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I our K-8 there were a lot of parents who volunteered. But, we did have the long list…. A request that when out to all families re/ volunteering, and then the short list- the families the ‘chair’ would call when they couldn’t get enough volunteers for an activity.
There were ~10-12 consistent names on the short list. They were mostly working moms. I love these women for always making it work for our community!! |
They are extroverted joiners. They are always the same type. But I don't necessarily see them doing it to get a perk for their kid. They just like to be involved and run the show like the carnival or class party. There are always a few per class but that's about all each class needs to get things done. The rest don't care, won't show up anyway (like miserable OP), or are only willing to do the least amount of effort to check a box. |
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I was this parent when my kids were younger. I was home and wanted to be helpful, enjoyed being around kids and thought it was a nice way to get to know my kid’s peers. I had zero ulterior motive.
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They are more than that. Usually have more of an agenda than just being with people and are controlling. It's fine. There is usually just a couple of these people in any organization. The majority of people are just extroverted joiners or just trying to help out where they can. |
I can't even with people saying that someone who runs a class party or the carnival have an agenda. I have been room parent and run the school fair because nobody else did it; my only agenda was to raise money, help the teachers, and have something fun for my kids to do. What else could I possibly get out of it? |
So now we're making up conspiracy theories about parents who volunteer at their kid's school? Who knew there were so many brilliant, scheming masterminds with evil agendas lurking at the 1st grade Halloween Party?? I had no idea! |
Oh please. Ask kids if they want or don’t want class parties. Ask kids if they want festivals, pumpkin patch, holiday celebrations at school. Of course they want them. It’s like the no gift parents saying kids don’t want gifts when it’s the parents who don’t want them. Volunteers make field trips happen, clubs and enrichment activities, sports, and also support staff and teachers. This in turn gives them more time to do the curriculum planning and classroom instruction. If your school doesn’t even have a PTA PP, that is pretty bad. Lots of things not happening that could make the experience much better for your kid and the teachers and staff. Ask me how I know. |
| The new idea is competitive volunteering. Let's see what I can get my kid by volunteering. Competitive moms make competitive kids. It's not good. It's kinda weird that more parents don't see the truth. |
You’re nuts. |