Not all schools' parents are as rich as yours. Use your head. |
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I am curious that for teacher who decide to change jobs to other schools or quit, do they take everything to home/new job with all those things that they pay out of pocket or buy using the provided school fund.
It would be nice to leave everything for the next new teacher, but it sucks that if they have to re-buy everything again in a new job at a different school. A month ago, I was wondering why my child’s teacher setup an Amazon wishlist for toy/book donations to classroom, and this is after we send her a giftcard for $800 from classroom contribution. The teacher messages us to drop off whenever they are out of snacks, paper products, school supplies etc. |
Teachers can deduct up to $250 without receipts. |
I have changed districts a few times. I leave whatever is purchased by the school. When we are allowed to order things, I order consumables. This means things like tape, staples, etc. That means there might not be much left when I do leave, because the district didn't purchase anything of significance. I have rarely left any single thing I have purchased myself. Last time I moved districts, when I had all my boxes packed up, it looked like I was moving a small apartment. My entire classroom library has 1500 books in it. (Best practices recommend at least 1000 books in elementary grade class libraries.) I personally purchased, secured as donations from friends, got super cheap at garage sales, etc, that entire library. |
Not sure if people know the difference between a tax deduction and a tax credit. A $250 tax deduction is a slap in the face. |
Perhaps, but we (two teachers) don't spend any money on our classrooms and are able to both apply the $250. |
No, the budget is not limited, it is allocated to other things. And some of the money needs to be re-allocated. |
So you lie? I mean, whatever, it’s trivial, have at it…but don’t brag about it or we are all going to lose the ability to deduct $250/1000 we actually spend. |
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3rd grade
Basic supplies like pencils, crayons, colored pencils, etc. Printer paper and a small printer for my classroom Rugs, bookcases, other small furniture items Snacks, cleaning supplies, sanitizer Lots of books and other learning/study aids Different seating options & fidget toys I used to have a beanbag/squishmallow corner called my calm down corner but it was banished due to covid *sad* I usually spend about $1,000+ a year. I'm not at a Title 1 school but most of the kids at my school come from poverty in the low income apartments and housing around the school. There was a big ruckus a few years ago when the boundaries were redrawn and some of the "rich kid area" got grouped in and bused across to this school. Some years I'll have amazing parents who really get lots of donations for the classroom and I don't have to spend much OOP. Some years, like this one, I'll have more than half of the class show up on the first day without more than a notebook and single pencil. |
| When I first started out in elementary I would spend a lot of money making my classroom cozy, getting furniture, books, posters, prize incentives, cute activities for holidays. Now I don't need to spend as much since I have built up my arsenal. I work for a title 1 school so my students often don't have much. I try to scour my buy nothing group for back packs, pencil cases, crayons, etc. I buy good quality paper towels and tissues since the ones we get from the school are crap. Lysol wipes, printer paper, a good planner. |