Teacher’s Corner: Keep your paws off the holidays and buy those damn pencils


A drawing of a  yellow school bus in front of a blue sky with the words "Back to School"

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Ahhh, August. Summer, ice cream, ripe fruit … wasps and parents on social media.

There are two discussions on social media right now that I find highly problematic. One is as sure as the fruit fly invasion, the other one is relatively new, so let’s start with that one.

I saw complaints, on social media, in traditional media, usually from parents, that the school holidays are too long. This cry seems to be independent from the actual length of the summer holidays. Germany is towards the low end with 6 weeks, while Spain gets a whole three months. The complaint is that parents don’t have that many days off and that those long summer holidays are from a time when mothers stayed home.

Now, I fully understand that childcare is a problem for working parents. But really, forcing kids as young as 5 to conform to capitalism’s desire to control our lives? Is that the answer? Not to mention that the very same parents would then have two other problems:

First of all, not everybody can get days off from work at the same time. Not even in Europe. Already people have to coordinate with co workers. For years my husband and his colleague had to decide who’d get the first, and who’d get the last three weeks. No matter how long the holidays are, they’d only ever get half of them off, which means that either you and your spouse never get a holiday together, or you’d still be stuck with a childcare problem.

Second, family holidays are already expensive as fuck. Families are a captive audience, so to speak. Shorten the holidays, shorten the main season, see prices soar.

Which all leads me to the suspicion that they don’t actually want more education, they want childcare where they’re free to take the kids out of class for a holiday. And since they are all working under the false assumption that teachers have all those school breaks as paid time off, they want to punish us and make us “work like normal people”. But here’s a heads up: If we work like normal people, I will not call you, read or answer your emails or schedule an appointment after 4 pm or at the weekend. I will absolutely not grade at the weekend. Trips? Forget about it. A 4 days class trip is 60 unpaid hours. Oh, and I will take my days off when I want.

Also, how much do you actually hate your own kids? They made it through the year, they are exhausted, there’s a heat wave and you want them to sit in class and do homework? What parents should be asking for is cheap or free summer daycare*, but then poor kids might profit as well and I guess we can’t be having that. Instead parents demand that their kids be turned into good little workers.

*My kids had that in primary school and it was amazing. I could never have organised all those activities myself.

Imagine some clever way in which I linked the two topics here

Which leads me to the second part, the inevitable whining about school  supplies. Let me get my point clear before I continue: I’m the first person to demand that we finally properly finance education and also school supplies. Schools should get both the money and time to organise and buy the things needed, including exercise books, folders and pencils. But I guess until that moment, we’re stuck with the Karens on Instagram. (If we did, they’d probably complain about not liking the colour of the pencils).

What really annoys me about this discussion is that it takes away attention from actual issues with school supplies: They can be a huge burden for poor families, especially when a kid starts school. Every year I have to collect (as a teacher) and pay (as a parent) “photocopy money”, to pay for each and any copy  we make. On top of the usual supplies, this can be quite difficult, especially if you have more kids. I always inform my students to discreetly tell me if they need more time. I’ll then put my broad back between them and administration and take the blame for not handing the money in.

Another issue is that there are colleagues who do use this as a personal self fulfillment trip with seriously ridiculous demands. I once had a colleague who insisted on fountain pens in year 8. Like, WTF?

But all that justified criticism gets drowned out by the Karens and Sabines*, usually financially safe white women, crying about having to spend two hours shopping for supplies and another two hours with labelling them, if they care to do so. Why don’t the teachers do it???, they want to know. Well, maybe because you’re not paying me. Just a guess. Why would I spend even more unpaid hours and pay with my own money, hoping that in a couple of months you will deign to pay me back? I already spend more on supplies for other people’s kids than I spend on my own kids. And again, what message are you sending to your kid? That school and education are not your priority. That you don’t really care. Lady, that’s not a good look.

*Of course it’s not the Todds and Martins who do this because they don’t even know what year their kid is in.

To finish my rant, parents and their ever growing sense of entitlement are really the worst part of the job. So if you’re friends with a teacher, remember to keep them from social media in August and maybe give them some pencils.

Comments

  1. Allison says

    Yeah, we get adults complaining that “teachers are overpaid.”

    To which I say, “the good teachers, the ones you want teaching your kids, are worth a heck of a lot more than we’re paying them. And the ones that are only worth what we’re paying them shouldn’t be there in the first place.”

    But, as usual, they want better teachers but don’t want to pay them. Just like they want pothole-free roads, but want lower taxes. To take a Frederick Douglass quote out of context, they--:

    … want crops without plowing up the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters….

    And there’s:

    It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men.

  2. anat says

    When I was a kid, by the time I was 10 or so my parents gave me the money and I went and bought my own school supplies. Problem of complaining parents solved.

  3. fusilier says

    And don’t forget continuing education, during that “free summer time,” in order to maintain one’s license.

    fusilier

    James 2:24

  4. says

    And don’t forget continuing education, during that “free summer time,” in order to maintain one’s license.

    At least we don’t have to deal with that. While I do think we should do more professional training, my license is good until I die or seriously fuck up

  5. chigau (違う) says

    Giliell
    Does “seriously fuck up” mean doing something professionally inappropriate?
    Or being discovered to be a professional assassin (for example)?

  6. Ice Swimmer says

    In Finland, it has been proposed that the summer holidays should two weeks later than they are now. Now it is from the first Saturday of June to mid-August. The reason would be that the tourist destinations would be able to be open all of August and attract more Central Europeans.

    The downside would be that the spring semester would be even longer than it is now (5 months vs. 5,5 months) and kids are already now quite tired in late spring.

  7. says

    Wait, that’s 10 weeks you’re getting and they say our six weeks are too long…
    Germany has a rotating system where all the states except the two asshole states rotate forwards and backwards so not everybody is hitting the roads at the same time.
    From experience I can say: If you got a short year you’re deadly exhausted from having to cram everything into less weeks, if it’s a long year you’re exhausted from everything being longer.

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