Grrr does my head in......
she comes with me to placement to help me and to make sure i can understand the children and the staff. She really bugs me because as soon I say something she repeats what Iv said even though I know the children have understood, she critizes me and make me feel really down and she is supposed to interpret what the children are saying to me but instead sh etalks to them and doesnt tell me what they said in the first place. If the staff are asking me something and I dont understand she will answer for me and not tell me.
she comes with me to placement to help me and to make sure i can understand the children and the staff. She really bugs me because as soon I say something she repeats what Iv said even though I know the children have understood, she critizes me and make me feel really down and she is supposed to interpret what the children are saying to me but instead sh etalks to them and doesnt tell me what they said in the first place. If the staff are asking me something and I dont understand she will answer for me and not tell me.



) from all of my interpreters not to mention from the teachers as well. I probably hold the world record for the most 72's ever written in the history of Milwaukee Public Schools as well as the most suspensions ever received. I was always in the principal's office. The interpreters would exert their authority over anybody and everybody and did not care that their job is to interpret only and nothing else - they acted like they owned the classroom and the hallways. It was always so much bullshit. For the longest time I had no idea that this kind of behavior from my interpreters were considered to be unprofessional and inappropriate. I actually did not learn how a professional interpreter was supposed to behave until college, despite my stints at the state school for the Deaf (WSD) from time to time growing up between the age of 6 to 18 years old. No one ever told me. I notice that interpreters who work in the public schools system (K-12) tends to be more unprofessional and tend to take advantage of the authority that they aren't supposed to have and they did not know their place as interpreters, while college and university interpreters as well as interpreters that come to your doctor's appointments and other such things are so much more advanced, more professional, and more mature, and they knew their place. I think something really needs to be done about those interpreters that exhibit unprofessional behavior in the K-12 public schools system. Professional interpreters who are truly professional know that their job is to interpret and nothing else, period. They know their place.