When I received my teacher evaluation last year, one area that I didn’t score as high as anticipated was in the area of parent communication, which sort of confused me. I had BCCed my AP each time I sent out an email to parents, which was fairly frequent. There was the sort of mini-newsletter each week discussing the things we were covering that week, there were the notifications about positive behavior I was seeing in some students, as well as the communiques about any inappropriate behavior that needed to be addressed. But through the midsts of all of that, there was rarely any actual phone calls home.
I don’t like parents having my phone number; I don’t like having to decide weather or not to answer a phone call late at night after I’ve hung up my teacher hat for the day; I don’t like the idea of having back and forth conversations via text about matters that should probably be discussed in person; I just don’t like communicating through that medium. I gave out my phone number my 1st year and didn’t have many problems but did hear some horror stories from my peers so I decided to keep my cell phone private this past year, for the most part anyway. One of the one parents that did get my number ended up texting me two weeks after school was out, asking if I was free. I responded that I was on vacation but that she could email me and I would get back to her when I got back. She didn’t email :/
I began to see that there were times that I really needed to call because I wasn’t getting much response via email so I began to call from the school phones. I rarely got through and the parents couldn’t call back and reach me directly so that was sort of a dud. I wouldn’t be able to call them at a more convenient time like 7PM since I’d be gone from school by then.
I did remember that back in college one of my friends had an app where you could disguise your phone number so an alternate phone number would show up on the persons caller ID (ie. I could call the parent from my cell but their caller ID would show my school’s office number). But apparently the app was pulled and the only app that could do something close would be one that I would have to pay by the minute. I also experimented with blocking my number from showing up on their caller ID but who’s going to answer a blocked number, plus they wouldn’t be able to call me back. Ugh, nothing was really working.
So this summer I began looking for an app that could solve these problems, and I happened upon a couple gems!
Remind101
Here’s the beautiful part- I can set it up to automatically go to voicemail if someone calls that number, or if I want to have office hours, to forward all the calls to my cell phone. For example, if they call my Google Voice phone number from 5 – 7 PM, it will ask their name, my phone will ring, ask me if I want to accept the call, and will put them through. If they call outside of those hours, it goes straight to voicemail AND Google Voice will transcribe the voicemail for you as well, creating a database of all your parent communication via telephone as well as a transcript of any voicemails.
Texts can come through Google Voice as well but I may not advertise that to my parents and just present it as my voice-mailbox. If they text, I can decide weather or not I want the Google Voice app to notify me of the text or just wait until I open up Google Voice again (to avoid the dilemma of weather or not to engage the conversation in that moment).
I’m excited to see how these can improve my communication. I also plan on using a Facebook Page and Instagram as well. Both of those will be firsts for me this year, but that will be another post.
Related articles
- Happy Tuesday: Calling All Parents (theuniqueclassroom.wordpress.com)
- Wonderous Google Voice (christopherkurisu.wordpress.com)
- Remind 101 – Safely Text Parents and Students (freetech4teachers.com)
