I think that's a great idea. In fact one day should be give a school supply and the teacher could give a list of what is needed. Then another day could be a free for all. You get a list of things the teacher likes from foods to home-made cards to favorite place to shop. You get a money limit so nobody gives the teacher something she can't accept. |
| I am mortified by this thread (and I'm not a teacher). This men and women spend a huge amount of time, HUGE, taking care of and nurturing our most precious loves during the day. They don't get paid appropriately, and almost everyone one, to a man or woman, spends significantly from their own pocket to enhance the classroom with things like tissues and colored pencils. I agree that the PTA "marching orders" can seem overwhelming, but please people, think of an appropriate way to that your child's hero this week. And teachers, can you tell us what some of your favorite Appreciation Week gifts of years past have been? |
| Typed too fast . . . these men and women, think of a way to thank . . . |
| I like what our room parent had us do today-bring fruit. Everyone likes fruit and it's healthy. If there are fruits the teacher doesn't like or is allergic to or if the teacher gets more fruit than he/she and family can eat in a week, they can always leave some in the teacher's lounge. I think it also sets a great example for the kids. |
| Teachers get paid ok stop the bs |
Again, stop all this crazy bring a fruit for a teacher, then a flower...and just get the teacher one nice gift. As great of an example as it might be for the kids to see the teacher with fruit, it's about the teacher this week, not the kids. The teachers spend the whole year teaching the kids. |
You're right. Giving a piece of fruit is so selfish and "crazy.". It makes the whole ordeal all about the kids. Bananas, pineapples, berries and stone fruit are not a way to thank you. To loosely quote the great Honey Boo....only dollars make me holler! |
| We LOVE our child's teacher as does our child. She has gone above and beyond and spends the majority of the day EDUCATING our kid and does a great job. Our kid WANTS to draw a picture and write a letter to her. And we are happy to do something for the teacher as well. I call smell a troll that started this or just an angry person. Perhaps they don't like their teacher or think they can do better spending their day working full time and education their child along with keeping them safe....Curious if the poster spent any time volunteering in the classroom. I've been able to hear and there and have an entire new appreciation for what teachers do. |
And they get off 3 months for summer. |
| Such Scrooge-like posts. We're happy to participate in this. DS made flowers for his teachers (a craft project) and we'll likely send in fruit and candy too. We think they're great people and are happy to give them extra appreciation this week. |
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I'm all for showing appreciation to teachers. As other posters have noted they do a heck of a lot more than they can ever be compensated for.
That said, I think what draws resentment is the fact that certain room parents, PTA whatever have turned this into a week long festival of things to do and little chores, which can push parents over the edge this time of year. If it were just left up to families and kids to do something if they felt so moved, or maybe one breakfast and day of flowers, I think everyone would be just as happy and a lot less stressed. |
Everyone know this. What does it have to do with Appreciation Week? |
| You know, these teachers are helping your kids make your mother's day present/card as we speak! |
Are you really unable to connect the dots here? |
My problem is the orchestrated PTA gifts--the ones that tell you the "theme". |