Patronising Bosses

Hi all,

First post so please bear with me...

I started a part-time job back in April 2025 in a primary school. At the start of this academic year, the school got a new headteacher. Recently a parent has complained about me which has resulted in me receiving an official verbal warning from the headteacher with accompanying extra training.

At the end of my shift today, I received the official paperwork about this complaint and disciplinary procedure. I haven't told anyone directly at the school about my autism diagnosis, but disclosed it to occupational health during my very short assessment before I started working at the school. The headteacher said to me at the start of this meeting "I understand you're autistic and everyone is a little bit on the spectrum..." I've heard this statement so many times, I am very rarely affected by it anymore. I don't believe that is correct but everyone is entitled to an opinion. My problem lies with when I was reading the documents and the headteacher said in a patronising tone "I know there are some big, complicated words here. Are you sure you understand all of this?"

For context, I'm an avid reader and achieved grade C at A Level English Language. I believe I am above average when it comes to my comprehension of the English Language and formal documents. Being autistic doesn't mean I'm academically challenged. Like having depression doesn't mean you just feel sad. (My full diagnosis is severe psychotic depression with auditory hallucinations and being on the autistic spectrum.) 

Am I being unreasonable here feeling insulted and offended how my boss treated/spoke to me? Should I say anything back or make a complaint about this? I am looking for a new job because the state of education in this country is not one I am enjoying or can cope with long term. I thought I was doing well in my remission with my mental health, but something like this may knock my confidence and self-esteem considerably. I'm an overthinker as it is, and have been replaying every conversation since Monday with people multiple times, trying to find any hidden meaning or my misunderstanding.

Parents
  • I'd be livid and raging. I think you should speak to your union rep and if you're not part of a union then join one, this is exactly the sort of thing they should fight on your behalf and on behalf of everyone else who has to put up with such patronising oafs.

    From what you've said I dont' think there is anything you misunderstood, but I do think you've been the victim of discrimination.

  • I would love to have a union to join, but although I work in an education setting, I am not teaching staff and I'm under the impression I can't join a union. (May look into this though as it is getting pretty out of hand, putting me off going into work each day.)

  • Teachers have their own unions, but most non teaching staff at schools I worked in were members of unions. If that isn’t the case in your school, you can still join a union and be your own school union representative. The union should guide you through the process of making that work for you in your employment.

Reply
  • Teachers have their own unions, but most non teaching staff at schools I worked in were members of unions. If that isn’t the case in your school, you can still join a union and be your own school union representative. The union should guide you through the process of making that work for you in your employment.

Children
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