Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have boys. They never want to participate in that crap. If the flower was for the teacher then I’d do it. They don’t dress up.
My sons are the same way. Not a care in the world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have boys. They never want to participate in that crap. If the flower was for the teacher then I’d do it. They don’t dress up.
My sons are the same way. Not a care in the world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have boys. They never want to participate in that crap. If the flower was for the teacher then I’d do it. They don’t dress up.
My sons are the same way. Not a care in the world.
Anonymous wrote:Today my child was asked to bring in a single flower. Yesterday wear green. Over the years, I can think of countless things that are requested that are such a huge hassle and pain in the butt. We had to detour 20 min in the morning to buy this flower. I could have and should have just blown off the request but I didn’t want my kid to be the kid who didn’t bring one.
I don’t mind as much if we have notice and can order in advance. Want some stickers for Valentine’s Day? Fine.
I especially hate spirit week where it is daily. Twin day is the absolute worst. Or wear your favorite baseball team. Rant over.
Anonymous wrote:I have boys. They never want to participate in that crap. If the flower was for the teacher then I’d do it. They don’t dress up.
Anonymous wrote:The lack of advanced notice is what gets me. I do not have time between 6pm and 6am to manifest some of these special costumes or essential items for a class project. Give us a few days' notice, please (if you can include a weekend, even better!). And put it in writing for the parents - especially for younger aged kids. They don't always remember or remember correctly (you're supposed to bring in 100 zip lock bags, or 100 items in a zip lock bag?).
Anonymous wrote:This is a wealthy school district issue. My guess is bored SAHMs drive these things- they like getting the pictures, they like coming up with "fun" things to do at school, they like forcing ridiculous fund raisers and events so they can sponsor over the top assemblies, they like throwing elaborate school parties that require parents to either contribute a lot of money or sign up for something dumb. Social media drives it too. I went to a top public school in the 90s and we didn't do any of this and our mothers weren't making chalk posters for us to hold on the first day of school.
Again, just a guess. High(er) FARMS schools don't do any of that. Likely bc it will be ignored by most parents.
Anonymous wrote:And we are well off and money is non issue. I can’t only imagine how burdensome it is for people where these extra costs might make a difference in their everyday living.
The school will say the day before, “don’t forget to wear green.” My daughter doesn’t own anything green the same way my friend’s son may not have anything red to wear for Valentine’s Day. Maybe schools should tell us everything in advance instead of the day prior.