Wow, this is news to me. I may reconsider sending money with kid to a party they are attending. It does seem weird for my kid to give a gift this year, and they did not give my kid a gift last year. |
| $20 + $2, $2= congrats class of ‘24? Close family $200+$24? |
Absolutely, I'm not shy about this opinion at all. The fact that adults will roll up in here and say that kids should give other kids gifts for the exact same accomplishment they themselves just achieved is grubby and tacky in my opinion. I'm not a fan of the graduation announcements either, but at least they are targeted at the head of household. If you are a parent hosting a graduation party for your kid and have allowed them to invite their friends to roll through (which is what often happens because there are multiple parties) and expect gifts from the kids who are invited without their parents? That's tacky. |
Give a $20 bill and get 2 $2 bills from the bank. Cute, reasonable, on point. 2024 grads. |
Your graduate does not have to spend $150 on classmates. They are all celebrating together. |
A guest of honor does not bring a gift. When you throw a graduation party and invite other graduates, you are celebrating all of them, not just the kid who lives there. They are all guests of honor. |
| My daughter has been invited to a grad party where she has been told to wear a certain color dress...sigh |
We get a few of these every year, esp. from White people (we are not; immigrants)? Are we expected to respond with a gift ? I'm feeling bad now for all the times we didn't send one. If that's the case, it IS tacky.
When we are invited to a party AND choose to attend we give gift cards. |
| Your child, as a guest, is not giving a gift because the child host graduated high school. Your child is giving a (small, token) gift because they've been invited as a guest to a party. These are basic social mores. And no, no one will judge or "grub" the kids for not giving gifts, but this is the correct framework. The poster above who framed it like birthdays and birthday parties (of course everyone has birthdays and you still bring a gift to the parties) was correct. |
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Senior son at a private with a mix of public and private HS friends. No gifts. None of the parties with just students were gifts given. In his crowd- it’s not a thing. In my family, HS grad parties aren’t a thing. It’s a family celebration—relatives after ceremony.
My husband is from a Midwest town where most kids don’t go to college and HS parties are a big deal. I grew up locally and they weren’t a thing here. 98% of my public HS went into a 4-year college. Our HS hosted a big “no alcohol” party event at some center —the night of graduation. MADD was very big then- thankfully. |
What a PIA—how many gifts are you buying? Kid has been invited to 8 open houses already. Most say “no gifts”. |
100%%%%!!!! Yes! |
Hostess gift? Never occurred to me |
| Why is this in College fourm? |
No, it is not like a birthday party unless all the invited kids were born on the same day. |