Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is ridiculous. Look I clearly don't think teachers should be paying for this stuff OOP and I always bring in everything that's asked for. But we pay very high taxes in MoCo and it's crazy this basic stuff isn't provided for.
I went to very average public schools growing up and we did not have to bring in any of this stuff. Nor did I hear of teachers having to make these bull purchases. It feels like schools were run in a more common sense way back then.
I lived in several "good" school districts. We used old-fashioned stuff.
I remember getting free lined, unbleached brown paper notepads, #2 pencils, fat Crayola crayon sets, and plops of white paste on a piece of paper towel. The school had communal watercolor paint sets and tempera paint in big jars.
Kleenex was not stocked in classrooms, I remember going to the office and paying 10 cents to get a tissue in 10th grade.
No glue sticks
Very little colored marker use and occasional colored pencil use. No dry erase or whiteboards. Only chalkboards.
Occasional composition notebooks. I feel like we were given these when needed.
Mostly used looseleaf lined paper until high school
No mandatory color coded folders by subject
Anonymous wrote:It is ridiculous. Look I clearly don't think teachers should be paying for this stuff OOP and I always bring in everything that's asked for. But we pay very high taxes in MoCo and it's crazy this basic stuff isn't provided for.
I went to very average public schools growing up and we did not have to bring in any of this stuff. Nor did I hear of teachers having to make these bull purchases. It feels like schools were run in a more common sense way back then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel ok if they charge us parents school supply fee instead of send in school supply or order school supply box ( except for low income area and families), it’s much easier and cheaper that way if fcps or school order large quantity from manufacturers directly ( one school supplies box cost nearly $95 for my 4th grader to be).
I agree- but $95 for school supplies is a lot. The PTA makes some money from that, because it's cheaper to get everything on your own, but it's a huge pain to find specific brand composition books in 3 different colors, etc.
We also have piles of old school supplies at home from when they send home leftover items at the end of the year. I'll try to repurpose some of those this year.
Anonymous wrote:My child just entered public school and there is a list of items that we are supposed to send in, such as tissues and hand sanitizers. It is my understanding that these supplies are pooled in the classroom, so it is not the case that these supplies are for individual use.
I cannot imagine it is cost-effective for the schools to beg from the parents in this way. Moreover, --wouldn't it be more economical for the schools to buy these items in bulk? It's quite expensive and if families are poor, it is not cheap to buy lysol wipes or boxes of tissues.
Why do our school taxes not cover school supply expenses? Surely this is something that could be budgeted for.
Anonymous wrote:I feel ok if they charge us parents school supply fee instead of send in school supply or order school supply box ( except for low income area and families), it’s much easier and cheaper that way if fcps or school order large quantity from manufacturers directly ( one school supplies box cost nearly $95 for my 4th grader to be).
Anonymous wrote:I feel ok if they charge us parents school supply fee instead of send in school supply or order school supply box ( except for low income area and families), it’s much easier and cheaper that way if fcps or school order large quantity from manufacturers directly ( one school supplies box cost nearly $95 for my 4th grader to be).