Principal to me, "As your boss...." Me to principal, "I don't work for you. I work for the board of education. The same board of education that you work for. The same board that I have already discussed this situation with, and they agree with me. You will be contacted shortly by the board chairman and the teacher association legal team. Now, be gone with you!"
I’m still trying to wrap my head around the fact that there are no trash cans in the bathroom. Considering how much younger girls are beginning their monthlies, what happens then?!
Sounds like my boss. She just doesn't see things from a teacher's perspective ever. Just makes demands and expects people to follow them. Just like how she demanded everyone attend on Friday regardless if you're sick and have a doctor's note, but she conveniently wasn't there because she was attending a football game.
Also... what are you supposed to do with the remainder of the class while you are escorting Susie to/from the teacher's bathroom every time? Leave them unattended? That seems like a recipe for disaster too. Didn't think of that did you Principal??
The comments section, wow. Wayyyy too much is expected of teachers these days. If the kid can bring in bags, provide a bin for the bathroom and the school janitors are able to regularly empty the bins, fine. NONE of that should fall on the teacher
Not if they went to Teachers College and studied to become a principal. Then they go straight to being a principal without having been a teacher. I had to deal with one for years when my kiddo was in elementary.
In my state you have to teach for 2 years and then can become a principal. My dad was the youngest principal ever in the state because that's exactly what he did back in the 1960s. Now it's what most admins do. And spoiler: most teach PE on their way to becoming a principal, then become head of special ed, then superintendent. That's the pathway.
Scratchy toilet paper?? No problem. Mrs. Smith will just have to donate several mega packs of the good stuff to start with, to be shared, and then throw in a waste basket to boot, considering how much of the teacher's personal money goes into supplies for the class.
@markromney94 it is not. A teacher has 20 to 30 students in his or her class. No teacher has time to gatekeep some kid's bathroom activities. If the parent wants a certain thing that is ridiculous, the parent should have to figure out the logistics. NOT one dime of that teacher's money nor one second of her time should go to such foolishness. The school toilet paper is just fine. The parent is ridiculous, and if you endorse such foolishness, you are ridiculous!
Neither of these statements is true: Most baby wipes are not biodegradable and can take up to 100 years to break down in a landfill. And even wipes that are "flushable", are not really. Ask a plumber - they have to get those things out of pipes frequently.
Just because they say they've flushable doesn't mean they truly are. Ask any one who works with a city sewage system or a septic system. These wipes do not break down and can cause a lot of damage.
Dr Oz did a story about the 'flushable' wipes. He went to the water treatment plant. Tech showed him the large wad of wipes that clogged the treatment tanks!
Principal to me, "As your boss...."
Me to principal, "I don't work for you. I work for the board of education. The same board of education that you work for. The same board that I have already discussed this situation with, and they agree with me. You will be contacted shortly by the board chairman and the teacher association legal team. Now, be gone with you!"
I’m still trying to wrap my head around the fact that there are no trash cans in the bathroom. Considering how much younger girls are beginning their monthlies, what happens then?!
Sounds like my boss. She just doesn't see things from a teacher's perspective ever. Just makes demands and expects people to follow them. Just like how she demanded everyone attend on Friday regardless if you're sick and have a doctor's note, but she conveniently wasn't there because she was attending a football game.
coveniently. i genuinely cant even fathom thinking like these idiotic people!!! Like what is wrong with them!?!?!?
Also... what are you supposed to do with the remainder of the class while you are escorting Susie to/from the teacher's bathroom every time? Leave them unattended? That seems like a recipe for disaster too. Didn't think of that did you Principal??
Principal Cornfoot will do anything but stand up for her teachers.
The comments section, wow. Wayyyy too much is expected of teachers these days. If the kid can bring in bags, provide a bin for the bathroom and the school janitors are able to regularly empty the bins, fine. NONE of that should fall on the teacher
Oh hell no! No poop bags, why the school doesn't get a trash can for the girls bathroom? Just a thought
Run, Cornfoot, Run!!! 🤣🤣
Have retired from decades of working a various school districts, I can tell you that most Superintendents are as clueless as Cornfoot.
Sounds like a principal who already said yes when the parent complained
Good one!!
Go pound sand tells someone they don't have enough sense to do anything worthwhile
Which is why Cornfoot didn't know it 😂
Were these principals EVER teachers?
Not if they went to Teachers College and studied to become a principal. Then they go straight to being a principal without having been a teacher. I had to deal with one for years when my kiddo was in elementary.
You know the worst part? My most recent principal WAS a teacher, and she was still so out of touch. It's like, don't you get it?
In my state you have to teach for 2 years and then can become a principal. My dad was the youngest principal ever in the state because that's exactly what he did back in the 1960s. Now it's what most admins do. And spoiler: most teach PE on their way to becoming a principal, then become head of special ed, then superintendent. That's the pathway.
@@elementarystemwithms.crosm5345 How did the most important system in the nation, our children's education system, get so messed up?😲
Scratchy toilet paper?? No problem. Mrs. Smith will just have to donate several mega packs of the good stuff to start with, to be shared, and then throw in a waste basket to boot, considering how much of the teacher's personal money goes into supplies for the class.
Poopscort 😂😂😂😂
Hall Amy White Thomas Martinez Anthony
Teacher can bring in her own plastic 2:00 bags, the bags you put your food in at the grocery store that you throw out anyway. Not complicated.
Why should the teacher have to do that? Should be on the parent and the student, since it's their little drama.
@@avengingemmapeel we’ll said. Not complicated from someone who probably hasn’t ever taught or been in school in 20 years. Ugh…
@@avengingemmapeel because it’s her job (when the child is at school).
@markromney94 it is not. A teacher has 20 to 30 students in his or her class. No teacher has time to gatekeep some kid's bathroom activities. If the parent wants a certain thing that is ridiculous, the parent should have to figure out the logistics. NOT one dime of that teacher's money nor one second of her time should go to such foolishness. The school toilet paper is just fine. The parent is ridiculous, and if you endorse such foolishness, you are ridiculous!
@@avengingemmapeel I agree, not 20 or 30 kids. But here it’s just one child. Manageable.
Most wipes are flushable and biodegradable. Come on, now. This is a stretch.
Neither of these statements is true: Most baby wipes are not biodegradable and can take up to 100 years to break down in a landfill. And even wipes that are "flushable", are not really. Ask a plumber - they have to get those things out of pipes frequently.
Just because they say they've flushable doesn't mean they truly are. Ask any one who works with a city sewage system or a septic system. These wipes do not break down and can cause a lot of damage.
@@linuxsurfer2002 Well said. I also came here to school (see what I did there?) the above uninformed, yet amusingly self-righteous commenter.
Dr Oz did a story about the 'flushable' wipes. He went to the water treatment plant. Tech showed him the large wad of wipes that clogged the treatment tanks!
You know, your taxes in big cities pay for people to remove blockages from the sewerage system caused by people flushing wipes? You are dead wrong.