| There is absolutely no reason both parents need to go. One parent stays at home with the kids. The other goes to the school. It's pretty awful to bring your kids when the school has specifically asked that children not attend. |
| OP, just take them. One kid goes with you, other kid goes with your partner. NBD. The people on here pouting over rules are ridiculous. |
No. It is inappropriate to bring the kids. Most schools do two sessions. OP, have you called to ask about this yet? If they do two sessions, kids stay home with DH and you get to go to both classrooms. Parents will roll their eyes and talk behind your back if you bring your kids. Everyone else paid for sitters, it's not fair for you to bring your kids to an event that is specifically for parents only. |
This is us. Tap out. |
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Come on, y'all. This is a problem that is easily solved by being a decent member of your school community.
If you have two parents available, send one. If you have one parent available but can afford a sitter, get a sitter. If you have to bring your child, that's fine because those who don't have to bring their kids left them home/with a sitter. |
There is nothing that says this person has to bring her child. She doesn't have to. |
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I think it's absurd that people expect OP to get a sitter even though she just moved here and doesn't trust anyone yet. Two friends recently had near misses with tragedy when they tried new babysitters (despite asking all the "right" questions). One sitter wasn't paying attention and the baby girl got out of the house and into the street and almost got hit by a car. Another was caught on a nanny cam leaving a preschooler home alone for an hour.
I am A LOT more sympathetic to people being paranoid about who they trust with their kids after hearing about these incidents. OP, bring your kids with no guilt if it's your only option. |
Did you even read the post? Totally irrelevant what you mentioned about baby and preschooler. OPs kids are in elementary school. |
Yes, I read the post. The point is not the ages of the children or the details of the incidents, but that it's very difficult to ensure that a stranger will provide safe and appropriate care for your children. OP is brand new to town and doesn't feel she can trust anyone yet- I'm saying that's perfectly rational. |
+1. You don't need to both go. Go to one teacher, ask for handouts/info and tell them you can stay for part but then need to scoot over to the other teacher. Don't be that family. Especially if you are new. |
| Title One school. Almost all of the parents bring their kids or they wouldn't come. Yes, it is sometimes distracting but I guess it's better than nobody coming. Most teachers pull out paper/markers/crayons, puzzles, blocks, etc. |
+1 I've paid for a babysitter only to not be able to hear the teacher because someone brought their loud kid along. One parent goes. |
So then what part of 'parents should get a babysitter' do you not understand? |
| Happened to me a few years ago. My husband was out of town. I had no one to watch my kids. I hired a babysitter from a company and used her several times beforehand to get to know her and have the kids comfortable with her all for the 1.5 hours of back to school night. Never needed or used her again. Probably cost me 15 hours worth of sitting costs. If I can do that rather than bring my kids it irks me when people who can afford sitters being their kids. OP knew the answer before asking as the school said child care wasn't provided. It wasn't the answer she wanted... |
But OP will not get a babysitter. Instead, OP will bring OP's children to back-to-school night. And OP will not be the only one to do this. And it will be fine. When the school says, "Parents should get a babysitter", what they really mean is, "It's not actually all that important to us for parents to come to back-to-school night". |