Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did this last year. I basically emailed the teacher and asked what she preferred. She told me to send the invites in with my son and she would put them in the folders.
We invited half of of the class (12 kids). 5 of the 12 came. All of the parents stayed (it wasn't a home party).
All the kids of the same gender in the class?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school is like this and it's been a big challenge (I have a kid in 3rd grade and one in 1st grade). No directory, no room parents, no contact lists, and teachers are only willing to let you hand out invitations if they are going to the whole class. We haven't found a great way to deal with it yet.[b] We've had a little luck focusing on just a few kids who are close friends with my kids, sending in a note with our contact info and asking their parents to contact us or to send in their contact info in return (rather than sending in a direct invitation). But that relies on my kids passing off the note to their kids, then having their kids pass it on to the parents, and having the parents care enough to respond. To be honest, we've focused on inviting non-school friends to birthday parties o(friends we still have from preschool or other activities), and just had a couple of kids from school attend in the years we've been at this school. Oh, and the parents have typically stayed at our house for the birthday parties we've hosted. Good luck!
See bold. Consider volunteering to be the parent who heads up the creation of a school directory. Yeah, that doesn't help OP in the short term, but maybe OP and this PP can get this going in their kids' schools. Unless there is blanket objection from most parents on privacy grounds, you should be able to do this pretty readily. Maybe post on here, or on other forums for elementary kid parents, to ask how other schools do it. It's pretty common to have a school directory in elementary schools. If your school bans it for some reason (and maybe OP's does too?) I'd inquire about why.
If no school directory is in the works or you don't want to take it on, then ask why there's no room parent and volunteer for that if you have time and if the teacher wants it.
Those of you with no room parents, is that because the teacher or the school as a whole doesn't work that way, or because no one stepped up to do it? Whether or not the room parent provides contacts to all parents, the room parent can be a big help in other ways. Just curious at the lack of room parents and the lack of any directories at some schools referenced here.
--parent of a high schooler whose 2 elementaries both had directories that were heavily used by us all....
Anonymous wrote:Our school is like this and it's been a big challenge (I have a kid in 3rd grade and one in 1st grade). No directory, no room parents, no contact lists, and teachers are only willing to let you hand out invitations if they are going to the whole class. We haven't found a great way to deal with it yet.[b] We've had a little luck focusing on just a few kids who are close friends with my kids, sending in a note with our contact info and asking their parents to contact us or to send in their contact info in return (rather than sending in a direct invitation). But that relies on my kids passing off the note to their kids, then having their kids pass it on to the parents, and having the parents care enough to respond. To be honest, we've focused on inviting non-school friends to birthday parties o(friends we still have from preschool or other activities), and just had a couple of kids from school attend in the years we've been at this school. Oh, and the parents have typically stayed at our house for the birthday parties we've hosted. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:I did this last year. I basically emailed the teacher and asked what she preferred. She told me to send the invites in with my son and she would put them in the folders.
We invited half of of the class (12 kids). 5 of the 12 came. All of the parents stayed (it wasn't a home party).
Anonymous wrote:DC is in K. We do not know any of the parents/families of the other kids in the class, and haven't received any communications, party invites, etc from any other parents so far this years.
We are starting to plan DC's birthday party, but I am at a loss as to the mechanics of inviting classmates. We have not been provided a contact list, have not been contacted by any kind of "room parent" or anything like that, basically zero contact aside from DC's teacher (no issues with that, BTW).
So I have no idea how to go about issuing party invites to classmates, which DC would very much like to do. Has anyone been in this situation (zero contact from other parents, etc)? Should I ask the teacher to distribute invites in their daily folders (hate to do that... it's not her job... etc)? Or ask the school office for a contact list? Not sure what the protocol is. I always assumed once we got to K there would be some kind of Class Parent to reach out to.
DC is not in any activities that involve these classmates. We'll probably invite some other kids as well... but I know how to get in touch with them![]()
Anonymous wrote:I did this last year. I basically emailed the teacher and asked what she preferred. She told me to send the invites in with my son and she would put them in the folders.
We invited half of of the class (12 kids). 5 of the 12 came. All of the parents stayed (it wasn't a home party).