No they cant because if its against their legal guardians wishes and also the students its an invasion of privacy.
yes
Yes.
Yes, it is generally permissible for a teacher to take a picture of a student for educational or administrative purposes, as long as the school has appropriate policies in place regarding student privacy and consent.
No, their parents could easliy sue the teacher in the United States of America.
No, it is no more illegal for a teacher to text a student than to email a student. It would be inappropriate for such to happen without the prior knowledge of the parents of the student, but not illegal.
If you are under the age of consent, usually 16, then yes. In some places this is still illegal even when you have reached the age of consent because of the responsibility of the teacher toward their student and the laws specify it is never okay.
Often referred to as just a parent-teacher conference, it is a time when parents meet with teacher to discuss their student's progress in class. Lately, teachers like students to be at these conferences as well in order to contribute and to hear certain things directly. This is why it is referred to as a parent-teacher-student conference.
No. A parent can give parental consent. A teacher can give teacher consent.
* It is seldom every heard of that a teacher beats a student because they could lose their teacher's license. Teachers may be strict, but if they hit, slap, or even push a student then the student should report it to the school counselor or to their parents. Beware! If you make false accusations towards a teacher simply because you don't like them you could get into trouble yourself and possibly be kicked out of the school you are in or your parents could be sued.
no the teacher just likes random conversation
Teachers usually follow a specific format in parent meetings. Sometimes the schools have a form that the teacher has to fill out, and sometimes the teacher follows a certain format that he or she has developed. The teacher tells the parents their child's grades and how the teacher arrived at those grades -- why the student received those grades. The teacher usually discusses the child's behavior: whether the child is quiet, noisy, nervous, interested in the classes. The teacher will mention if the child asks to go the restroom quite a lot because it could be a sign of a health problem. The teacher will mention any outstanding qualities the student exhibits or any problems the student seems to have. The teacher generally does not mention other students by name in the conference, but might mention whether the student seems to have a lot of friends or not. Then the teacher asks if the parents have any questions. Parents often ask if the student has been in any trouble or what they can do at home to help the student improve his or her grades. Sometimes parents tell about problems the child has at home, such as not wanting to do homework or wanting to play games all night. They might ask the teacher for some advice. Sometimes parents disagree with the teacher, and the conference is a good time for parents and teachers to either come to some kind of agreement, or at least to understand how everybody feels about a certain problem or issue. A conference usually doesn't last longer than 20 minutes, and if there are many teachers, each teacher only speaks for around 5 minutes.
Farwell speech to the teacher from a student