Well, the salary comes from the school, not the parents, so you've misdirected your anger. Most, though certainly not all, parents, in my almost 30-year experience as an independent school teacher, have been absolutely respectful and thoughtful. I'm thankful whatever students want to do to thank me, be that a thoughtfully written card, a Starbucks card, or even a friendly hug. |
| Just like many things in communities where rich people flex on eachother, dont you think gifting people for doing their job might lead to bribing and a quid pro quo dynamic. |
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Another teacher here.
Some parents have come to events early with a negative attitude. I'd prefer an optimistic approach and a "let me know if I can be of any help" over a gift. For transition years, please know that the forms we have to fill out for your child's next step will ask about you, as well. Something small like a candy bar or tiny flower/plant would be a nice surprise. If you went to a cool place over the summer and brought something back (soap, a candle, maple syrup...) and a little gift is a conversation starter that is kind of cool. |
I'm not a teacher.....but the above describes what we do. Holiday and end of year gifts. Note from my kids to accompany both. Nothing at the start of the year. |
PS - we stopped this for our oldest at HS because it was discouraged at that school. But the PA had special teacher treat days that we helped to support financially and/or with time volunteered (usually they were pampered with food/drink/giftbags). Not sure what younger one's HS will do. As others have noted - all schools are a little different, so ask a friend you know at the new school (or a buddy family) if there's a protocol you should know about. |
Absolutely unnecessary |
| My kids are in a private elementary school and I have them take their teachers a small first day of school gift. Like cookies and a Starbucks gift card. It's not necessary but thoughtful. |