What to Do with Those Pesky “Con­tracts” from the Teacher

Last night, my daugh­ter brought home a “con­tract” titled “Class­room Rules” from her 9th grade French teacher. The con­tract was to be signed by both the stu­dent and the parent/guardian.

Accord­ing to the Rules, “If [a stu­dent] chooses to break a rule [s/he] earns a zero for the day.”

As read­ers of this blog know, I dis­agree with the giv­ing of a zero for a grade. So, in good con­science, I couldn’t sign the bot­tom of the form, which stated: “I under­stand and sup­port the rules.”

I crossed out “sup­port the rules,” put an aster­isk beside it, and wrote:

Dear Teacher,

Based on my own research, my hus­band and I don’t agree with the giv­ing of a “zero” as a grade. If you’re inter­ested in see­ing that research, I’d be delighted to share it with you.

I’ll let you know what happens.

29 Comments on “What to Do with Those Pesky “Con­tracts” from the Teacher”

  1. FedUpMom says:

    Wow, if I was in your posi­tion I’d be object­ing to a lot more than the zero grade issue.

    1.) Isn’t a con­tract sup­posed to be nego­ti­ated by both par­ties? I’ll bet nobody asked for you or your daughter’s input when the con­tract was drawn up. Does the teacher have any duties described in the contract?

    2.) I object to the for­mu­la­tion, “if a stu­dent chooses to break a rule…” as if the stu­dent actu­ally has the free­dom to make choices in the class­room. This makes a mock­ery of the con­cept of choice. The free­dom to “choose” between two alter­na­tives, both defined by some­one else, is no free­dom at all. It’s like a mug­ger offer­ing the “choice”, “your money or your life?”

    It reminds me of the ancient joke about a guy who dies and goes to hell. The devil tells him he can choose between three rooms. In the first, peo­ple are thrown into a rag­ing fire which burns but does not con­sume. In the sec­ond, peo­ple are buried up to their necks in manure. In the third, peo­ple are stand­ing around up to their waists in manure, and each per­son is hold­ing a cup of cof­fee and a dough­nut. The new arrival says, “OK, I’ll take the third room”, and he’s installed up to his waist in manure with his cup of cof­fee and dough­nut. Five min­utes later the devil comes back and announces, “Cof­fee break’s over — back on your heads!”

    These are the kinds of choices your daugh­ter is being offered.

    The whole idea of a con­tract seems so wrong-headed to me. Learn­ing should be a joy. Teacher and stu­dent should be part­ners in the quest for knowl­edge. Turn­ing edu­ca­tion into a busi­ness of con­tracts and rules and pun­ish­ments just starts you off down the wrong path.

    November 19th, 2008 at 10:23 am
    Permanent Link

  2. Diane says:

    That’s it; I’m mov­ing to Finland …

    November 19th, 2008 at 10:46 am
    Permanent Link

  3. Sara Bennett says:

    Dear Fedup Mom,

    You make great points and I agree with you. In gen­eral, though, in a short note like this one, I try to only raise one issue. I’m hop­ing the teacher will give me a call (I signed with my name and phone num­ber). If she does, I’d like to have a con­ver­sa­tion about a lot of her ideas. For instance, in that same note, she stated that her grades were based equally on test scores, class par­tic­i­pa­tion, home­work, and projects, so that stu­dents of all learn­ing styles would be accom­mo­dated. In real­ity, though, that method doesn’t accom­mo­date any student.

    November 19th, 2008 at 12:07 pm
    Permanent Link

  4. fivekittenf says:

    My teenagers in high­school come home with these idiot con­tracts all the time. I’m going to remem­ber this for next time!

    The other day my daugh­ter told me she took a cal­cu­la­tor home from school worth $142…(which I’ve told her NOT to bring any­thing home from school worth money because it’s sure to get lost in our house…) and she said the school pol­icy is she can’t grad­u­ate unless she returns it or pays for it. Think­ing there’s some­thing uneth­i­cal about that…she found the cal­cu­la­tor but is still look­ing for the cover. Now I’m really curi­ous to know how many peo­ple haven’t grad­u­ated because they couldn’t pay their bills…so much for free pub­lic education.

