Teacher reveals dog ate her students’ homework
Would you look at that: The dog really did eat their homework.
A teacher was left shocked after her pet pooch devoured her class’ assignments, leaving paper fragments all over her kitchen floor.
The photo went viral in a Reddit thread with the caption, “When you’re a teacher and your dog eats everyone’s homework.”
The post earned more than 1,100 upvotes and people on the platform were quick to crack a few jokes about the puppy mishap.
“How the tables turn,” one user said.
“You should show this picture to your class. They’d enjoy it (as long as you give everyone good marks for it),” commented someone else.
“But the real question is … do the kids believe you or do they think you’re making an excuse because you forgot to grade their homework?” quipped another.
While it’s unclear whether the Reddit poster, who did not reveal specifics, really is a teacher or not, it didn’t stop readers’ imaginations.
“I would have LOVE for a teacher to come in and say, ‘Kids. You all got As. My dog ate your homework,’” one user giggled, while another said: “Good dog! Now everyone gets an ‘A.’”
“Your dog: ‘See? I got rid of all this so you have more time to pet me!’” joked someone else.
Although the age-old excuse is usually just a fib, hungry hounds have been known to actually eat kids’ homework. In fact, just two years ago, a student in the Philippines fell victim to his dogs’ late-night munchies — all of which was caught on video.
The two pups played a round of tug of war with the papers until it was in scraps, making a confusing sight for the student, Darren James Lamban, when he awoke the next morning.
While he might be one of the only people whose devious pet has truly snacked on their homework, the excuse dates back to the beginning of the 20th century.
In a 1905 edition of a Welsh-American magazine, music critic William ApMadoc recited an old anecdote of a minister whose sermon met the same distasteful fate — being eaten by his dog.
But it wasn’t until a 1929 speech penned by a retiring headmaster, James Bewsher, that the tale of homework-eating pups was seen.
“It is a long time since I have had the excuse about the dog tearing up the arithmetic homework,” his speech, which was published in the Manchester Guardian, read.
Other sources claim John Steinbeck once begged an editor to extend the deadline for “Of Mice and Men” in 1936 due to the manuscript’s unfortunate bout with the author’s Irish setter, who took a hefty bite — or two — out of the book.
Or so he said.
Read the full article Here