Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers are professional. Professionals do not show favoritism. Teachers should not be casual, friends, with parents. Too much hanging-out at the school by the Room Mom is a problem.
It means they have problem kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a room parent and we have a similar lottery for field trips. However, I am always give. First right of refusal since I spend a lot of time volunteering with the class, know all the kids, and the teachers know me. If a teacher is going to put a parent in charge of a group of elementary schoolers you bet they are going to lean on the ones they know.
That does not make sense at all. Such a system puts most volunteering opportunities in the hands of people who already have the opportunities. Any parent who goes through the volunteer training should have an equal chance. Handling a group of elementary schooler is not hard!
Most of the work a room parent sucks. They just constantly have to ask people for stuff and then get the stuff no one else volunteers to get. I have no problem giving room parents the opportunity first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers are professional. Professionals do not show favoritism. Teachers should not be casual, friends, with parents. Too much hanging-out at the school by the Room Mom is a problem.
It means they have problem kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, there are people who WANT to chaperone?
Is this for real? DH and I both signed up and I know at least 10 other parents in our 1st grade class that did.
DP - in our school we get enough volunteers… but barely. We have a very diverse population with a lot of recent immigrants.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers are professional. Professionals do not show favoritism. Teachers should not be casual, friends, with parents. Too much hanging-out at the school by the Room Mom is a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, there are people who WANT to chaperone?
Is this for real? DH and I both signed up and I know at least 10 other parents in our 1st grade class that did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a room parent and we have a similar lottery for field trips. However, I am always give. First right of refusal since I spend a lot of time volunteering with the class, know all the kids, and the teachers know me. If a teacher is going to put a parent in charge of a group of elementary schoolers you bet they are going to lean on the ones they know.
That does not make sense at all. Such a system puts most volunteering opportunities in the hands of people who already have the opportunities. Any parent who goes through the volunteer training should have an equal chance. Handling a group of elementary schooler is not hard!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, there are people who WANT to chaperone?
Is this for real? DH and I both signed up and I know at least 10 other parents in our 1st grade class that did.
Anonymous wrote:Wait, there are people who WANT to chaperone?
Anonymous wrote:That is absolutely not OK, OP. You need to speak to the teacher. Don't worry about coming across as rude. There is clearly favoritism going on, and the teacher needs to recognize the favoritism is not invisible, but it's noted and commented upon.
And to PP, in my years of experience with two kids who are now in 7th and 12th grade, room parents never got first dibs for other roles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a room parent and we have a similar lottery for field trips. However, I am always give. First right of refusal since I spend a lot of time volunteering with the class, know all the kids, and the teachers know me. If a teacher is going to put a parent in charge of a group of elementary schoolers you bet they are going to lean on the ones they know.
That does not make sense at all. Such a system puts most volunteering opportunities in the hands of people who already have the opportunities. Any parent who goes through the volunteer training should have an equal chance. Handling a group of elementary schooler is not hard!
NP. And yet, some parents are very bad at it. They don't pay attention to instructions, they imagine that they are on a special outing with their kid and ignore everyone else, they argue (!) with the teacher about rules, etc.
I agree that it's unfair, but I would rather the chaperones take the job seriously.
OP, I avoided being room parent like the plague but if I got a chance to chat with the teacher at "back to school night" or during a conference I would always mention that I liked to volunteer for field trips and that I was very good at following the teacher's instructions. They would laugh, but also be like "yeah, good." I was never buddies with them but always tried to be helpful (like drop off extra t-shirts on tie dye day). I had pretty good luck going on field trips, though there may have also been less competition for it. Hard to know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a room parent and we have a similar lottery for field trips. However, I am always give. First right of refusal since I spend a lot of time volunteering with the class, know all the kids, and the teachers know me. If a teacher is going to put a parent in charge of a group of elementary schoolers you bet they are going to lean on the ones they know.
That does not make sense at all. Such a system puts most volunteering opportunities in the hands of people who already have the opportunities. Any parent who goes through the volunteer training should have an equal chance. Handling a group of elementary schooler is not hard!