Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, good luck getting field trip chaperones if it means you have to get a doctor's appointment to get a TB test, and downtown to get fingerprinted. I did this when I was a regular volunteer for a DPR coop program which was fine, but I'm not doing it again just to accompany a field trip. Americans really are over the top with these things - you'd never see it in Europe for such a purpose.
Okay. Don't go.
Our school required this last year and there were no problems getting chaperones.
Our school didn't last year. Hope they won't this year either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your school starts to require chaperones to go through this pain in the ass process (which I'm in the middle of so I can volunteer in the school library), wait a little. They will surely back off once a chaperone shortage kicks in. I say ridiculous paranoid nonsense. The world is full of minor risks. If you can't trust the parents of your kids' classmates to chaperone field trips or pitch in at the school without harming kids, pick another school.
Take away the argument of tb tests and background checks, do you know how condescending it is to tell someone to pick another school? If not, it is and there are a lot of people on here that can't just pick another school.
Sure they can, in a city of abundant school choice. Picking a different school might create major headaches for a family, but it can be done. If you can't trust classmates' relatives to act responsibly in a group setting (at drop-off, pick-up, school events, field trips etc.), honestly, what's the point of staying on? TB tests and fingerprints aren't going to change anything. Even schools with FARMs rates in the single digits tend to struggle to round up enough chaperones for every single field trip. We don't need this top-down deterrent to parents helping out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your school starts to require chaperones to go through this pain in the ass process (which I'm in the middle of so I can volunteer in the school library), wait a little. They will surely back off once a chaperone shortage kicks in. I say ridiculous paranoid nonsense. The world is full of minor risks. If you can't trust the parents of your kids' classmates to chaperone field trips or pitch in at the school without harming kids, pick another school.
Take away the argument of tb tests and background checks, do you know how condescending it is to tell someone to pick another school? If not, it is and there are a lot of people on here that can't just pick another school.
Anonymous wrote:If your school starts to require chaperones to go through this pain in the ass process (which I'm in the middle of so I can volunteer in the school library), wait a little. They will surely back off once a chaperone shortage kicks in. I say ridiculous paranoid nonsense. The world is full of minor risks. If you can't trust the parents of your kids' classmates to chaperone field trips or pitch in at the school without harming kids, pick another school.
Anonymous wrote:If your school starts to require chaperones to go through this pain in the ass process (which I'm in the middle of so I can volunteer in the school library), wait a little. They will surely back off once a chaperone shortage kicks in. I say ridiculous paranoid nonsense. The world is full of minor risks. If you can't trust the parents of your kids' classmates to chaperone field trips or pitch in at the school without harming kids, pick another school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school last year mentioned it and then backed off. They said unless the trip was an over night, it wasn't needed. No background check is needed to BECOME a parent. It was hard just getting chaperones for field trips before this except for the few parents who did most trips.
What does becoming a parent have to do with an adult being responsible for other people's children without a background check?
Would you hire a babysitter you have never met before and not background check them?
I'm not the PP, but do Americans get their babysitters fingerprinted?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school last year mentioned it and then backed off. They said unless the trip was an over night, it wasn't needed. No background check is needed to BECOME a parent. It was hard just getting chaperones for field trips before this except for the few parents who did most trips.
What does becoming a parent have to do with an adult being responsible for other people's children without a background check?
Would you hire a babysitter you have never met before and not background check them?
Anonymous wrote:Our school last year mentioned it and then backed off. They said unless the trip was an over night, it wasn't needed. No background check is needed to BECOME a parent. It was hard just getting chaperones for field trips before this except for the few parents who did most trips.