I am pleased by your perseverance. As a parent and parent volunteer, I have learned so much. If only parents knew what abuse teachers endure. Not only from students, and parents, but principals, as well. I don't think I have heard of our principal cursing teaches, but he has allowed students to go unpunished for doing the same. It is my opinion, and one shared by some teachers, if this principal does not care for a teacher, it is open season on that teacher. Students learn which teachers are on the "Principal's Hit List". It seems all it takes to get on the "List" is to speak up. Where there are no consequences for calling a teacher the equivalent of a female dog, no consequences for telling a teacher to perform sexual acts to herself, the abuse grows. Teachers pay a price if they dare speak up. The sad thing is, some teachers report, to the principal, everything said to them by another teacher. These teachers are ruled by intimidation. I have found going to the school board is a waste of time. It seems to be a "One hand washes the other" mentality. I wrote letters about the abuse of power I felt one principal was exercising, and I attended many board meetings. They gave me the three minutes allotted a parent, sounded the gavel, and I returned to my seat. Then I wrote to the attorney for the La. Dept of Ed. I detailed everything I had learned. I never received a reply from him, but the principal announced her retirement, within a few weeks.
I am going to do the same thing, but with a different principal. Parents complain all the time, but too many will do nothing more. We as parents need to stand up for our children's rights. As a parent, I am going to stand up for our teachers. My son's teachers watch over him, teach him, and are there for him. Though teachers are not the mothers of their students, I find most teachers, in our school, treat children as they would want their own child treated. Parents need to drop that remote control, get off the sofa, and stand up for their teachers. All too often, a teaher only sees a parent when that parent is angry. When that parent wants to blame their child's shortcomings on someone other than themselves.