Unfortunately, it may not come from the administration.
Too many
teachers have had the unsettling experience of entering the principal's office
knowing that waiting there is an angry parent ready to "rake them over the
coals." Compounding the problem, teachers have also found very little
support from the principal for the teacher's position.
What can you do and how should you act if this happens to you? Can you just
leave the conference if it is not going well? What can you do to ensure that
this will not happen to you? These are some of the questions we hope to answer
in this section.
Years ago teachers found parents supportive. If the parent was not, the
ad-ministration could be counted on for help. Those days seem to have gone the
way of the poodle skirt
and the twist. Now teachers are not surprised to see
building principals who sit and let parents question, yell, and even threaten
them. In some cases, the principal even joins in the cross-examination of
the teacher. Going to the principal's office can be more frightening for the
teacher than for the student in some cases. Matters can get even worse if
the complaint moves on to the superintendent or to the school board.