TP or their sleeve. It’s OK. |
lol OK. |
PLEASE pick out your husband’s oldest sock, the ones with holes in them, and make your child use that instead of an eraser. I’m sure all their classmates will admire them and envy them for their ingenuity and frugality. Their teachers will select them for Lunch Pals and the school will put up a picture of your child in the front office. |
Ok this feels very inconsiderate. You don’t like what’s provided free and so you want parents to buy them. The area is experiencing a major economic event, maybe this year use what the school provides (i.e. taxpayers already paid for) and save the asks for things you’re genuinely not provided (like decent tissues) |
| Try this PP. Dump water on the floor and then use a piece of newspaper to clean it up. Let us know how that goes. |
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I hope nobody complains about their kid’s teacher being out sick for a week, because the teacher-bought clorox wipes and tissues had run out by October.
Also, is “Disenfecting all classroom surfaces” part of the teacher’s job description? Or is it just another “assumed task” teachers are expected to do? |
This. I used to teach primary. The (rare) kids who had their name on every pencil, crayon, and marker had enough to get through the year. Use a Sharpie. Yes, it’s a hateful task, and nobody is making you. You could also get custom pencils, but the Triconderoga pencils really are better. The leads are always centered. |
Haven't taught in a long time, but I never did this. |
Are you wiping down desks or scrubbing floors now? Spraying the desks with disinfectant and letting it dry is probably doing more for killing germs than the Clorox wipes anyway. Yes the brown paper towels aren’t great, we also have them in my office, but they wipe down a desk sufficiently. |
| Are the school janitors also expected to use these “subpar” supplies? Who should they ask to donate things so they can have the brands they prefer? |
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From what I gather from this thread, some parents do not want to send supplies to school because:
1. I don’t want to share my money with others. 2. Teachers should supply the materials 3. Teachers should put up with whatever quality supplies the school can give them. If they run out, too bad. 4. Teachers should do a better job of keeping track of pencils, instead of preparing and delivering quality lessons. IMO the only reason parents shouldn’t send supplies is if they cannot afford them. |
The janitors only empty trash cans at my school. Nothing else is done to clean classrooms. That’s why teachers request wipes. I guess they could request spray and real paper towels instead. |
The only one I agree with is the bolded, within reason. All people in all workplaces are expected to put up with whatever quality supplies their workplace orders. But the accountability should be with the schools and the administrators. It should be very hard to look at a parent in FCPS and say there’s no budget for paper towels to clean classrooms. Teachers begging from parents just saves the administrators that difficult discussion. |
Well isn’t that why teachers don’t want to buy the material for their classroom? They have other things they need to do with their money? Believe it or not, that is also true of parents. Who have already “shared” the money for the supplies in question by paying our local taxes. So if the decision is: do I want to share more money with a classroom who already has cleaning supplies (but perhaps the teacher had to proactively ask for the supplies, or they aren’t the preferred brand) and sharing my money with my family, or any of the other people in our community who desperately need help right now and don’t have the privilege of saying they don’t want to have to wait two days for paper towels. |
So, does that mean that the desks are never cleaned and the wipes get used for the doors? That nothing gets cleaned and the wipes are used for emergencies? I’m genuinely curious. I worked in an elementary/middle school in another district. My office had two tables and my desk. Every day I cleaned my desk, the tables, and the doorknobs. So, that’s a minimum 20 wipes a week —or a roll of paper towels and spray. What were you not doing that you only used maybe 3 containers of wipes in a whole school year? I bought my own supplies, including huge bottles of hand sanitizer and emergency toilet paper. |