Want this question answered?
course offere teacher student rerequist
John A. Barr has written: 'The elementary teacher and guidance' -- subject(s): Counseling in elementary education, Teacher participation in educational counseling
Robert Louis Warner has written: 'Guidance services' -- subject(s): Teacher participation in educational counseling, Educational counseling, Vocational guidance
talk to your school council , guidance teacher or principal .
Mentoring is not counseling. It is guidance in the form of teaching and support provided by someone you trust, usually a teacher, a parent or relative, a supervisor, or a counselor.
Problem of guidance and counseling are Paucity in trained counselor Rivary between teacher and counselor Mis-understanding of the counselor jobs by teachers Suspicion of counselor by teachers, students or school heads Lack of fund Lack of location Lack of psychometric test during counseling services
Be their friend and help stand up for them. If that doesn't work, tell a teacher, principal or guidance councilor
tell your teacher, or a nurse, police, guidance counselor, principal or trusting neighbor Tell anyone.
If one is being bullied, they can talk to their teacher, guidance counsellor or principal, they can also tell their parents about the situation, so that it can be addressed.
Barbara H. Wright has written: 'Practical handbook for group guidance for teacher-advisers of homerooms' -- subject(s): Educational counseling
It depends on what you mean by "unfair." If you can prove that the teacher is giving other students better grades when your work is the same quality, you can go to the principal and discuss what can be done about it. If you're actually doing something that is making the teacher treat you differently, however, you're not being treated unfairly. Ask your guidance counselor or another teacher what they think about this teacher's behavior and see if it really is unfair or not.
It depends on whether the teacher and the principal are two different individuals or a single individual (which happens in some schools where principal happens also to be an active teacher). If teacher and principal are two separate individuals, then the verb form would be 'are'. If it is the same person who is the teacher and the principal, then the verb should be 'is'. Hope that suffices.