Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ I work with a teacher who spends $$$ on TpT, trinkets to give to the kids and food. None of this is necessary in high school. We have materials at my school and I’m not sure the TpT materials are even that great. They don’t need snacks every math class.
None of that is necessary in elementary school either.
ES Teacher
It is if you don't have a curriculum and are expected to not only teach whole group lessons but small groups as well. And food is necessary for kids who eat lunch at 10am and are hungry at 2pm when school ends at 3:30.
There's no use to talking to people like this. We all know teachers who do the very bare minimum. They don't care and they won't suddenly start caring because someone on DCUM said to do so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ I work with a teacher who spends $$$ on TpT, trinkets to give to the kids and food. None of this is necessary in high school. We have materials at my school and I’m not sure the TpT materials are even that great. They don’t need snacks every math class.
None of that is necessary in elementary school either.
ES Teacher
It is if you don't have a curriculum and are expected to not only teach whole group lessons but small groups as well. And food is necessary for kids who eat lunch at 10am and are hungry at 2pm when school ends at 3:30.
I understand if you work in a low income school where kids are really hungry and don’t have food. But I don’t have patience for the teachers supplying snacks to all and then the kids are eating your junk food instead of what we actually packed. That’s what one of mine did. Yes, he preferred the choc covered granola bars or mini muffins to whatever I packed back in k. I am also a teacher and have given good when kids are actually hungry and I worked in a school where they had nothing. Some teachers think that’s all kids, every day and it’s just not true. They like to play the martyrs and complain about spending their own money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ I work with a teacher who spends $$$ on TpT, trinkets to give to the kids and food. None of this is necessary in high school. We have materials at my school and I’m not sure the TpT materials are even that great. They don’t need snacks every math class.
None of that is necessary in elementary school either.
ES Teacher
It is if you don't have a curriculum and are expected to not only teach whole group lessons but small groups as well. And food is necessary for kids who eat lunch at 10am and are hungry at 2pm when school ends at 3:30.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ I work with a teacher who spends $$$ on TpT, trinkets to give to the kids and food. None of this is necessary in high school. We have materials at my school and I’m not sure the TpT materials are even that great. They don’t need snacks every math class.
None of that is necessary in elementary school either.
ES Teacher
It is if you don't have a curriculum and are expected to not only teach whole group lessons but small groups as well. And food is necessary for kids who eat lunch at 10am and are hungry at 2pm when school ends at 3:30.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ I work with a teacher who spends $$$ on TpT, trinkets to give to the kids and food. None of this is necessary in high school. We have materials at my school and I’m not sure the TpT materials are even that great. They don’t need snacks every math class.
None of that is necessary in elementary school either.
ES Teacher
Anonymous wrote:^ I work with a teacher who spends $$$ on TpT, trinkets to give to the kids and food. None of this is necessary in high school. We have materials at my school and I’m not sure the TpT materials are even that great. They don’t need snacks every math class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach kindergarten and I'd say I spent at least $1K my first year and maybe $500 for the next few years. Now it's less than $250 each year. I had to buy everything except classroom furniture and basic school supplies that the students brought it. Classroom library books, bulletin board stuff for 4+ board, classroom posters, mailboxes, pencil cases, classroom rug, storage containers, classroom incentives, manipulatives, clipboards, ink for my color printer, my printer, etc. We don't have a PTA so it's all on us.
Why didn't you ask for Classroom book donations? Our school does this and the response is overwhelming.
We always send our kid with pencil cases, etc based on the supply list. Even the incentives are on the list.
Use your head.
Why do you have to be so rude? This poster may work in a school that limits what they can put on a supply list or ask parents for. Instead of assuming stupidity, consider that there may be factors that you don’t know about.
Or a lower income area where people rarely buy books and then are unlikely to want to give them away.
NP - There are lots of charities that will donate books to schools and libraries; teacher wish lists that can be funded by anyone, free-cycle and nonprofit grants. Teachers also need to let parents know that their school district is not supplying the needed items. Districts do this because they know teachers will make up the difference.
Teachers - here you go...
https://www.readingrockets.org/article/search-free-books
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach kindergarten and I'd say I spent at least $1K my first year and maybe $500 for the next few years. Now it's less than $250 each year. I had to buy everything except classroom furniture and basic school supplies that the students brought it. Classroom library books, bulletin board stuff for 4+ board, classroom posters, mailboxes, pencil cases, classroom rug, storage containers, classroom incentives, manipulatives, clipboards, ink for my color printer, my printer, etc. We don't have a PTA so it's all on us.
Why didn't you ask for Classroom book donations? Our school does this and the response is overwhelming.
We always send our kid with pencil cases, etc based on the supply list. Even the incentives are on the list.
Use your head.
Why do you have to be so rude? This poster may work in a school that limits what they can put on a supply list or ask parents for. Instead of assuming stupidity, consider that there may be factors that you don’t know about.
Or a lower income area where people rarely buy books and then are unlikely to want to give them away.
Anonymous wrote:Please tell us your grade, typical items you purchase, and approximately how much you spend without being reimbursed each year.
Anonymous wrote:Middle school math, all approximate
$300/year of pencils (I literally go through 20+ per day)
Hours upon hours of scavenging buy nothing and yard sales for free/cheap binders, notebook paper, dividers, etc. The kids literally come with nothing so if I want kids to have a binder I have to provide it.
$300/year of TPT activities in years when I have a new prep or 3+ preps, because I have zero provided curriculum from the county
$500/year of snacks to bribe the kids to stay after school for free tutoring
$50/year on bulletin board paper and borders (they only last 1 year before there are penises drawn on the paper and the borders are ripped, lol)
$100/year on expo markers, sometimes more if I use them with students on the mini white boards. We don’t have smart boards in my school.
$50/year on tissues—I’m allotted 2 boxes/month and have 75 kids a day in my room. I usually run out around the 10th of the month
Clearly this is a low income school, but it’s in FCPS. My first few years I spent thousands on materials. The PTA averages 4-6 members and has a budget of $1000ish per year. That buys pizza for TAW but that’s about it. Supply lists and wish lists aren’t a thing (nor should they be)
I taught in a wealthier school in the county once. They were literally throwing supplies at me. I’ve secured a job back at one for next year. Even with ESSER funds I’ve spent zillions this year.
There seriously needs to be a supplement for teaching in low income schools. The amount of extras (time, money, energy) that are expected of teachers in low income schools is so much.