The call about Open House was okay. Likewise the reminder of Parent- teacher conferences.
But the calls about Homecoming? Not needed. As if a kid would forget spirit days, the football game, and the dance? Not likely.
Or the call announcing, "As of today, school is officially on winter break." Likewise. Any teenager who didn't know when break started is not exactly a star student to begin with.
"Don't forget to check the Lost and Found! All items will be donated to Goodwill next week." Could you not run this on the daily announcements and be done with it?
"Final Exams will take place on the 20th, 21st, and 22nd. All fines must be paid by then." Um... could the school system not get this across more efficiently? Maybe the novel approach of actually contacting students with fines and leaving the rest of the families alone?
It gets worse. Robo-secretary called on a Friday evening informing us that our child had been marked absent from a class that day. Amigo had no idea what had happened. He, like many with Asperger's, thrives on routine. Missing a class is not on his agenda. He swore he hadn't missed anything that day or any other day. Chuck stopped in to visit the school office the following Monday to investigate: it was a mistaken call. The system had gotten out of hand and called the families of every student in the school, including the associate principal and her freshman son. Now the very same associate principal was faced with making apologies to 400 families.
It gets better -- or at least more humorous. We were shocked with a robo-call at 5:30 one morning. Yes, I said morning. 5:30 A.M. Local High School families were awakened to find out that the following morning was Senior Spirit Day, the day that all seniors wear school colors and "skip" homeroom to take a class picture in the gym.
Oops. Someone had programmed A.M. instead of P.M.
To repair the error, the same secretary recorded a new call apologizing for the mistake and sent it out that night at the "correct" time. At 5:30 P.M. came the automated and recorded message from Robo-Call High School, explaining the AM/PM mistake and reminding parents of the senior spirit specialty sprockets and ....IS THIS REALLY SO BLASTED IMPORTANT???!!!
Give it up already! If it's important, please call me. Call Chuck. Call my kid to the office to remind him if he has any fines. If he's missing something, he'll find his way to the Lost and Found and bring a friend along to search (he's blind, remember?). If he cares about Senior Spirit Day, he'll set out his clothes the night before. He'll get to the gym for the class picture. It doesn't take a phone call, much less a robot call made at an inhuman hour of the morning.
He turns 18 soon, and with his legal adulthood, he'll have more control over his schooling. Can we celebrate his birthday by cancelling school robo-calls? Please? That would be a gift.
But the calls about Homecoming? Not needed. As if a kid would forget spirit days, the football game, and the dance? Not likely.
Or the call announcing, "As of today, school is officially on winter break." Likewise. Any teenager who didn't know when break started is not exactly a star student to begin with.
"Don't forget to check the Lost and Found! All items will be donated to Goodwill next week." Could you not run this on the daily announcements and be done with it?
"Final Exams will take place on the 20th, 21st, and 22nd. All fines must be paid by then." Um... could the school system not get this across more efficiently? Maybe the novel approach of actually contacting students with fines and leaving the rest of the families alone?
It gets worse. Robo-secretary called on a Friday evening informing us that our child had been marked absent from a class that day. Amigo had no idea what had happened. He, like many with Asperger's, thrives on routine. Missing a class is not on his agenda. He swore he hadn't missed anything that day or any other day. Chuck stopped in to visit the school office the following Monday to investigate: it was a mistaken call. The system had gotten out of hand and called the families of every student in the school, including the associate principal and her freshman son. Now the very same associate principal was faced with making apologies to 400 families.
It gets better -- or at least more humorous. We were shocked with a robo-call at 5:30 one morning. Yes, I said morning. 5:30 A.M. Local High School families were awakened to find out that the following morning was Senior Spirit Day, the day that all seniors wear school colors and "skip" homeroom to take a class picture in the gym.
Oops. Someone had programmed A.M. instead of P.M.
To repair the error, the same secretary recorded a new call apologizing for the mistake and sent it out that night at the "correct" time. At 5:30 P.M. came the automated and recorded message from Robo-Call High School, explaining the AM/PM mistake and reminding parents of the senior spirit specialty sprockets and ....IS THIS REALLY SO BLASTED IMPORTANT???!!!
Give it up already! If it's important, please call me. Call Chuck. Call my kid to the office to remind him if he has any fines. If he's missing something, he'll find his way to the Lost and Found and bring a friend along to search (he's blind, remember?). If he cares about Senior Spirit Day, he'll set out his clothes the night before. He'll get to the gym for the class picture. It doesn't take a phone call, much less a robot call made at an inhuman hour of the morning.
He turns 18 soon, and with his legal adulthood, he'll have more control over his schooling. Can we celebrate his birthday by cancelling school robo-calls? Please? That would be a gift.
I get robo calls from the school, too. and emails that say the same thing as the call. I guess they really want to get the word out!
Posted by: songbird | January 13, 2010 at 02:46 PM