- Parents who don't come in and berate the teacher if their child did poorly, arguing over every lost mark on the child's behalf, leaving with a huff that it's the teacher's fault the child left all those answers on the test blank.
"Don't come in" AND "argue" are mutually exclusive so either you are making it up or you have a 4th grade understanding of logic. That's part of the problem.
I imagine the OP meant "Parents who don't" "come in and argue".
Everything I've tried, from groundings to talks to counselling, has been of no real impact.
I can reach my son with a simple conversation and a hand-made drawing.
In my experience, politicians care more about their corporate campaign contributors (telecommunications, anyone?) than they do about their constituents.
one in four Americans say that the Internet can serve as a substitute for a significant other for some period of time, according to a new poll released today by 463 Communications and Zogby International. The poll examined views of what role the Internet plays in people's lives and whether government should play a greater role in regulating it. The online survey was conducted Oct. 4-8, 2007, included 9,743 adult respondents nationwide Am I the only one who questions the accuracy of an online survey that indicates this?
- Parents who don't come in and berate the teacher if their child did poorly, arguing over every lost mark on the child's behalf, leaving with a huff that it's the teacher's fault the child left all those answers on the test blank.
"Don't come in" AND "argue" are mutually exclusive so either you are making it up or you have a 4th grade understanding of logic. That's part of the problem.
I imagine the OP meant "Parents who don't" "come in and argue".
Everything I've tried, from groundings to talks to counselling, has been of no real impact.
I can reach my son with a simple conversation and a hand-made drawing.
Speaking of mutually exclusive...
In my experience, politicians care more about their corporate campaign contributors (telecommunications, anyone?) than they do about their constituents.