Anonymous wrote:I am an active member of the pta and help out in the classroom too. What school allows you to bring in pizza for class parties?
Anonymous wrote:Haven’t read through responses, but why are kids getting pizza? In addition to lunch? Too much food, OP. Ugh.
The experienced room parents send one last email, after all the ones asking for money, saying:
"THIS PARTY WILL NOT HAPPEN UNLESS THERE ARE ENOUGH FUNDS TO FEED EVERYONE AND HAVE A FEW ACTIVITIES."
Or words to that effect.
In my 13 years of school parties, not one has ever been cancelled after such an email
Anonymous wrote:
The experienced room parents send one last email, after all the ones asking for money, saying:
"THIS PARTY WILL NOT HAPPEN UNLESS THERE ARE ENOUGH FUNDS TO FEED EVERYONE AND HAVE A FEW ACTIVITIES."
Or words to that effect.
In my 13 years of school parties, not one has ever been cancelled after such an email![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm the room parent at a public school. I end up paying for most of the food for kids' parties. We don't get pizza for parties, but it takes a lot of effort to put together a table of healthy food for these parties.
Before the holidays, I asked parents to vote to decide if they wanted to have a group class gift, then 1/2 backed out at the last minute, so I end up fronting 100s of dollars for that (instead of the 20 per family).
I have a serious illness and I lost my job this year (I have a temporary, lower paying one now). I still did the right thing.
I have no sympathy for the shirkers who don't even give a thought to the burden they're placing on a VOLUNTEER who is trying to make sure things are nice for all their kids and the teacher who takes care of them 8 hours a day.
Do better shirkers.
$20 × 20 kids? That's $400 for a teacher gift. Nope. If you choose to do that, it darn well should be on you.
I did not want to run after people to get money from them, so I made sure that all the funds were collected during the first few weeks of school. I sent emails every week for the first few weeks listing the names of people who contributed and those who still had to. It was easy to write the reminder emails at the beginning of the year.
OP, being a room parent is a responsibility not a popularity contest. You need to be blunt and make sure that everyone contributes at least a minimum agreed upon amount. If people want to contribute more it is up to them, but the fixed amount contribution is mandatory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t have parties in school growing up I don’t think. Just a Halloween parade and Valentines card exchange. I don’t even remember “room parents.” Is this a new thing or a rich school thing?
From what I gather, both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is nothing like this at our affluent public school. School only allows 3 parties per year: Halloween, Christmas/Holiday, end of year. No money collected. Room parent does sign up genius for food/games/crafts. No pizza, just snacks.
Teacher gifts are by family, not whole class.
This seems to work well. You should try it OP. I’m and active participant (send something in every party) and spend nowhere near $135, even including $30 teacher gift card 2x a year. I think you are doing it wrong.
+1
I’m a room parent. No beginning of year collection of money - just sign up genius for each party.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the room parent at a public school. I end up paying for most of the food for kids' parties. We don't get pizza for parties, but it takes a lot of effort to put together a table of healthy food for these parties.
Before the holidays, I asked parents to vote to decide if they wanted to have a group class gift, then 1/2 backed out at the last minute, so I end up fronting 100s of dollars for that (instead of the 20 per family).
I have a serious illness and I lost my job this year (I have a temporary, lower paying one now). I still did the right thing.
I have no sympathy for the shirkers who don't even give a thought to the burden they're placing on a VOLUNTEER who is trying to make sure things are nice for all their kids and the teacher who takes care of them 8 hours a day.
Do better shirkers.