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. |
That's why I sit down that night and send them via email. |
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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!
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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! |
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. |
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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. |