    I hate grades. I don’t give my home­schooled daugh­ter grades. I chose the alter­na­tive method of sup­ply­ing a nar­rated report on progress to the superintendent.

    And Dear DIane: Since the lat­est report on Fin­land I’ve been read­ing up on them. Maybe we can split the mov­ing van/plane costs! Too bad it’s so cold there…I’m in NY sit­ting here in 2 feet of snow and already dread­ing winter..Maybe with global warn­ing it’ll float south.…I love Fin­land more and more every time I read an arti­cle about some of their edu­ca­tional philoso­phies and pro­grams. I try explain­ing this to some home­schooler naysay­ers — and they always reply “well, we’re not Fin­land, we’re in the US” ..pub­li­cally edu­cated smart peo­ple mak­ing igno­rant state­ments. Fin­land is def­i­nitely cool. (ha ha I made a pun…)

    Can’t wait to hear what the teacher says..bet she’s com­plain­ing behind your back! I doubt she’ll say any­thing though. Love to see this fol­lowed up!

    November 19th, 2008 at 3:12 pm
    Permanent Link

  5. Sara Bennett says:

    The teacher wrote me back:

    “The zero is not actu­ally a grade, it (the zero) is fac­tored into the grade for home­work and class par­tic­i­pa­tion. It is just a way of indi­cat­ing that a stu­dent was unpre­pared for that day or cut the class.”

    The teacher missed my point (I guess I should have explained it a lit­tle more) but at least I didn’t sign the “con­tract.” Since my daugh­ter attends a very large pub­lic high school (4,000+ stu­dents), where parent-teacher inter­ac­tion is min­i­mal and there’s no email access to teach­ers, I’ll wait until the parent/teacher con­fer­ence to fur­ther dis­cuss the issue.

    November 19th, 2008 at 5:45 pm
    Permanent Link

  6. Dawn says:

    Hmmmm.…the con­tract sounds like if they don’t behave they get a zero. Her inter­pre­ta­tion of it clearly doesn’t reflect what is in the con­tract. Per­haps the teacher needs a writ­ing class.…or some home­work to brush up on her skills??!!

    November 20th, 2008 at 12:37 am
    Permanent Link

  7. FedUpMom says:

    This teacher needs to spend the year teach­ing her class as if it was an adult continuing-ed, non-degree class. No grades, no con­tracts, no pun­ish­ments. She and her class would learn a ton.

    I’m tak­ing sev­eral classes myself on this basis (fig­ure draw­ing, oil paint­ing, Man­darin Chi­nese!) and hav­ing a ball. I’m learn­ing so much more than I ever did in a con­ven­tional school setting.

    November 20th, 2008 at 10:59 am
    Permanent Link

  8. FedUpMom says:

    For­got to men­tion, there’s a good arti­cle in the New York Times today, “What’s the Value of a Big Bonus?” Basi­cally, these researchers found that offer­ing peo­ple a big bonus for com­plet­ing a cog­ni­tive task actu­ally made their per­for­mance worse, because of the stress involved. This is what Alfie Kohn and oth­ers have been say­ing about grades for some years. Is any­one listening?

    November 20th, 2008 at 11:14 am
    Permanent Link

  9. Kat says:

    Ugh. We get this dumb con­tracts as well, and my son is only in 6th grade. I don’t sign either and/or mod­ify then sign. I’m never quite sure what the value is, and all I can think about is my son run­ning for pres­i­dent one day and some­one from the media pulling out his old school record and show­ing the things he put his name to way back when.

