Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the meetings provided child care- I would go.
Our school does provide childcare and dinner for your children. When I go, I see 90% of the moms/dads there doing pick-up from the afterschool program and leaving. They don't want to stay an extra hour, because they are exhausted and need to get home (walk the dog, deal with life). The moms/dads who do make the meetings picked up their children hours earlier when school ended and have to make the commute all the ways back to campus. I think meetings should be at different times each month. Maybe one late for working parents, one after drop-off, one after pick-up, one on a weekend. I think PTAs should rotate meeting times so different people can make it.
Anonymous wrote:If the meetings provided child care- I would go.
Anonymous wrote:One of the new leaders last year was a mom with a PK kid and it was her first year at the school. She was horrible and in everyone's face selling her "merch" as she called it. She was either a SAHM or made her money from selling stuff.
It was a big turn off to the parents who had been there for years or parents in the older grades.
Sounds familiar. Busy work on steroids = no real impact on the school or DC. SmhAnonymous wrote:Its now a few weeks into school. I signed up to volunteer for a bunch of stuff. Haven't gotten any email or call about it. I'm not chasing them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Solution: more PTA dads
No kidding. My DH was president of our PTO one year. Shorter meetings, fewer 'community building events', same level of $ raised.
Oops, your misogyny is showing. How embarrassing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1. I collided with one last week. Completely turned me off of the pta.Anonymous wrote:Stay away because of the mean PTA moms!
+2. I wish there was a way to avoid them at pick-up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Solution: more PTA dads
No kidding. My DH was president of our PTO one year. Shorter meetings, fewer 'community building events', same level of $ raised.
Anonymous wrote:+1. I collided with one last week. Completely turned me off of the pta.Anonymous wrote:Stay away because of the mean PTA moms!
Anonymous wrote:I am trying to figure this out, since parent engagement is notoriously difficult. What is preventing you? Is it that events are of no interest to you? Is it that events are held at times that are inconvenient for you? Is it that you just don't feel that that kind of engagement is important?
I am talking about events at all times. Some people can't make morning meetings. Some people can't make evening meetings. Some people don't care about anything beyond their own child's classroom but are very involved there. Some people feel that it's enough to just send a check and leave it at that. Some people donate $0 but a lot of time. Some people donate $0 and also 0 time.
What is stopping you?
+1. I collided with one last week. Completely turned me off of the pta.Anonymous wrote:Stay away because of the mean PTA moms!