I agree with the previous poster. If your kids are in center daycare, you can afford more than $15 at the holidays. We pay $4k/mo! Give me a break - these teachers deserve th world. |
Why plan ahead when you can just complain? |
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$75 in gift cards to each of the three teachers in my toddler's room with a few little treats in a gift bag (technically there's a lead teacher, but the other two are there just as much).
She's been there since the fall and we'll probably give something between $50-$100/teacher when she transitions out of that room next fall. Do people get anything for the admin folks, generally? |
| At our school, the director and admin people do receive gift cards and some goodies. |
| When DD was in daycare, each family used to give $25 into a pool. We had about 24 kids in class, which came out to $600 that was shared with 6 teachers or $100 each. |
No, I'm not going to give you a break. Everyone is different and every center is different in price. We pay 1K a month at our center-I clearly don't live where you live. These posts are ALL relative to peoples financial situations. Its is great you can afford a 4K/ month center and it is wonderful that you can afford to give more to your teachers but please do not say things like "give me a break". There are ways to show appreciation to providers that are big and small. |
| I gave $100 each to three teachers. |
You could have hired a nanny. |
NP. Many of us don't want nannies, even though we can afford them. Social interaction; set lessons/activities/structure; no caregiver-is-sick-today scramble; several adults on premises at all times; no TV. I'm assuming $4K/month is for more than 1 or 2 kids. |
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I'm the room mom here again. 11:18, here's the deal. Sorry you can't afford more. I do pay around 3k a month for two kids, and while money doesn't grow on trees (or in a savings account at this point, sadly), we are prioritizing giving to the people who truly love and care for our kids at daycare. Case in point, we made cookies the other night for my oldest to give to her teachers. She INSISTED that we give last year's classroom teachers cookies, too. These people kiss boo boos, create fun, and care about the well being of my kiddos. I'd eat pbj's for a week before I wouldn't show them some form of my appreciation.
The other rub? One of the families who NEVER contributes to anything has the cash. I just went to the kid's birthday party at the zoo ($400- and the Mom loudly let everyone know that's how much it cost since they "included everyone's siblings") and we've been over to their newly renovated house with the two luxury cars out front. Could they be swimming in debt? Absolutely. But you'd be damn sure that it rubs me the wrong way when I overheard the Dad saying, "Christmas gift? I don't get a Christmas gift from my employer!" So perhaps my frustration is misguided. It's not at the people who don't give or give small amounts because that's what they can afford. It's the entitled yuppie parents who think that the "help" doesn't deserve it. Give what you can. But think about the impact those teachers have on your kiddos. Generosity is a good thing. |
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^^How do you know that the parent who doesn't contribute to the "class" gift doesn't give her own personal gift aside from the class?
We contributed to both the class gift this year and gave another personal gift because we could. I don't think anyone knew we gave a personal gift. |
| Also it seems as though 11:18 is stating exactly what you are saying. Give what you can and show how much the care givers mean to your family. |
| I think its interesting how everyone buys into the idea that a Christmas gift (and particularly the amount of the gift) is a reflection of how much you appreciate your child's teachers. I suppose there is nothing wrong with this philosophy, but it somehow doesn't feel quite right to me to give cash as a Christmas gift to show my appreciation. Nor does it seem right to suggest that those who don't give a certain amount of money as a gift aren't doing enough to show teachers that you care. For me, Christmas gift giving is really about spreading joy and celebrating the season. I understand that day care teachers are not well compensated but if that's really the issue we are trying to address, why not provide assistance to them throughout the year if you can afford to do so? |
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I'm just going to answer this and avoid all the arguing.
We have one child in the pre-k classroom at a center. He switched teachers at the end of the summer. We give Target gift cards, which we have had feedback that the teachers appreciate. We gave $50 to his current teacher and $40 each to the two teachers he had earlier in the year (they each got $50 last year). We gave $15 gift cards to nine different floaters and other teachers that I know interact with my child at various times. We gave $20 to the parent organization fund (they did that for the first time this year and that was the suggested amount per family) that set up a breakfast and gift cards for all staff. We also bring in a big bag of snacks/candy/goodies for all the office staff to share. All together spent about $350. |
| 13:06 here. Also, I write a thank you note on a holiday card for each of the people I give gifts to. |