Hi All-
The mishap actually occurred with MH, but I was hoping to get some feedback on how he can talk with his supervisor about this-
MH is self employed and he teaches as adjunct faculty at a technical college on tues and thurs. The school that he teaches at is about an hour away from home, so we have set up home daycare for our 1 year old DD with a lady that lives close to the school. We have been using her for several semesters (always on Tuesdays). MH drops her off about 30 minutes before class starts and picks her up afterwards. Anyways, he gets to the daycare yesterday and no one is there. He waits and calls and texts....the lady is simply not there. Of course he calls me panicking and there is literally nothing that we can do to get care for DD in 20 minutes before the class starts (I work almost an hour and a half from where he was at, so it would have done no good for me to get there) He called his supervisor at the school and no answer, so he just went to class, with a baby in tow, to explain to his students what had happened. As you can imagine, his adult students were not impressed that he shows up with a baby- plus this is only the second course for this semester, so the students don't know MH yet. He waited for everyone to get there, did a brief lecture and then ended class early. At this point, he had still not heard from his supervisor. Of course, he is deeply embarrassed , aware of how unprofessional it looked and is fearful that he will not be hired back for another term. When he got home yesterday, there was an em ail from his supervisor saying that she was aware that he had brought his DD to school and it was against policy (duh) It was very terse as she was clearly upset. MH responded letting her know what had happened and he did what he thought was best in such a mess of a situation rather than just no showing up at all. She did respond after that saying don't let it happen again, but her email had a much softer tone.
DH will see her tomorrow as well as his students- what/how/WWYD to smooth the situation over with everyone. Obviously he has apologized, but any suggestions as to what he can say or do to maintain respect and professionalism with his students and his supervisor? MH loves teaching and we really count on the extra income. It would be such a blow to MH's ego and our financial situation if he were not to get hired on for additional terms.
Thank you for reading through this long, long email and TIA for any advice.
* Oh- daycare provider has been fired, She didn't realize that she was supposed to watch DD (even though we had confirmed the night before and she has been watching her at the same day/time for 6 months) She picked up a shift at her other job.
Re: Help smoothing over a terrible, terrible mishap at work yesterday (long)
IMO I don't feel like your DH did anything wrong. He had care set up in place, it fell through last minute, his supervisor was unreachable, so he made the best of a situation.
If I were in his shoes I would ask the supervior what she would prefer to have done in that situation. I would also come with a plan of how you both will deal with that situation if it arrises again.
As for his students, he already apologized to them. There really isn't anything else he needs to do in that situation. Maybe offer to have some extra office hours that week incase anyone felt short changed by his brief lecture and has questions?
-sorry for the spelling.. I can't find the spell check to save my life.
Explain to everyone that there was child care set up, but it fel through. I would also make a point to mention that the DCP was fired, and new care has been set up. That's all that really needs to be said.
The supervisor was unreachable, and that also needs to be addressed. I agree with PP that asking her how she would have preferred he handle the situation is a good idea.
Agree with PP. I don't know how much he told his supervisor in the first communication but he needs to reiterate the following points.
- He set up care ahead of time and confirmed it multiple times but DC provider was simply not there when he showed up
- You work far away so you couldn't help him out and he literally had to decide between showing up to class with baby in tow or not showing up at all
- He has since fired DC provider and you and he have agreed on XXX plan if this happens again (assuming the last part is true)
As long as it's a one time occurrence, I'm sure it wouldn't affect his future prospects with the university.
He apologized to his students once. That is good enough. It is likely they truly don't care.
He needs to ask his supervisor how she would have preferred he handle the situation, and assure it won't happen again.
I do agree that he needs to talk to his supervisor and ask what she would like for him to do in the future IF this were ever to happen again, but clearly tell her that you've fired the sitter.
Past that, I'd let it go. I actually REALLY don't believe that his students were all that upset. I think that's HIM projecting/overreacting. Maybe a couple were a little "huh?" about it, but really... I doubt that most of them were really all that put out by this.
And why is his pride hurt? This is a working parent issue that other parents have had to deal with! He's not alone. It's not about him being a bad teacher OR a bad parent. He was stuck in a crappy situation because of a sitter who bailed on you. But it's not unique.
His best course of action is to move on and continue to do the best job possible and remain professional. In time this will be forgotten if not forgiven.
This and what PPs said. I totally have the Frozen 'Let It Go' song in my head now.
Baby GIRL due 12/26