Adamantium wrote:
Also, if there is anyone there who might advocate for you, such as a counselor or social worker, you can mention that this behavior is making you uncomfortable and you don't understand it. They might be able to help you cope with it.
Having someone who with matter-of-fact confidence advocates on your behalf can make a big difference. And this person can also rather act as a fair witness.
And really, students in school are often fed a line of crap. 'You must take care of it yourself,' they tell students, over and over and over again. And if it's a question about whether a paper has been graded correctly, by a teacher who is generally reasonable, that's fine. It is good experience to take care of it yourself.
But a number of cases in adulthood, it is precisely the adult, mature thing to get an advocate. And it can also be the smooth and skillful thing as well.
And I'd say that when it's the teacher themselves who is the problem, it's precisely such a time.