I wonder what Zelda came up with for that introduction
Greentext
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Zazzy
Zealous?
depending how she's feeling, zany, zen or zealous?
Or zonked, if she smoked a fat dart beforehand
"Xylophone Zelda". Really fucked over Xenias introduction
"Zyougottabekiddingme Zelda"
Gotta be xenophobic Xenia now, sorry, I don't make the rules
Uh, xylophone doesn't start with Z, back to kindergarten until you learn your letters.
He can blame english phonetics. Also X being kind of a joker letter. "Why does eks make the sound zee?"
The teacher clearly said "letter" though, so phonetics shouldn't come into it. If they were named "Pete," "Psycho Pete" would be reasonable and probably accurate.
Also, xylophone is a noun anyway, so after they redo kindergarten, they'll need to go back to second grade (or maybe first?) and relearn basic grammar.
Finally, English phoenetics is an oxymoron, but I don't think kids get into that concept until later on in school, so I'll give you a pass for now. But everyone knows English pronunciation and spelling aren't related and you just end up memorizing everything anyway.
Why your screenshot looks more beautiful than usual greentexts?
edit: is it a custom font?
Zoomed in before screenshotting
As an outsider, it's wild to me that you can/could get suspended from school so easily.
You can't.
Principal:
"OK this kid is fucking based, I'll reward him with a week off"
Thanks for the good chuckle
How old are they that they called labeled as ableist? This would not have happened in 2000s elementary
Hm.
They could be in 4th grade in 2010, and be 25 now posting this. I could also believe that elementary school teachers could be among the first 5% of people to adopt a new super-inclusive type of brand new lefty language that's just starting to be used for a new type of friendly inclusiveness in 2000.
Makes sense.
I'm about 10 years older and have never heard the term in person, only in lefty online communities like Lemmy. I even took an ASL class from a deaf person (highly recommend, though maybe my teacher just rocked) as an adult with my SO, and we didn't even use the term "ablism," but instead just "hearing" to describe people who aren't deaf (so the concept, not the term). That would've been mid to late 2010s, IIRC.
Couple that with the claimed suspension in 4th grade, and I have serious doubts any of this happened. To get suspended, you need to be starting fist fights or something, even cussing or intentionally insulting people would probably only land normal detention.
Interesting!
I don't know - the term "ableist" has certainly spiked in popularity in the last ten years or so, but even in the 90's you'd get a bollocking for throwing around the terms "mong" or "spaz" or "flid" within earshot of a teacher.
I mean, I can see why - I hate the terms myself now. but when you're in single digits of age, it's just used as another derisory term rather than a specific slight at someone's physical or mental development challenges.
It still got you in hot water if you were daft enough to get caught shouting it though.
Were you in a big city? Mine was pretty small. I wonder if that has to do with it? I never heard the word until maybe high school or college
Really? I was in a pretty medium sized city (30-40k people, suburb of 1M+ city), and we used it all the time as kids. I have kids about the age of OP and live in a similar sized city, and I catch my kids using similar language.
I grew up in a liberal area and now live in a conservative one. It would take a lot more effort than that to get suspended from elementary school, you basically need to actually beat someone up or use drugs in school to do that.
Are you saying used the word ableist? Or the r word? I’m saying the r word was used frequently in elementary and middle school and wonder how young OP must be.
I have literally never heard "ableist" in real life.
We used the word "retard" (the R word in case it gets censored on your instance) a ton as kids to insult each other (e.g. for doing poorly at something), and I've heard my kids say it as well. I personally don't see the word nearly as problematic as the n word, because I've literally never heard it used to insult someone with an actual mental disability (have heard "mental retardation" [censor?] to describe such a condition though), it's only used to tease friends.
I crack down on it, but mostly because we have a few people with such conditions in our community and I'd hate for them to be offended at something my kids say off hand. I don't see it as "ableist" or whatever, and most don't seem to associate it with people's actual mental development, and instead I hear "slow," which is much less censored and IMO more offensive since it sounds like you're trying to hide a more ugly word in the hope that they won't understand (and I bet they do). I crack down on any potential slurs, but it wasn't that long ago that "idiot" meant much the same as "retard" (again, potential censored r word) does now, so banning its use just retards ("slows", if censored) that process.
I think "the left" (not sure who to point at here, but they largely seem leftist) have gone too far down the "inclusive language" rabbit hole here and often do harm than good (e.g. "latinx" is offensive because it came from English speakers, not the Latino community). Creating special terms just highlights differences instead of focusing on similarities, which IMO causes more problems than it solves. But I also don't want to offend anyone, so I try to enforce clean language and stick to technical terms (and not academic terms that dance around the issue) for things when I'm unsure of the acceptable parlance. I'll ask as well, e.g. I use "black" since that's what my black friends prefer. The "right" takes things too far the other direction, so I stick somewhere in the middle and try to ask when unsure.
Nah I was in a pretty small town, semi-rural but not buttfuck-nowhere either.
It certainly wasn't labelled "ableist" then, it was simply "being a little shit" - I only really learned of the term ableism around 10-15 years ago.
Same, but in a suburban area (suburb of major metro). Never heard of "ablism" until I found leftist communities like this online, and I grew up in a left leaning area. I don't think I've ever heard the term in person, and I have kids about OP's claimed age.
I'm not native and I discovered the word by reading a Lemmy community's rules.
When I went to school, one kid during that exercise said that his name was so-and-so, and one thing he liked to do was stick his thumb up his ass.
He was known as "Thumbs" for the next four years, possibly longer. I actually don't think I ever learned his name, he was just Thumbs.
I knew a kid who was caught beating his meat on a school trip, and was thereafter known as Spanky.
Surely older than 4th grade, puberty for boys tends to not happen until 6th or 7th grade.
Yep, it happened in 8th grade so people called him Spanky through the end of high school.
Definitely a learning experience for that kid.