No they won’t. |
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The last few years of my child’s elementary school I stopped donating the crazy amounts of things and no one noticed or cared. They collect a lot at the open house and no one actually sees what you donate. For example, they wanted 2 packs of dry erase markers. Nope. We just got 1. Kid never used even one marker from it all year. They also asked for a dry eraser. I didn’t buy that at all - I will buy if my kid tells me they need one. She never asked the whole year. 10 packs of pencils? Nope. One pack, and we took out a few already to add to her pencil pouch and donated the rest of that one pack. 24 glue sticks? Absolutely not. We bought 6-12, kept 2 in her pouch and donated maybe 4? The rest we keep at home. 3 boxes of Clorox wipes, 75 count. Hell no. We donate one box only. They are pricey. 2 boxes of tissues? Nope, just 1.
Easy. |
LOL, you must be a master teacher! I’m not wasting class time arguing with a kid who’s refused multiple times to pick-up a pencil. |
We notice. |
Teacher here. I had to fill in for you. Yes, these supplies are pricy. When you and other parents sent just one box of Clorox wipes, I had to purchase tons of Clorox with my own money to make up the difference. So you simply transferred the cost to me. I guess that’s okay, but it starts to add up when a lot of parents do it. |
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120 pencils? Each?
I teach third grade and we ask for 24 (2 packs of 12). We don’t pool supplies. |
Nope. We found out the reason they wanted 3 Clorox wipes was because each teacher was giving one to the Art teacher. The school can pay for Clorox wipes. They can place team orders. I’m a former FCPS teacher and I can tell you I had tons of leftover supplies at the end of the year. We don’t need 24 packs of pencils of 24 glue sticks whatsoever. I also ended each year with a ton of paper towels and tissues, hand sanitizer and Clorox wipes. It’s gluttonous. |
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You ok with your kid missing lunch and recess waiting for a kid to pick up a pencil? |
If your kid picks up the pencil they dropped then they can go. I never punished an entire class for the mistakes of one kid. |
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Im a 5th grade teacher. I long ago stopped buying school supplies for kids. This past year all the kids were in charge of their own supplies. There was no class crayon or colored pencil bin. Want to color? You need to have your own or borrow. I had a bin for lost and found pencils. None in there? Ask a classmate. I didn’t even have a classroom pencil sharpener—kids brought their own and shared. No tissues? Go to the bathroom and grab toilet paper to blow your nose. No Clorox wipes? We didn’t wipe anything down.
It was practical and logical consequences of not having your stuff. Kids figured it out and I didn’t spend my money. Was it a Pinterest perfect classroom? No? Did kids learn? Totally fine. |
| Guess what many teachers will be doing in a week or two: Active Shooter Training, stop the bleeding course, and how to shelter in place. Buy the darn pencils if you can! |
What other way does the art teacher get classroom supplies for every student in the school? Why did you ask for so much that you didn’t need? |
In FCPS? Every school has a list so I highly doubt that you were the only teacher in the school who didn’t want the families to have a supply list. I understand you not buying above what families bring in. |
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I attended public schools in PG county and my parents struggled to buy school supplies for my siblings and me. I appreciate what our teachers did for us.
We are incredibly fortunate that we can afford to buy what my daughter needs and we buy extra. Spending an extra $50-100 for school supplies isn’t setting us back. We realize that not every family is as fortunate, and that’s why we go above and beyond. For us, the other kids our my daughter’s school are not some undeserving faceless moochers, they are our friends and neighbors. So help your teachers out if you can. If you’re unwilling to, then don’t. But don’t bash teachers for asking for what they need - trust me, they’re not selling surplus school supplies on FB Marketplace to fund their extravagant vacations. |