Anonymous wrote:Possibly unpopular opinion, but I don’t need stuff from parents for me. Ask me what supply in my classroom I’m buying for your children with my own money and get it for me instead.
This week alone:
Food, headphones, bandaids, cleaning supplies,
Anonymous wrote:Possibly unpopular opinion, but I don’t need stuff from parents for me. Ask me what supply in my classroom I’m buying for your children with my own money and get it for me instead.
This week alone:
Food, headphones, bandaids, cleaning supplies,
Anonymous wrote:Possibly unpopular opinion, but I don’t need stuff from parents for me. Ask me what supply in my classroom I’m buying for your children with my own money and get it for me instead.
This week alone:
Food, headphones, bandaids, cleaning supplies,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is taking the verb thing way, way too far.
?
My kids have been at Title 1 Capitol Hill schools for a decade with a wide range of family incomes. While some parents may do individual gifts, often it is organized by a room parent asking for those who want to chip in, then they use the whole amount to purchase some gifts/gift cards. That avoids a bunch of small gifts like coffee mugs etc and allows for a few bigger things.
This was my post, but I wanted to add - if you use this method at a Title 1 school or school where some parents can’t contribute, I would recommend that regardless of who chips in to sign it from the whole class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is taking the verb thing way, way too far.
?
My kids have been at Title 1 Capitol Hill schools for a decade with a wide range of family incomes. While some parents may do individual gifts, often it is organized by a room parent asking for those who want to chip in, then they use the whole amount to purchase some gifts/gift cards. That avoids a bunch of small gifts like coffee mugs etc and allows for a few bigger things.
Anonymous wrote:We are new at dcps at elementary school. Amy dcps teacher gift limit? Is it rare for parents to gift teachers? My wife bumped into a neighbor, and they say that they never gift any on teacher appreciation week or christmas. She has kids in elementary school and middle school. What is the norm here? We are really confused
Anonymous wrote:You neighbor sounds cheap or poor.
Anonymous wrote:This is taking the verb thing way, way too far.