Do teachers give thank you notes?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I don't expect a thank you note for a thank you gift, but it is nice to acknowledge that a gift was received. My child's teacher sent a single blast text to the whole class. It seemed a bit half-assed.


If it was a group gift, that is fine. Its half-assed for individual gifts, especially if not everyone gave something. How hard is it to have a generic thank you, cut and paste and cater to the family.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I always sent thank you notes home by the following day. I don't have a lot of confidence that they actually make it home though.


That's why I sit down that night and send them via email.
Anonymous
I remember a teacher who used to send fun postcards (like the ones you get a museums in a book) via snail mail over the break with a thank you written on it. The postcards were related to what we were studying ...like Egyptian art or something like that.

I always thought that was clever and fun to get. Plus postcards are easier to send and require less postage!
Anonymous
My kids preschool teacher had sheets that said something like, "Dear______, Thank you for______." Where they went to fill in the blank on what they think about the gift, followed by a generic "happy holiday, have a great break" sentence. They were handed to us as we left at pickup.

I thought it was so clever!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm a parent and don't expect them.


This. Every year DS has gotten a thank you card from one of his art teachers, in his backpack, the same day we give the gift.
The counselor mailed a thank you card to DS directly.

Other than that typically the classroom teachers send a generic thank you to the entire class and that works well for me.

I don't expect the teacher to write 20-30 thank you notes.

Anonymous

Sometimes, but please don't worry if you don't. Families give gifts as thank yous, I don't see an express need for you to send a note back - a verbal thank you to the student is perfectly fine. But of course erring on the side of courtesy is never wrong.
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