Avoid Being a Victim of an Unfair Teacher Step 1:Always be sure to make a good first impression at the beginning of the year. For most teachers, once they see you as a bright, kind, polite student, they'll always see you as a bright, kind, polite student. They'll let things slide later.
Step 2.Figure out teachers right away. Do they seem cruel, tough, insecure, or oversensitive? Do your best to present yourself as someone who belongs on their good side. Be prepared to revise your assessment as well. A teacher who seems good at first may be trying to make a good first impression, just as you are. A teacher who seems irritable and mean may just be having a bad day, or a crisis in his or her personal life.
Step 3.Give the impression that you care about their subject, even if you loathe it. Be reasonably attentive, participate, do the work. Who knows? If you give it a chance, you may find that it's not so bad
Step 4:If you're opinionated and need to have your say or question the material, save it for the teachers who are open to input. If you question easily offended teachers, they may not take it as well. Also, they will generally like it if you ask meaningful questions about their subject.
Step5:If you must miss class, ask about missed work as soon as possible. If possible, ask for these guidelines in writing, perhaps in the form of a syllabus
Step6: Give them no excuse to lower your grade. Participate in class, do the homework, have the notebooks and stuff you need.
Step7:Sometimes there's nothing you can do yourself. In a case where the teacher is being obviously unfair and you can prove it, have your parents talk to the teacher to say that they are not going allow it.
Step8:Save all paperwork, assignments, etc. A paper trail will always unveil the truth. Try to be as organized as you can. This way you can easily reference it later, if needed.
Step9:If you teacher tries to pull an act that you never turn in work and fails you for a semester. Tell a teacher you trust or assistant principal and ask them to keep copies of your work in their office in a folder as you turn in work. If then teacher fails you again for "missing homework" tell whoever it is holding onto the copies and have the teacher explain themselves to them. If they say you haven't turned in homework, all the evidence that you DID do your work will be right there. A person who viewed this article did have a teacher that did this.
Step11:For every misdeed of the teacher, tell your parents. If the list grows large, your parents can come to the principal as witnesses.
Step12:Do not feel bad if you get the teacher fired. If they are this unjust, they probably do not deserve their job
Step 13 : Ask lots of questions. Ask how to do assignments in detail. This will annoy them, but they can't do anything about that. If they do complain about you, simply reply that you want to produce the best quality assignment possible
Step14: And the most important rule: Always be respectful.
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Unfair Teachers
RandomYou do not win an argument by getting in the last word or the wildest insult. You win an argument by getting the other person to change. When a teacher does something unfair, winning the argument means getting that teacher to correct his mistake. So...