    November 22nd, 2008 at 1:26 am
    Permanent Link

  10. Steph Consarlas says:

    As a stu­dent i get con­tracts all the time i almost failed year seven and my teacher said i might have to sign a con­tract 4 year 8 and myself and par­ents would have to sign it it said i HAVE to hand in all my work on time and NOT think its to hard, and just give up, i said to myself they can’t look into the future and tell me that i have to get it all done on time i was strug­gling and my teacher thought i was just being lazy, BULL i some­times won­der if they ever where a kid and whether they went though school like they didn’t have trou­ble with any work or large projects. it just makes me won­der and now im still behind at school and he really does not even try to help!
    Hope all goes well.
    Steph:)

    November 26th, 2008 at 8:33 pm
    Permanent Link

  11. Anonymous says:

    I think that all of you are the rea­son schools are fail­ing our kids. As I high school teacher I see what your views are doing to the stu­dents and I think it is sick. I have only been teach­ing for 4 years and I do still remem­ber what school was like for me. Stu­dents are lazy and at least now I know why. I am sorry if you think answer­ing 4 ques­tions bases on the class notes is to much work for your children.

    August 11th, 2009 at 12:17 pm
    Permanent Link

  12. FedUpMom says:

    Anony­mous, if you’re teach­ing high school, your stu­dents could be get­ting home­work from 5 teach­ers every day. Just the home­work you assign, writ­ing answers to 4 ques­tions, could eas­ily take an hour, if the ques­tions are thought-provoking. Then your stu­dent still has to deal with 4 more sets of home­work! Do you see how quickly this adds up? If the stu­dent also plays a musi­cal instru­ment, or plays a sport, or has a part-time job, or has respon­si­bil­i­ties at home, there just aren’t enough hours in the day.

    Before you call your stu­dents “lazy”, ask them to describe a typ­i­cal day dur­ing the school year. You’d be amazed.

    August 13th, 2009 at 11:02 am
    Permanent Link

  13. Irate teacher says:

    I am an ele­men­tary teacher and after read­ing the var­i­ous posts on this web­site have become increas­ingly irate. I won­der how par­ents would feel if there was a web­site whole­heart­edly ded­i­cated to bash­ing par­ents? I won­der what teacher would even con­sider doing such a thing? If we all have the best inter­ests of chil­dren at heart, what are you teach­ing them by han­dling sit­u­a­tions by send­ing sar­cas­tic, dis­re­spect­ful emails and notes rather than ini­ti­at­ing a con­ver­sa­tion with the indi­vid­u­als to solve prob­lems or even try to under­stand and dis­cuss the rational/research behind pos­si­ble edu­ca­tional assign­ments? I do agree that home­work reform needs to be addressed, but there could and should be a much more civ­i­lized way of approach­ing these con­cerns rather than .

    August 13th, 2009 at 7:42 pm
    Permanent Link

  14. PsychMom says:

    As as fol­lower of this site, my expe­ri­ence has been that the par­ents who write in have been excep­tion­ally cor­dial and polite when approach­ing teach­ers and admin­is­tra­tion and they only become less polite when ignored or treated poorly by the teach­ers or admin­is­tra­tion. In my own expe­ri­ence, I’ve had very very good rela­tion­ships with all my child’s teach­ers and have been able to voice my con­cerns and have them lis­tened to. Other par­ents have not been that fortunate.

    I tune in here because I want my child to love school. I want there to never be a day when she says, “school is bor­ing”, or “I don’t want to go to school”. To me home­work has no place in ele­men­tary school and frankly I was shocked to learn that such a thing even existed once I became a par­ent, because it didn’t hap­pen when I was a kid. I don’t under­stand why this change hap­pened but it’s a bad idea and I would like to be a part of a move­ment that works to change it. There will be no tears in my house over homework…it’s not worth it.

    The sad­dest com­mer­cial on TV right now (here in Canada any­way) is a jin­gle for Staples…to the tune of “It’s the Most Won­der­ful Time of the Year”..a father pulling a couch through a Sta­ples store and on the couch are two sad faced kids. What bet­ter way to kick of the school year than to imply that kids hate going to school and par­ents can’t wait to be rid of their kids! What mes­sages are we giv­ing our kids about edu­ca­tion and school!

