+1 the teachers don't want that crap anyway. |
Agreed. —room parent |
I collect and give the teachers a gift card. If I was a teacher that is what I would want. |
So, its ok for you to feed them crap, but not have it 1-4 times a year at school. Many kids don't go to parties so for them, its important. |
Its not about what you would want as a teacher. I think our teacher would prefer we send in snacks and supplies so it doesn't come out of her pocket over a gift card. There is absolutely no reason for a room parent to collect for presents. Each family should do what they want and can afford. Depending on where you live, there are also limits on what can be given. For us, a group gift if you have that many parents donate can violate school ethics policies and it can cause issues. Its ok if each family gives $20 directly but not ok if it is collected and one large gift card. |
Are you really clueless about the different roles? PTA is completely separate from room parent. Most of us who do room parent are forced, for lack of a better term, as we volunteer once, are done with the nasty parents and choose not to do it and get calls from the teacher or principal or our kids tell us no party per their teacher in less your XXX step in and does it and they are upset (this happened with us where my child was so upset that the party was canceled). There are many room parents like OP who misuse the money. Depending on the room parent there is not much sugar. I keep it healthy except for a cupcake or small slice of cake. Most kids get far more sugar at home than school. If I got everyone to donate $5, I can easily do what most would consider a lavish party when it isn't, including pizza and a desert. Its all about how you spend the money. And, many of the kids like the dumb games (I wish we didn't do them but the teachers insist). PTA is completely separate. They do not contribute money and many of the PTA parents refuse to do anything classroom related as the PTA is their passion. They are too selfish to even donate a box of kleenex or wipes when they send their sick kids to school. |
Most schools have done away with classmate birthdays and only have 2-3 parties a year. We don't have a parade as they say safety reasons. |
If we did that, I could send one pizza home per child and they'd have dinner. |
Our MCPS school doesn't always have paper towels or even soap... As a W district, maybe you can share your supplies with some of our schools. One year, they didn't even have enough toilet paper. You sound really stingy for being financially comfortable in your rich W school. |
This is what I do and usually I have a few generous parents pick up the big things so I just have to do fill in and activities. I have no issue spending the money as if some of these parents would actually attend the parties they'd see how much some of the kids enjoy it. Likewise some kids don't get invited to birthday parties for their peers so these are the are the only parties they get to go to, which is pretty sad that parents deliberately exclude kids. It really isn't that expensive and if you are a room parent year to year, you save the decorations so you just need food and some activities (as you save some from the year before). Is it really that hard to chip in a pack of plates, a bag of veggies, etc? You really are going to deny your kids a few parties a year at school? |
My BCC district ES PtA gives thousands each years to Focus schools PTAs. I’m sure many of the W schools do as well. You don’t need to be obnoxious. The PP described a party that is much closer to what my kids have for their classroom parties than a pizza for all bash. Doesn’t make anyone stingy. |
Wait - Are you saying that eating pizza is important or partying with their friends? A school party doesn't have to involve pizza. Party refreshments could be cookies, chips, popcorn, fruit, etc. I'm sorry if kids don't go to parties outside of school, but you can't replicate that experience in school. They're two different types of experiences. I agree with the teacher who posted earlier saying that parties should be kept simple. They should be a fun break, not a major disruption. Growing up, our school had a Halloween carnival in the evening, but nothing during the school day. For Valentines Day, we did a card exchange, but I don't recall any refreshments (if there were any it probably would have been a couple of cookies per kid). For Christmas, we probably had cookies, but I don't really remember. There weren't any games. I mainly remember holidays involving the teachers doing crafts, maybe songs and/or stories with us leading up to the holiday. Sometimes for special occasions they'd show us movies and give us popcorn. While it was nowhere as elaborate as the school parties my kids have had (and theirs never included pizza), it was a fun break from the routine which is what we really wanted. The parties at my kids' school seem to be overly done, very disruptive, and unnecessarily stressful (in some ways even for the kids). |
It does make you stingy if you can spend $100 to go out to eat and not donate $5 or less (given carrots, plates, fruit can be less than $5) to a party a few times a year. PTA has nothing to do with room parties. I don't know any other PTA's that give to focus schools. And, even then, those PTA's are not spending it on the actual classrooms. It is obnoxious to be so selfish. Having pizza at a party is not that expensive. You only need a few pizzas and usually if you do sign up genius one parent ends up donating it. I don't know why you think these parties, even if they have nice food are that costly. But, probably because you've never done one or even attended. Some of us can do a lot with very little. |
By the time you buy all the snack food, you can buy a few pizza's and be done with it for the same cost. I've done it both ways and the pizza ended up being cheaper vs. a selection of snack food. I think its interesting how many people assume whats what when they are not organizing it. A bag of chips is $4-5 dollars. You need a few bags, so there is the cost of pizza right there. We had school parties growing up. Its not about replicating at school vs. not but not all kids have great home lives and this is a highlight for them. |
I’m a room parent and I’ve attended most of my kids’ parties and I’m not wrong just because I disagree with you. Our kids’ pizza parties are typically at 1:30/2 so the parents can then pick them up around dismissal time. We don’t have pizza partly because it’s expensive but mostly because it’s entirely unnecessary because the kids have just eaten lunch. We spend more room parent funds on craft materials or on cheap prizes for games and then have a fruit platter, pretzels and mini cupcakes that parents contribute. we save most of our funds for teacher gift cards, which means more than a slice of papa john’s after kids have just eaten lunch. |