![]() |
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Quote:
You've lost me on that one. I remember way back at the dawn of time when I was a pupil at the Accrington High School For Girls, Mabel B. Horne made it very clear that when we were wearing the school uniform we were representing the school. That included on the way to and on the way home from that school. At such times if we were seen by a teacher not to be wearing a tie, or beret (later corduroy cap) or to be behaving in what was deemed to be an unseemly manner said teacher would give us a very sharp piece of her mind. If we had dared to respond in anything other than a co-operative manner we would have been queuing up outside the head's office next morning trembling in our regulation neatly laced up black school shoes. |
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Quote:
The wrong message was sent out by the teacher angrily bursting into the shop and s/he exceeded his/her authority. What that teacher should have done is had a quiet word with the shopkeeper and explain that her customers should be in school. No doubt the shopkeeper would probably have responded favourably. If you go in spitting fire and brimstone don’t be surprised if that’s what you get back. |
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Quote:
The schools responsibility does not start and end at the school gates any more. |
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
She wasn't spitting fire and brimstone at the shop owner though was she? She was instructing the pupils, pupils who are her responsibility, where they ought to be. We only have the shop owner's version that she was screaming like a banshee. I would like to hear the teacher's version of events.
|
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Thankfully I can't see JB's post, although unfortunately I've read Willow's quote. It looks like another trolling mission from 'the great one' and should just be ignored. Either that, or he is totally out of touch with the modern world.
No doubt he'll respond by saying I've abused him, but equally thankfully, I won't be able to see it. :D |
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Quote:
|
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Quote:
Really! Since when? Unless the school has a “Tuck Shop”. I didn’t know that. If that is the case then it is giving the school an authority that it shouldn’t have. I agree with your last sentence though. |
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Quote:
|
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
We only have the proprietors word for what went on in regard to the teachers attitude...so I think it is hard to judge whether or not she was spitting fire and brimstone.
After all the story would not have been anywhere near as sensational(if you can call it that, but obviously, by Observer terms it was)if the report had stated that the teacher walked in and calmly frog-marched the offending pupils back to school.......the proprietors report is subjective......and worded to give best publicity. Stunt seems to have had the desired effect. And Jambutty, it seems that most parents these days do have mobile phones, though we cannot say all......a text message is sent and logged......and if there is no response then a call is made to a landline number...if one is available. |
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Quote:
School have never had any authority over the pupils outside of the school except as I have already explained. Many of my teachers went to and from school on the same bus that the pupils did and thus the pupils behaved themselves. But the teacher had no authority to supervise the pupils. But then we didn’t know that, and we did have respect for the teacher’s authority. It was the conductor and ultimately the driver who ensured good behaviour on the bus. |
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Quote:
That’s about as close to spitting fire and brimstone as you can get without actually doing so. But you are nit picking as usual and trying to defend a teacher who overstepped the mark. |
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Perhaps the publicity seeking shop owner can employ all the pupils who frequent her shop, after they've left the school.
After all she won't mind a jot if they are late for work every morning, and are sat eating a sausage roll somewhere. I again applaud the actions of this teacher. The sooner people realise life has to be played by certain rules, the better. Rhyddings shouldn't be targeted as a bad school. Things can, and do improve, and also the reverse. Twenty years ago Moorhead was seen academically as the best of the local schools, and Holy Family was struggling, and now it's all changed round. Things can improve in any school, with the right teachers, of which this woman is one. |
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Quote:
Exactly. Only the shop keeper's version of events. Perhaps she's just miffed because she didn't get the children's money in her till. |
Re: Don't bug me teacher, eating me breakfast.
Quote:
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 17:18. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.1
© 2003-2013 AccringtonWeb.com