    August 14th, 2009 at 12:50 pm
    Permanent Link

  15. Concerned Teacher says:

    After read­ing some of the com­ments left by par­ents– it is no won­der that so many kids are dis­re­spect­ful and rude in our soci­ety today. There is no respect for author­ity, rules, order, etc. How for­tu­nate the stu­dents and teach­ers are that live in Korea! There teach­ers are highly respected. Their Sci­ence and Math scores make ours look pretty sad. How can Amer­i­can kids respect teach­ers when their par­ents don’t? The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree! What in the world is going to become of pub­lic edu­ca­tion if this trend of teacher and school bash­ing by par­ents doesn’t stop?! Not every­one can afford to pay for pri­vate school! Some par­ents need to under­stand that not every­thing in life is fun and games! The class­room is not a day­care cen­ter! It is a place of train­ing and prepa­ra­tion for life!

    August 14th, 2009 at 4:32 pm
    Permanent Link

  16. FedUpMom says:

    Con­cerned Teacher — what would you rec­om­mend a par­ent should do, if she sees that the school is actu­ally harm­ing her child? In my case, the school caused my child to have severe, chronic anx­i­ety and depres­sion that she is still work­ing to over­come. I tried to be as respect­ful as I could in resolv­ing the issue, and I was com­pletely unsuc­cess­ful. The only thing that worked was tak­ing my daugh­ter out of the pub­lic schools.

    Some­times the teacher is wrong, some­times the school is wrong. It isn’t “dis­re­spect­ful” to advo­cate for your child when they’re hurt­ing. There must be a way for par­ents (and kids!) to be heard.

    It seems like a lot of teach­ers want a sys­tem where they are beyond ques­tion­ing, beyond account­abil­ity. As you rightly point out, that’s not the Amer­i­can way. The upside to the Amer­i­can way of think­ing is that at our best we pro­duce inno­v­a­tive, cre­ative thinkers. The down­side to the Asian approach is that at their worst they pro­duce con­formist plod­ders, or drive their most cre­ative stu­dents to suicide.

    And if you think I’m exag­ger­at­ing, see:

    http://​eng​lish​.hani​.co​.kr/​a​r​t​i​/​e​n​g​l​i​s​h​_​e​d​i​t​i​o​n​/​e​_​n​a​t​i​o​n​a​l​/​1​9​9​9​7​5​.​h​tml

    August 14th, 2009 at 5:52 pm
    Permanent Link

  17. FedUpMom says:

    http://​eng​lish​.hani​.co​.kr/​a​r​t​i​/​e​n​g​l​i​s​h​_​e​d​i​t​i​o​n​/​e​_​n​a​t​i​o​n​a​l​/​1​9​9​9​7​5​.​h​tml

    I’d like to high­light one sen­tence from the arti­cle about rates of sui­cide attempts by Korean youths:

    “Still, such over­all high fig­ures may be blamed on stress caused by exces­sive study­ing and com­pe­ti­tion, experts said.”

    Is this really the model we want to follow?

    August 14th, 2009 at 5:57 pm
    Permanent Link

  18. Matthew says:

    Yes! A new school year means new con­tracts! I was on the look­out for them this year. They seem more toned down this year (more along the lines of “I acknowl­edge receipt of these rules” rather than “I agree to these rules”), but it still baf­fles me that so many teach­ers don’t real­ize that by start­ing out with this sort of author­i­tar­ian atti­tude will close the door to stu­dents’ minds from the very begin­ning. Peo­ple learn best I think when they feel rap­port with or trust the per­son teaching.

    One teacher, how­ever, tried the clas­sic con­tract. It went some­thing like this:
    “I, , rec­og­nize that I am solely respon­si­ble for the grade I receive in this class. I agree to meet these three goals.…..and acknowl­edge that if I fail to meet these goals the teacher will call my par­ents.” There was then room for his sig­na­ture and a parent’s sig­na­ture and phone number.

