Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do it or don’t do it, but please don’t email the teacher or admin about it. Early elementary teachers get soooooo many emails about the dumbest things. Here are some of my emails from this week:
“My kid isn’t allowed chocolate milk.”
“My kid is going to ride the bus/walk/go to aftercare.” X50 (We need to know but there are just so emails!!!)
“I think my kid has X disability.” (Very important! Almost lost among the chocolate milk emails.)
“Can you send a link to the movement break videos so I can review?”
Just please, please, please chill with the emails the first month unless it matters.
A lot of parents don't want their kids of any grade level drinking it. What do you suggest parents do to keep their kids from grabbing it and drinking it? Given how many parents complain about it, how can parents convince the school to stop making it available?
I guess you are the mom(s) who sent me this email! Haha
If you don’t want your kid to eat something, tell them. I cannot monitor their drink consumption at lunch. I’m not even in the room!
"Larlo, please don't drink the chocolate milk at school."
"OK, Mom."
Proceeds to drink chocolate milk at school.
NP so instead you want to the lunch monitors to know the food preferences of 50 kids? Or the teacher, who also needs to eat their lunch, to know the food requests of 20 kids and monitor it at all times? That’s a ridiculous request and just not going to happen.
Also I know lots of kindergartners. Even they know what their parents do or don’t want them to eat, including being careful about allergies.
No, we want the school to stop offering sugary crap to children who haven’t developed self control yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do it or don’t do it, but please don’t email the teacher or admin about it. Early elementary teachers get soooooo many emails about the dumbest things. Here are some of my emails from this week:
“My kid isn’t allowed chocolate milk.”
“My kid is going to ride the bus/walk/go to aftercare.” X50 (We need to know but there are just so emails!!!)
“I think my kid has X disability.” (Very important! Almost lost among the chocolate milk emails.)
“Can you send a link to the movement break videos so I can review?”
Just please, please, please chill with the emails the first month unless it matters.
A lot of parents don't want their kids of any grade level drinking it. What do you suggest parents do to keep their kids from grabbing it and drinking it? Given how many parents complain about it, how can parents convince the school to stop making it available?
I guess you are the mom(s) who sent me this email! Haha
If you don’t want your kid to eat something, tell them. I cannot monitor their drink consumption at lunch. I’m not even in the room!
"Larlo, please don't drink the chocolate milk at school."
"OK, Mom."
Proceeds to drink chocolate milk at school.
NP so instead you want to the lunch monitors to know the food preferences of 50 kids? Or the teacher, who also needs to eat their lunch, to know the food requests of 20 kids and monitor it at all times? That’s a ridiculous request and just not going to happen.
Also I know lots of kindergartners. Even they know what their parents do or don’t want them to eat, including being careful about allergies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do it or don’t do it, but please don’t email the teacher or admin about it. Early elementary teachers get soooooo many emails about the dumbest things. Here are some of my emails from this week:
“My kid isn’t allowed chocolate milk.”
“My kid is going to ride the bus/walk/go to aftercare.” X50 (We need to know but there are just so emails!!!)
“I think my kid has X disability.” (Very important! Almost lost among the chocolate milk emails.)
“Can you send a link to the movement break videos so I can review?”
Just please, please, please chill with the emails the first month unless it matters.
A lot of parents don't want their kids of any grade level drinking it. What do you suggest parents do to keep their kids from grabbing it and drinking it? Given how many parents complain about it, how can parents convince the school to stop making it available?
I guess you are the mom(s) who sent me this email! Haha
If you don’t want your kid to eat something, tell them. I cannot monitor their drink consumption at lunch. I’m not even in the room!
"Larlo, please don't drink the chocolate milk at school."
"OK, Mom."
Proceeds to drink chocolate milk at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do it or don’t do it, but please don’t email the teacher or admin about it. Early elementary teachers get soooooo many emails about the dumbest things. Here are some of my emails from this week:
“My kid isn’t allowed chocolate milk.”
“My kid is going to ride the bus/walk/go to aftercare.” X50 (We need to know but there are just so emails!!!)
“I think my kid has X disability.” (Very important! Almost lost among the chocolate milk emails.)
“Can you send a link to the movement break videos so I can review?”
Just please, please, please chill with the emails the first month unless it matters.
A lot of parents don't want their kids of any grade level drinking it. What do you suggest parents do to keep their kids from grabbing it and drinking it? Given how many parents complain about it, how can parents convince the school to stop making it available?
I guess you are the mom(s) who sent me this email! Haha
If you don’t want your kid to eat something, tell them. I cannot monitor their drink consumption at lunch. I’m not even in the room!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do it or don’t do it, but please don’t email the teacher or admin about it. Early elementary teachers get soooooo many emails about the dumbest things. Here are some of my emails from this week:
“My kid isn’t allowed chocolate milk.”
“My kid is going to ride the bus/walk/go to aftercare.” X50 (We need to know but there are just so emails!!!)
“I think my kid has X disability.” (Very important! Almost lost among the chocolate milk emails.)
“Can you send a link to the movement break videos so I can review?”
Just please, please, please chill with the emails the first month unless it matters.
A lot of parents don't want their kids of any grade level drinking it. What do you suggest parents do to keep their kids from grabbing it and drinking it? Given how many parents complain about it, how can parents convince the school to stop making it available?
Anonymous wrote:Do it or don’t do it, but please don’t email the teacher or admin about it. Early elementary teachers get soooooo many emails about the dumbest things. Here are some of my emails from this week:
“My kid isn’t allowed chocolate milk.”
“My kid is going to ride the bus/walk/go to aftercare.” X50 (We need to know but there are just so emails!!!)
“I think my kid has X disability.” (Very important! Almost lost among the chocolate milk emails.)
“Can you send a link to the movement break videos so I can review?”
Just please, please, please chill with the emails the first month unless it matters.