Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are people buying tables and then filling them with friends or is it you are just supposed to say who you want to sit with when you buy a ticket? Buying tables is one thing as it usually gains more fundraising dollars, but just choosing who you want to sit with is weird.
At ours either people group together to buy a table, or a someone’s company buys a table and asks people to join - either way it excludes those that don’t socialize heavily at the school. If they wanted more money maybe they could just have on the gala website “grade level table” or something then you know you will be at a table with some kids parents in your grade. But no, that’s not the way it’s done. The organizers will group people at at table sometimes if they are in the same grade and they don’t know where to put them, but it’s not explicit.
That is terrible. A company buys a table? How tacky and exclusive. What school is this?
I have seen this but it's a tax write off. A parent buys a table, aka makes a donation in their company name so the company gets the credit. The parent just invites their usual friends to sit at the "company" table.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are people buying tables and then filling them with friends or is it you are just supposed to say who you want to sit with when you buy a ticket? Buying tables is one thing as it usually gains more fundraising dollars, but just choosing who you want to sit with is weird.
At ours either people group together to buy a table, or a someone’s company buys a table and asks people to join - either way it excludes those that don’t socialize heavily at the school. If they wanted more money maybe they could just have on the gala website “grade level table” or something then you know you will be at a table with some kids parents in your grade. But no, that’s not the way it’s done. The organizers will group people at at table sometimes if they are in the same grade and they don’t know where to put them, but it’s not explicit.
That is terrible. A company buys a table? How tacky and exclusive. What school is this?
Anonymous wrote:You sound impossible. You’re friendly with other parents but not super close with them. You’re not part of the in crowd so nobody asks you to join their table. You can’t start your own table because you don’t have people to ask to join you. You can’t have the gala organizers seat you at a table because there might be other parents you don’t know yet sitting there. Lady, as a member of my kid’s school auction committee, what exactly do you want?
Anonymous wrote:You sound impossible. You’re friendly with other parents but not super close with them. You’re not part of the in crowd so nobody asks you to join their table. You can’t start your own table because you don’t have people to ask to join you. You can’t have the gala organizers seat you at a table because there might be other parents you don’t know yet sitting there. Lady, as a member of my kid’s school auction committee, what exactly do you want?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are people buying tables and then filling them with friends or is it you are just supposed to say who you want to sit with when you buy a ticket? Buying tables is one thing as it usually gains more fundraising dollars, but just choosing who you want to sit with is weird.
At ours either people group together to buy a table, or a someone’s company buys a table and asks people to join - either way it excludes those that don’t socialize heavily at the school. If they wanted more money maybe they could just have on the gala website “grade level table” or something then you know you will be at a table with some kids parents in your grade. But no, that’s not the way it’s done. The organizers will group people at at table sometimes if they are in the same grade and they don’t know where to put them, but it’s not explicit.
That is terrible. A company buys a table? How tacky and exclusive. What school is this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are people buying tables and then filling them with friends or is it you are just supposed to say who you want to sit with when you buy a ticket? Buying tables is one thing as it usually gains more fundraising dollars, but just choosing who you want to sit with is weird.
At ours either people group together to buy a table, or a someone’s company buys a table and asks people to join - either way it excludes those that don’t socialize heavily at the school. If they wanted more money maybe they could just have on the gala website “grade level table” or something then you know you will be at a table with some kids parents in your grade. But no, that’s not the way it’s done. The organizers will group people at at table sometimes if they are in the same grade and they don’t know where to put them, but it’s not explicit.
Anonymous wrote:You sound impossible. You’re friendly with other parents but not super close with them. You’re not part of the in crowd so nobody asks you to join their table. You can’t start your own table because you don’t have people to ask to join you. You can’t have the gala organizers seat you at a table because there might be other parents you don’t know yet sitting there. Lady, as a member of my kid’s school auction committee, what exactly do you want?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound impossible. You’re friendly with other parents but not super close with them. You’re not part of the in crowd so nobody asks you to join their table. You can’t start your own table because you don’t have people to ask to join you. You can’t have the gala organizers seat you at a table because there might be other parents you don’t know yet sitting there. Lady, as a member of my kid’s school auction committee, what exactly do you want?
Skip the assigned table seating altogether and a lot more parents would feel much more welcome to attend.
- OP
Anonymous wrote:You sound impossible. You’re friendly with other parents but not super close with them. You’re not part of the in crowd so nobody asks you to join their table. You can’t start your own table because you don’t have people to ask to join you. You can’t have the gala organizers seat you at a table because there might be other parents you don’t know yet sitting there. Lady, as a member of my kid’s school auction committee, what exactly do you want?
Anonymous wrote:You sound impossible. You’re friendly with other parents but not super close with them. You’re not part of the in crowd so nobody asks you to join their table. You can’t start your own table because you don’t have people to ask to join you. You can’t have the gala organizers seat you at a table because there might be other parents you don’t know yet sitting there. Lady, as a member of my kid’s school auction committee, what exactly do you want?
Anonymous wrote:Are people buying tables and then filling them with friends or is it you are just supposed to say who you want to sit with when you buy a ticket? Buying tables is one thing as it usually gains more fundraising dollars, but just choosing who you want to sit with is weird.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I are friendly with several parents at our private school but are not super close with anyone. Every year around the time of the school fundraising gala, we get asked to use our outside connections to secure a big item for the auction, which we gladly do to support our school. Our gala has a seated dinner format, so you have to organize a table with other parents, and that's the part I am not comfortable with.
We are not part of the in crowd so no one asks us if we'd like to sit at their table (although these parents never forget about us when it come time to donate or secure an auction item). I also feel awkward to start a table and ask other parents if they'd like to join because those parents have much closer friends than us to sit with already. There is an option to just buy tickets and the gala organizers will choose the seating for you but we did it once and ended up on a table where we did not know anyone and we did not have a great experience.
So we just take the path of least resistance and skip the whole event. At our kids' former school, the gala had more of a cocktail party format and it was not as socially stressful.
Thoughts?