    My son had started work­ing on the goals by the time he showed it to me (and I have to give him credit for real­iz­ing that it was ben­e­fi­cial to him to set the goals extremely low), but I took one look at it and said I wouldn’t sign it and my wife agreed. I told him I felt like the teacher had a large influ­ence in grades (both in teach­ing style and in sub­jec­tive grad­ing) and so did we as parents.

    He wrote up a new state­ment say­ing he had a large influ­ence on his grade and that he would put in a best effort to meet the goals. Then all three of us signed it.

    He won’t have that class again until Tues­day, and I’m very curi­ous what kind of response we’re going to get. I can tell from the other papers she sent home that this is going to be a painful class (A’s can only be given if the stu­dent does unas­signed work? ). Sadly, he is in this Social Stud­ies class because we took him out of GT Social Stud­ies because of sev­eral years of exces­sive home­work in those classes.

    September 3rd, 2009 at 8:50 am
    Permanent Link

  19. Matthew says:

    Oops, some of what I wrote in the con­tract quote above didn’t come through (guess the site doesn’t like greater than/less than sym­bols). Basi­cally, he had to fill in his name and write in 3 goals.

    September 3rd, 2009 at 8:52 am
    Permanent Link

  20. PsychMom says:

    I think you should make up a con­tract for each teacher…

    I, Miss or Mr.., acknowl­edge that (insert student’s name here) is a mem­ber of my (insert sub­ject here) class and shall be accorded respect and kind­ness while a mem­ber of said class. I shall always be cour­te­ous, behave in a pro­fes­sional man­ner and pro­vide, to the utmost of my abil­i­ties, a sound edu­ca­tion in the class con­tent this year.

    Have the prin­ci­pal co-sign.

    September 3rd, 2009 at 9:44 am
    Permanent Link

  21. Matthew says:

    PsychMom…I love that idea. And I bet at best it would be greeted with stony silence and most likely a “who do you think you are?” response (um, a par­ent and taxpayer?).

    September 3rd, 2009 at 9:50 am
    Permanent Link

  22. PsychMom says:

    If you did do that though…it would cer­tainly send a mes­sage that you have expec­ta­tions as well.…and heavens…that you are a vig­i­lant, car­ing parent.

    Isn’t that always the com­plaint from teachers.…that they have to do these things because we aren’t “engaged” in our children’s education?

    I hope I have the courage to do somet­ing like this if I ever see a con­tract from school.

    September 3rd, 2009 at 10:01 am
    Permanent Link

  23. FedUpMom says:

    Matthew — I’m intrigued that you had to take your son out of a G/T class. I had to take my daugh­ter out of an accel­er­ated math class which was mak­ing her life mis­er­able. Who­ever got the idea that “gifted/talented” means “tons of home­work and pressure”?

    At least your son gets to write his own goals, I guess. What both­ers me here is that it’s the usual sit­u­a­tion where the stu­dent can’t really write what he thinks, but has to guess at what the teacher wants to hear. What if your son’s goals were:

    1.) To stay focused on learn­ing, rather than on grades.

    2.) To retain my inborn curios­ity and creativity.

    3.) To con­tinue to have a rich, mean­ing­ful per­sonal life out­side of school.

    Look­ing at your mes­sage again, I think I might have mis­un­der­stood it. Does your son write his own goals, or does he just get to set lev­els, like “My goal is to get a C+”?

    And in the spirit of true part­ner­ship, I’d like to see the par­ents respond with a con­tract for the teacher to sign. Some­thing like,

    *****************************

    1.) I will assign home­work only as it is nec­es­sary and use­ful for your child.

    2.) I will resist attempts by gov­ern­ment bureau­crats to turn this class into stan­dard­ized test prep.

    3.) I will strive to make this class inter­est­ing and engag­ing so that stu­dents can enjoy learning.

    I acknowl­edge that if I fail to meet these goals, the par­ents will call the principal.

