3. Double Standard? Sort Of
Of course I’m going to disapprove of a child missing class for vacation.
What I won’t tell you is that I encouraged my own daughter to pull her kids out of school to visit me during my break.
6. Think What Happens at Home Stays There?
We hear about your financial problems, your nasty fights, your drinking problem.
We end up knowing way too much about everybody.
9. That’s Not How It Works
Don’t ask me to make a teacher forgive a homework assignment or not to teach a specific subject.
We don’t dictate to teachers; we work with them.
12. What Do I Love About This Job?
I can influence and inspire kids and adults, help work through problems, and find solutions.
And every day I can pop into a classroom where something interesting is going on.
What other job gives you all of that?
13. You’re Not Actually Helping Them
C’mon parents, this is your child’s homework, not yours.
We know what a seventh-grader can do, and we know what an adult with an engineering degree can do, so please don’t do your child’s work for him.
Kids need to make mistakes and struggle through things; it’s how they learn.
14. We Never Know What the Day Will Hold
One minute you’re mopping up vomit, the next you’re in a special ed meeting, and the next you’re dealing with two kids who got in a fight.
Then you shovel snow off the sidewalk in front of school, you meet with teachers to decide whether to change the language arts curriculum, and you play basketball with a group of kids.
And that’s just in the first two hours.
15. I Care, But I Don’t Always Want to Talk
The last thing I want to do on the sidelines of a basketball game or during intermission at the school play is have a conference with you about your child.
If you have something to talk to me about, come by my office during the day or even better, make an appointment.
18. We’re Not Leftovers
For years, folks have said that if you can’t do anything else, you can always go into education.
The truth is, this is what most of us wanted to do. I had been accepted to law school, but I chose this.
19. Who Are Our Favourite Kids?
They aren’t necessarily the ones with the highest IQs.
What we really value is hard work.
20. Stop Overcompensating
Since the economy has gotten bad, it seems that more parents are taking any job they can get, working crazy hours and neglecting their children.
Then a lot of them try to make up for that by coming to their child’s rescue when there’s an issue with a teacher, coming in here and hollering at us.
21. I Have a Lot to Keep Track Of
As a principal, you’re expected to know about bus routes, curriculum, communication, school lunches, adolescent development, conflict management, learning disabilities, and more.
You have to be an expert on everything, sometimes in the same 20 minutes.
22. So That Explains It
We had a young man struggling to focus during year-end tests. “My underwear is on backward,” he said.
That’s the problem with all this testing: We’re being judged by assessments taken by kids who may have their underwear on backward.
Sources: Principals in Georgia, Utah, Florida, and New York and former principals in New Hampshire and Vermont, United States.