But obviously some teachers are taking the things in the giveaway pile. |
| I you are going to give a mug, swing by the thrift store. All the Best Teacher mugs from previous years are out on display. |
Nope, it’s because there are now and every year multiple threads on what to buy teachers for gifts. Try to keep up. |
Ugh, not again! We get that you hate teachers & think they are lazy complainers. No need to make post your feelings on the subject at least once a month. |
| Why does anyone think it is mandatory to give teachers a gift? Just save everyone some angst and skip it. |
I think most teachers are great. I think it devalues then when we focus on stupid crap like holiday gifts when they are professionals. |
In 16 years of teaching, I’ve only see subs and building services take the mugs home. Otherwise they stay in the break room until they get knocked over and shatter. |
+1 |
+2 Stop giving. Nothing ro complain about if no gifts are given. |
| If you give me an ornament for Christmas, it will occupy a place on my tree every year. And I will remember the child who gave it to me. Bonus if it’s hand made. If you give me homemade treats, I will happily eat them. I might share them with my family if there are any left. If you make me a card, it will hang on my refrigerator for weeks. If you give me a candle or lotion or a mug, I will be so thankful you took the time to go shopping for me. Literally every teacher friend I know feels the same. I’m not sure who these bitter dcum teachers are. But they shouldn’t be in the classroom. |
| My step-mom was a teacher for over 20 years. She always put up 2 Christmas trees at home. One was with her collection of ornaments from her students. |
I’m a teacher and I agree with this. Yes, i do have enough mugs to supply for the whole staff but damn if I don’t smile and profusely thank the child who gives it to me, every time. Op, I get your intent but the word choice reflects very poorly on all of us. |
Appreciate doesn’t mean take home and use. I appreciate the thought, but I honestly don’t use 90% of the stuff. Mainly for health reasons. I used to keep the lead-impregnated Made in China dollar store mugs to hold classroom supplies like pens and calling sticks, but it gave the impression that I like mugs and then I got them all the time. If you or your child write a note, I will keep it always. I have a box in my desk going back years. No trip to the Mall or dollar store required. |
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I appreciate and thank students for each and every gift. But I do not keep it all.
What gets tossed, donated, or taken to the break room: -Homemade treats unless I know the parents and their home environment very well -store bought treats unless they are reallllly good (no cheap popcorn tins from Walmart or off brand hot cocoa mixes, for example) -candles -paper weights, figurines, or other knick knacks -lotions and soaps unless really high quality -gift cards to restaurants like Olive Garden, red lobster, etc The good stuff: -homemade cards, hand drawn pictures from students and/or handwritten notes from parents. -gift cards to Amazon, target, Starbucks, or Visa gift cards -sharpies, nice pens, dry erase markers, copy paper, notebook paper, Kleenex, other school supplies you know every teacher uses |
We were all gracious toward the children, but there was some discussion of the parents at the water cooler and team meetings. Especially the donation to a hot button issue that seemed to the parent testing us. |