If you cared about poor kids so much, you'd certainly do something of tangible value (acting as a cheap weirdo doesnt count). Adopt one or two such kids? Launch a new charter school? Send your kids to a failing school and help refloat it? |
| You're welcome to donate to our EOTP school. The Title 1 funds cover additional mental health type positions (school counselor, psychologist, etc.), but don't do much for enrichment. Extra $$ would be great for field trips, aftercare enrichment, and more. |
When faced with this issue at our affluent eotp school, I just donated a lot to other teachers at other schools and their gofundme projects. It was really nice to feel like I was making a difference, and not just subsidizing another parent's pet project. |
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OP, are you at all involved in how much money s suggested and/or how it a spent? Do you opt your kids out of the activities that you consider unnecessary?
Do you complain about your elected representatives even though you never vote? |
She asked a simple question. Why do you have to be such a jerk? |
| I want to clarify one point: those aids you see in the classroom for children with special needs are absolutely NOT paid for by hsa or pta. They are funded by dcps according to federal law. None of student support fees are funding anything exclusively for the special education department of these schools. |
$1,000 is pocket change for KIPP. Check out their financials on the charter board website. They'll take the donation, and will put it to good use, but they are doing very well financially compared to other charter schools. |
I think it's fine for you not to contribute, OP. We all give in ways that are meaningful to us personally. FYI, Cleveland Elementary in Shaw is facing a budget shortfall. They have to raise $30,000 or choose between classroom supplies or a staff member. There are already few (really, almost none) after school enrichment activities. The PTA has raised about $10k already. You might consider donating there. Despite what folks on this board think, Title I schools are not rolling in it, and they offer their students significantly less beyond the bare bones than WOTP schools. You should donate where you think your money can be most impactful, and no one should guilt you about how you define that. |
| Good thing you're anon, OP. Some of these "ladies" would cut you if they got the chance and could get away with it. All in the name of community-mindedness of course. |
CORRECTION: They already chose to keep staff and now have to raise the $30k for supplies. The staff were either the science teacher or the reading specialist. The supplies aren't just for the art classes. We're talking copy paper (200 cases) for the entire school, pencils, hand soap and toilet paper for the bathrooms. Fundraising at a Title I school, where only a very few are able to write checks to support this effort has been challenging. Nobody wants to see the teachers sabotaged by a well-intentioned decision to support reading school-wide and allow every student a day (am/pm) of science education each week. Honestly, send that $1,000 to Cleveland with "DCUM" on the memo line. |
That's what our school does too. Let the principal use the budget for staff, then the parents supply the supplies, like soap, copy paper, cleaning supplies, etc. -- some from PTA and some as a first day of school "please bring" for every kid. |
| really OP? You spend 30k already but can't fork over cash to the PTA? I would much rather just write a check to the PTA then deal with all the non stop fundraisers for crap people don't really want. |
Seriously, PP? You sound a little crazy. Because actual charitable donations are worthless in your view, in order to prove she cares about poor children she needs to: adopt, start a school, or send her children to another school. Um, wow.
Is that what you do for charity? Nevermind donations of cash, you go straight to adoption? Methinks you are a hypocrite. |
| Eh, I don't pay the fee at our upper NW school either. I pay the field trip fee and contribute to the teacher gift requests, but I don't think the kids need a smartboard in every class and carts full of Apple computers and since no one asks my opinion, I voice it this way. I give the equivalent to a charity that provides food and other support to low income families in the city. |
Bizarre. I did not pay when I could not afford it - and I found the aggressive ask annoying. However,once I had more money I supported my childs schools in a variety of ways. Those without money can support a school with volunteering, potlucks etc. If I had your money I would support my kids school AND schools across the park. I would donate for specific things in that case, so I did not go into a slush fund. I can think of no better charity than education in DC. I find your idea of egalitarianism by sitting out a little mixed up, but its your money. |