    *******************************

    September 3rd, 2009 at 10:11 am
    Permanent Link

  24. PsychMom says:

    I’m begin­ning to be intrigued by this idea of a con­tract for each teacher with each child.….it gets to the heart of this prob­lem of “us” ver­sus “them” which really shouldn’t be there at all, but is.
    It helps to bring it back to what the teacher’s respon­si­bil­ity is, what the child (fam­ily) can right­fully expect, and sets a tone of a true part­ner­ship, not this dic­ta­to­r­ial tone that seems to come from school at times.

    We’re not just the system’s sheep.…we are par­tic­i­pants and we have expec­ta­tions too.

    September 3rd, 2009 at 10:35 am
    Permanent Link

  25. Matthew says:

    FedUp­Mom: the sheet was labeled “Goal 1″, “Goal 2″ and “Goal 3″ with about 5 blank lines each so I guess you could put any­thing, but the under­ly­ing mes­sage (“write you goals and suc­ceed at them or else you will get in trou­ble and have it turned in by the next class or you’ll get a 0 for your home­work”) wasn’t exactly con­ducive to deep intro­spec­tion by the students.

    I think if I get push­back from the teacher I might try a reverse con­tract, if noth­ing else but to make a point.

    September 3rd, 2009 at 11:14 am
    Permanent Link

  26. FedUpMom says:

    Matthew — I was think­ing some more about your son’s assign­ment. You say that he has fig­ured out, cor­rectly, that it’s in his inter­est to set the goals low. How about these?

    Goal 1.) I will con­tinue to be a carbon-based life form.

    Goal 2.) I will put my pants on one leg at a time.

    Goal 3.) I will attend school when I am forced to.

    Actu­ally, this whole busi­ness of kids set­ting goals at the begin­ning of the year is get­ting on my nerves. Even the Feds have included it as part of their pack­age to go along with Obama’s speech. What could it pos­si­bly mean to set indi­vid­ual goals in a sys­tem where the indi­vid­ual has zero power to achieve those goals? If a major­ity of the kids say that their first goal is to learn more about how to imple­ment green tech­nol­ogy, will the teacher change the cur­ricu­lum? Of course not. The only accept­able goals are the ones that the teacher wants. If the kids say their first goal is to hold a strike over stan­dard­ized tests, then what?

    Also, notice how the teacher wants the stu­dent to agree with the state­ment “I am solely respon­si­ble for my grade.” It’s a glar­ing exam­ple of how school is about grades instead of learn­ing, and it’s also just plain false. If the stu­dent had actual respon­si­bil­ity for his grade, he could choose not to receive a grade, or choose a dif­fer­ent form of assess­ment, or …

    September 5th, 2009 at 11:07 am
    Permanent Link

  27. HomeworkBlues says:

    As I read more, I become more and more dis­il­lu­sioned. Do we tell our kids just not to have kids?

    Of course not. But don’t we want some­thing much bet­ter for our grand­chil­dren. I told my daugh­ter, you will have to either home­chool or put your chil­dren in pri­vate school. She asked me recently, “Mom, can you home­school my chil­dren so I can have a career?” If I’m alive and well, I just might have to do that!

    September 5th, 2009 at 5:53 pm
    Permanent Link

  28. HomeworkBlues says:

    Cor­rec­tions: There should be a ? after grand­chil­dren, not a period. And, I know that home­school has an S in it. Typo.

    September 5th, 2009 at 5:54 pm
    Permanent Link

  29. HomeworkBlues says:

    Sara, I linked to your con­tracts posts about your own daugh­ter and her French teacher last year. That post and all the sub­se­quent com­ments brought back mem­o­ries. Sara, I miss when you chimed in more frequently.

    You wrote: “Since my daugh­ter attends a very large pub­lic high school (4,000+ stu­dents), where parent-teacher inter­ac­tion is min­i­mal and there’s no email access to teachers,”

    No email access to the teach­ers? Wow, that’s a new one. At least I’ve always had that.

    September 23rd, 2009 at 5:35 pm
    Permanent Link

Leave a comment on “What to Do with Those Pesky “Con­tracts” from the Teacher”

Your Info (optional)




Comment (required)

Message