| You really don't understand how many pencils ES kids lose. I sent a 40 pack or something stupid last year for my 6th grader and within the semester she'd lost almost all of them. Kids just lose stuff or it gets broken. This stuff isn't that expensive it you hit the sales this weekend. Just go with it and don't think too hard about it. |
| maybe buying/supplying too many pencils and crayons leads kids to NOT taking care of things, since they know there are hundreds of backups. there is no way one kid needs 120 pencils for the school year (or even half that). |
All of this. We are past this stage thank goodness. I remember being irritated (on DCUM) about communal supplies, but it's only a few years. At first I followed it to the letter, but then got more - oh there's an enormous pack of Expos so I'm sending in 3X the expos, but I might miss on sending the two rolls of paper towels. I end up sending in more but not the exact stuff. Hopefully it all evened out. |
THIS! I am a sub and am constantly telling kids to pick up pencils from the floor. |
| I have not bought my kid school supplies since 2nd grade. The lists are clearly unrelated to what any individual teacher needs. I wait for the targeted email from teachers asking for specific things. Otherwise I just send my kid with a pencil or pen daily. |
Ok … so the answer is to have the kids pick them up and put them away no? Not ask the parents to send in 500 pencils. |
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Wow. The most pencils I have ever seen on a school supply list was 36. Where is the teacher even storing 120 per kid?
We'd still send it, but that is...a lot. |
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Classroom scenario:
Kids have 40 mins to take a test. Four raise their hands saying they don’t have pencils. What should the teacher do? 1. Screw the four kids cuz you they are too poor to have pencils 2. Screw the four kids cuz they have issues loosing their stuff. 3. Teachers have to spend test time sending kids to other classrooms to beg for pencils. 4. Teacher cancels test because those four will fail. Teacher has to re-schedule test, and pull a random lesson out of nowhere to make use of that instruction time, and they fall behind. Just send extra pencils if you can afford them. |
They don’t pick them up. |
| I was a teacher of first grade. I think that is an outrageous number. |
So don’t. Tell the teacher to let you know when your child needs more pencils. Send in yours with your kid’s name on them and a pencil pouch. They can keep track of them. Then come back in June and brag to us about how you saved $20 because your kid made it the whole year with their one pack. |
Exhibit A: Reasons why teachers ask for extra supplies |
Or why they spend their own money on classroom supplies for kids who aren’t theirs. |
This is false. Things get used but you should see all the extras at schools. |
Just don’t buy it. You’re part of the problem here. The school will provide it if you don’t. |