Most of the time, parent emails are a standard, non-issue part of a teacherâs job. At their best, emails from parents help to communicate logistics, provide a heads-up to teachers for context of whatâs happening at home, and ask questions when something isnât working. I know not every teacher can say this, but when I was in the classroom, almost all parent emails were kind, cooperative, and professional.
That said, for me and for every teacher, the emails that werenât kind, cooperative, and professional definitely stood out (and not in a good way).
A caveat before I dig into this list: This isnât to say that parents canât ever email with frustrations, concerns, or serious questions. Itâs critical to communicate with teachers on behalf of your childâs well-being and academic performance. However, if youâve clearly communicated your needs to the teacher and those needs still arenât being met, thatâs not a green light to fire off a nasty email or hound the teacherâthatâs when you sit down with an administrator to help you get what you need.
Weâve put together some phrases and approaches to avoid that will help you get the response youâre looking for and avoid jeopardizing a relationship with an important person in your childâs life.
9 Things Parents Should Never Say in an Email to Teachers
1) Accusations instead of questions
Thereâs a big difference between âMaddie said you wouldnât let her retake her quiz, and I donât think thatâs fairâ and âMaddie said you wouldnât let her retake her quiz, and I was wondering if she got that info right. Is there some context weâre missing?â
2) The word âASAPâ
Between the human beings in their classrooms, lesson and curriculum planning, and other emails, teachers already have about 100 ASAPs bouncing around in their mental workload. Unless itâs an actual health emergency or a high-stakes time-sensitive request (both of which I would think would do better as phone calls, but I digress), leave this acronym out of your emails.
3) âPer my last emailâ
Listen, I get the frustration that someone may have missed a part of your earlier email. But this phrase has been around long enough to become synonymous with an insult. Alternatives: âWondering if you got a chance to address my question from Fridayâlet me know what you think.â âYou might have missed it in the thread, but I responded on Wednesday. Just didnât want you to think I left you hanging.â
4) âI talked to your boss and she said to speak to you firstâ
I think parents use this phrase to say, âIâm serious enough to have let your boss know about this,â but really it says, âInstead of addressing the problem with you like an adult, I tried to go over your head and your principal called me out on my unprofessional approach.â (Note: In cases of studentsâ health or safety being at risk, go directly to a principal or building supervisor.)
5) Questions about other children
We canât comment or report on other childrenâs behavior, academic performance, accommodations, personal information, schedules ⊠anything, really. Please donât ask us for our thoughts on something you wouldnât want us telling another parent about your child.
6) Anything too long-winded
If itâs more than two paragraphs, ask for a meeting or phone call instead.
7) Requests for a meeting or phone call with no context
I remember once I got a request for a meeting and the parent refused to let me know what it was about. It turned out the parent was confused about a grade and had never seen the rubric I sent home and put online. We could have avoided a lot of worry on my part (and a lot of time/coordination on both our parts) if heâd just been honest about what he wanted.
8) Giving deadlines for responses
Most school districts have a 24- or 48-hour email response expectation for teachers. Itâs perfectly fine to request a response time if you have something time-sensitive like a recommendation letter. But itâs both condescending and not in your realm of control to give teachers an earlier deadline (âI need a response by the end of the dayâ).
9) ANYTHING IN ALL CAPS
Unless youâre emphasizing something funny or lighthearted, all caps come off as yell-y and demanding. Not a good look or effective for getting what you want.
Thereâs a very important exception for all of these guidelines: if you are ordering food or beverages for teachers. In that case, all bets are off. All caps, a three-hour deadline, the acronym âASAP,â and a demanding tone are all fair game!