Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest question?
Why when money buys you access, stuff and opportunities in every other facet of life should school be safe spaces? Never letting kids fall doesn’t protect them it really prevents learning how to pick them slef up. Life is better with money, that’s the reality and it is never too early to learn that.
Because I am a government employee and cannot be bought.
Love,
Your kids teacher
Anonymous wrote:I belong to a school in the burbs where it’s pretty close to $100/pp, as long as the auction offers a great date night and items to bid on, why complain? It’s all for the support of our kids, our school and offering enriching opportunities. OP, stop airing out your school drama here, there’s a time and place for that. Try going the PTA auction social chair and learn why the expenses occur.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm on our elementary's PTA Board and disapprove of school auctions. I understand it brings in money for the school, so I keep my mouth shut, but I do not condone the message that a public school can encourage inequalities, that if you have money, you get more school-related stuff. At our school, shadowing the Principal is auctioned off, or a lunch with the assistant Principal, etc. Tying a relationship with a special teacher or administrator with money is just wrong.
So I don't go. Don't want to see that happening live.
This!
Our principal used to do this, but is not doing it this year. I wonder if that was the rationale. I don't love the teacher outings as donations, but the Principal-for-a-Day stuff rubbed me even more the wrong way. I know for a fact I'm not the only one who felt this way, so the admin might have had a similar change of heart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest question?
Why when money buys you access, stuff and opportunities in every other facet of life should school be safe spaces? Never letting kids fall doesn’t protect them it really prevents learning how to pick them slef up. Life is better with money, that’s the reality and it is never too early to learn that.
Because I am a government employee and cannot be bought.
Love,
Your kids teacher
Your boss can
Anonymous wrote:Is this entire conversation about limiting the amount Janney parents can help their school because the rest of the city can’t or won’t help theirs? Race towards the bottom much? Are you going to limit Christmas at Janney households next because other kids have crappy presents? Are you going to strip out the physics lab at UMD because UDC is a glorified 13th grade? News flash rich people have more, shhh their houses are nicer too
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest question?
Why when money buys you access, stuff and opportunities in every other facet of life should school be safe spaces? Never letting kids fall doesn’t protect them it really prevents learning how to pick them slef up. Life is better with money, that’s the reality and it is never too early to learn that.
Because I am a government employee and cannot be bought.
Love,
Your kids teacher
Anonymous wrote:Honest question?
Why when money buys you access, stuff and opportunities in every other facet of life should school be safe spaces? Never letting kids fall doesn’t protect them it really prevents learning how to pick them slef up. Life is better with money, that’s the reality and it is never too early to learn that.
Anonymous wrote:Honest question?
Why when money buys you access, stuff and opportunities in every other facet of life should school be safe spaces? Never letting kids fall doesn’t protect them it really prevents learning how to pick them slef up. Life is better with money, that’s the reality and it is never too early to learn that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I belong to a school in the burbs where it’s pretty close to $100/pp, as long as the auction offers a great date night and items to bid on, why complain? It’s all for the support of our kids, our school and offering enriching opportunities. OP, stop airing out your school drama here, there’s a time and place for that. Try going the PTA auction social chair and learn why the expenses occur.
You misunderstand. That what the entire DC Public and Public Charter Schools forum is for. For 10 months of the year this is its sole purpose. For the other two months it's "Look at my lottery list!"
Anonymous wrote:Honest question?
Why when money buys you access, stuff and opportunities in every other facet of life should school be safe spaces? Never letting kids fall doesn’t protect them it really prevents learning how to pick them slef up. Life is better with money, that’s the reality and it is never too early to learn that.
Anonymous wrote:I belong to a school in the burbs where it’s pretty close to $100/pp, as long as the auction offers a great date night and items to bid on, why complain? It’s all for the support of our kids, our school and offering enriching opportunities. OP, stop airing out your school drama here, there’s a time and place for that. Try going the PTA auction social chair and learn why the expenses occur.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm on our elementary's PTA Board and disapprove of school auctions. I understand it brings in money for the school, so I keep my mouth shut, but I do not condone the message that a public school can encourage inequalities, that if you have money, you get more school-related stuff. At our school, shadowing the Principal is auctioned off, or a lunch with the assistant Principal, etc. Tying a relationship with a special teacher or administrator with money is just wrong.
So I don't go. Don't want to see that happening live.
This!