We have to find out how well we are doing our job ...
And what’s their score in Math, Reading and Writing?
I was in high school 20 years ago and remember these surveys. We usually laughed about them. Seems they’ve gotten much more crass.
Now the teachers will know which kids can be easily exploited.
Here’s your list of in-crowd antics kids.
Now go tell your friends and have fun fun fun...
Child abuse. It’s integrated into the system across the United States.
Survey or recruiting kids for sex?
Makes you wonder, doesn’t it?
In my day we might have had a field day with that survey except that I didn’t know what transgender was and I didn’t know about oral sex and if it was before I was 15 I didn’t know about homosexuals.
I clearly remember the day I learned about homosexuals. A girl made the statement, “Oh, he’s so homosexual.” I went home and asked my mother what that meant and she told me to look it up. To put it lightly, I was shocked.
This test had to be Oral ,because most of the kids can’t read ?
Pushed by planned parenthood and LGBT groups so they can get more funding. A teacher in Chicago suspended for telling kids they didn’t have to fill out.
Get YOUR children out of the government indoctrination centers - NOW!!
teachers who ask such questions of children entrusted to their care, should be fired forthwith. and then sent for psychiatric diagnosis. My Lord! what kinds of perverts have managed to finagle their way into our public schools (and onto our public payroll), anyway?
School administrators looking for their next dates.
"To be a good father, mother, brother, sister, or friend; To be a dependable, faithful, and skilled worker in home, school, field, factory, or office; To be an intelligent, honest, useful, and loyal citizen, with faith in God and love of fellowman; To recognize the brotherhood of man and to live by the Golden Rule."
I remember my kids in 7th grade got a quiz like this. They were smart enough to just blow off the answers. But, one of their friends was even cuter... when asked about sexual experience, he wrote in, “Do animals count?”