaved, so will be chosen for awards/class rep and so on. Some children are more quiet and don't like being the centre of attention and teachers wouldn't push that, especially in reception.

Report
Crazycrazylady · 09/03/2021 13:43

Meh
I couldn't get worked up about this, Teachers are humans and of course will have kids that they are more drawn to than others but they should and usually do hide it a bit better than what you're describing here.
As long as she was nice to you dd , I wouldn't lose any sleep over it.
Is she your pfb by any chance?/

Report
MargaretThursday · 09/03/2021 13:50

The parents put it on fb, I’m not sure if others parents have noticed, they must have if I have too.
Surely all that means is they are friends with you on fb (so you see it) and they are putting it on fb. I tended not to put that sort of thing on Fb didn't mean they never received awards.
There could be 27 other children receiving them and you'd never know.

Report
CoffeeWithCheese · 09/03/2021 13:51

We've got it in my kids' school (juniors so we're well out of the reception shock to the system aspect) and it is absolutely bloody rife - the names of the kids who've got learning awards all week are in the newsletter and there are names of kids who pop up absolutely every week without fail, picked for everything - nothing much I can do about it but it is really ridiculous in this school.

Report
Yuddiesorno · 09/03/2021 14:07

I feel your pain - this happened to both my DC - was far worse with one particular class teacher. In the end we just tried to make a joke out of it at home - because it was a foregone conclusion that the same two girls were picked for everything- every play, every sports competition, every art prize etc etc etc. Always representing the school blah blah blah. They became known as the "golden girls " in our house Grin

I am sorry to say that they clearly thought the sun shone out of their own arses, as did their parents so maybe there's a self-fulfilling prophecy going on there somewhere.

I remember reassuring my DD that once they all got to secondary it would be different. How naive I was Hmm. The golden girls are now the "popular " ones who still think they exist on a different plane to the others.

Sorry for rambling but in my experience this is absolutely a thing and those who fail to acknowledge it have either been very lucky, wilfully obtuse or it's their children that are the "golden girls" so they probably don't realise.

Report
pollylocketpickedapocket · 09/03/2021 14:20

@MargaretThursday

The parents put it on fb, I’m not sure if others parents have noticed, they must have if I have too.
Surely all that means is they are friends with you on fb (so you see it) and they are putting it on fb. I tended not to put that sort of thing on Fb didn't mean they never received awards.
There could be 27 other children receiving them and you'd never know.

I have chilled out a bit today over but as I’ve said, it’s not just the awards! There’s definitely favouritism going on. I’m not going to give too specific examples as outing but these kids are singled out an awful lot!
OP posts:
Report
Yellowmellow2 · 09/03/2021 18:07

It sounds like your child doesn’t mind so I wouldn’t worry. There’ll be a different teacher next year. You’re only at the beginning of the school journey and things will change as your child moves through the school. The teacher has 30 children to manage. It’s not easy!

Report
Porridgeoat · 09/03/2021 18:12

My kid went through primary like your DD and the poor favourite child fell from great heights in secondary school

Report
Porridgeoat · 09/03/2021 18:12

Best way is to teach them resilience

Report
youdontnome · 09/03/2021 18:36

This is absolutely a thing. Happened when I was at school many, many years ago. I was very surprised that it was still happening years ago when my DC were at school.

Report
CrappingMyself · 10/03/2021 18:25

I would ask what your child needs to do in order to get certificates/awards etc.

I work in a school. I give awards to those that I feel deserve the award/certificate because they have made progress. It may be because the child that struggles to put their hand up in class and always shouts out answers (ADHD diagnosed) has put their hand up 3 times in a row without shouting - that's progress and deserves recognition in my book. But equally I have a few kids that I know I can rely on to be sensible, can be trusted (because they do what I ask), so I will rely on them to help me out if the TA is out the room for a reason. They may come across as favourites, but it's more that I know they are sensible mature kids for their age.

OP you mentioned a spelling test. You said your child learnt the words and told the teacher this, but did your child demonstrate this in class? Could the teacher evaluate it? They can't just take the parents word for it.

So yes, have a conversation with the teacher. Ask what you can do to support your child in their learning, both academic AND social so they can reach their potential, whatever that may be.

Report
Please create an account

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