Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All class parties are, in my experience, very rare. I don't think we've been to more than a couple ever, and none older than kindergarten. Invite your kids friends.
Maybe all class parties shouldn't be rare? Perhaps if we were all more inclusive in general it would foster better relationships among the children at school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All class parties are, in my experience, very rare. I don't think we've been to more than a couple ever, and none older than kindergarten. Invite your kids friends.
Maybe all class parties shouldn't be rare? Perhaps if we were all more inclusive in general it would foster better relationships among the children at school?
Anonymous wrote:All class parties are, in my experience, very rare. I don't think we've been to more than a couple ever, and none older than kindergarten. Invite your kids friends.
Anonymous wrote:What?
Whole class parties parties pretty much ended after preschool. Sure, there are a few playground parties throughout elementary where the whole class was invited but it’s certainly not the norm.
I have a first grader and a fourth grader. They’ve gone to dozens of parties this year. The average number is 15 kids or so. Only one party was for the whole class (and that was the 1st grader.)
Nobody invites the entire class to venue parties where the cost gets exorbitant fast. And nobody invites the entire class to house parties where there just isn’t space to host that many kids comfortably. And most of all, nobody invites their child’s bully to their birthday party. That’s insanity.