This, thank God, didn't involve my child, but a friend of mine's older child. What's your take--my friend and I are dying to hear!
"Jane" notices "Sue" trying to cheat off her test. After the test Jane tells The Teacher (a 20+ year vet) that this happened. The Teacher then sends Jane to bring Sue back to her desk. With Jane present, The Teacher says something along the lines of,"Sue, Jane here tells me you were trying to cheat off her test. Is this true?" Sue, needless to say, denied the allegations
. The Teacher then says something to the affect of, "Well girls, I'm so proud of you--Jane of you for coming to me with your concern, and Sue for telling the truth. OK girls, you can go now."
Yes, this actually happened to a child I know.
Naturally "Sue" couldn't make a beeline to her friends fast enough to tell them what happened. Jane was fortunate enough to have to stay after school to make up a different test, so the other kids didn't have a chance to give their response right away.
I have to admit, my first response when my friend told me this story was, "What in God's name was "Jane" thinking when she was she did this?" To which my friend replied,"I know--I feel terrible, but the first thought that came into my head was, 'Oh my God--I've raised a "narc"!'"
My friend then went on to tell me that she was so shocked by what the teacher did she for once in her life she was rendered speechless. She told her kid to not worry about it and she would take care of the issue on Monday. Meanwhile, my friend is beside herself and doesn't know how to handle this. And naturally the kid accused of cheating happens to be one of the "popular" girls, and her mother is up there in the feeding chain.
I posed this situation to my kid and some of his friends separately as a hypothetical situation, and was honestly shocked when they all said they would have gone to the teacher. I was NOT shocked that they wouldn't want their names brought into it. [img]tongue.gif[/img] . When I told them this actually happened to a kid I know, they all felt terrible for "Jane."
I feel badly that my first thought was that my friend's kid was a schmuck for tattling. I had no idea how strongly telling teachers this sort of thing was emblazoned on our kids'conscious. If I had done this sort of thing as a kid, I think the teacher would have been annoyed at me for tattling. I suppose I grew up in a different era where the only thing worse than being a crybaby was being a tattletale.
My friend asked for my honest opinion, which I told her. I said that while on one hand I would have wanted to throttle my child for being a narc, that even if my kid was the biggest tattletale in the county the teacher completely mishandled the situation. Though this incident seems minor, it really isn't. Let's face it, this sort of thing could ruin a kid socially for a loooong time. I told her I wold most definitely meet with the teacher to ask her why in God's name she did what she did, and how she propsed on putting things right. I told her I would aslo inform the principal, in writing, as well as the superintendent. Yes--admittedly to give the teacher a taste of tattling, but also to have any necessary backup lest there should be problems later on between my child and other kids. I would also have to be restrained from beating the teacher for being such an a-hole.
OK--what's your take?