Anonymous wrote:The PTA does so much for our school. It's a few volunteers taking on the burden of time, money, and effort for everyone else. God bless them. If that leads to them acting like a click or someone insular, who cares.
Walk in their shoes and then you'll get it. I started to get involved in the PTA before my health took a turn. I didn't get a chance to do much. But I did help out with picture day. And calling parents and trying to get issues resolved, I was treated so rudely, as if I was working for the photo company and I get a commission or something. It's ridiculous. So many thankless tasks.
My friend ran a program where they collect used instruments, get them refurbished by a music school in town, and the kids write an essay to have a chance to win the instrument. One of the winners families complained that the (totally functional clarinet) was not good enough and the PTA should buy them a brand new one, which they can't afford. The list goes on.
My friend is such a sweet person and worked so hard, there were so many steps to this process and for someone to be nasty to her at the end, which this parent was... It's just awful.
My DC’s first school PTA was like this. When we switched to a different school it was the polar opposite. Everyone was friendly and nobody has been exclusionary. I guess it varies school to schoolAnonymous wrote:The PTA at our school feels really cliquish. I tried volunteering for a while but felt very unwelcome. Now I do things for them occasionally out of obligation to the school and because I think it's important to demonstrate what community involvement is to my kid. But I don't jt enjoy it at all because I find the other PTA parents bizarrely unfriendly and I just kind of smile my way through it but when it's over I always tell my husband "remind me not to do this again."
I just don't get their behavior. They constantly ask for volunteers and want more people involved, but they clearly mostly just want people who they already know (because their kids are friends, are in the same activities, or they're neighbors or whatever) and they view me as an outsider. It often feels like they are like "We desperately need volunteers! No, not you." It's feels pretty bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop generalizing everyone as the same.
The ones I’ve known have been great and I certainly appreciate the work they do.
OP here. I wasn't generalizing. In fact, I was surprised that someone like this actually exists because it hasn't been my experience to date. It was kind of shocking that this person exactly fit the stereotype.
Anonymous wrote:Stop generalizing everyone as the same.
The ones I’ve known have been great and I certainly appreciate the work they do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the volunteers who organize and staff all the fun things at your kids school?
There are great PTA parents and there are the exclusive, snooty ones who treat this like their job and other volunteers like their employees. I will never volunteer for my child's PTA again after the way some woman tried to micromanage me like I was her employee! Sorry lady, I already have one of those in my actual job. I'm doing this to help the children at my kids school for free. You don't get to treat me like crap. Nope, make your own damn sign up genius this year.
Anonymous wrote:You mean the volunteers who organize and staff all the fun things at your kids school?
Anonymous wrote:I am a PTA momHopefully folks don't hate me. I try very hard to have fun events at school and be welcoming to parents and families. In fact, that is pretty much all we focus on (how to provide a fun and welcome environment for families).
Anonymous wrote:Some are great, but then there are the ones that do it because they want to be able to control everything/socially engineer things for their kids. They pretend to want help, but really they enjoy acting like martyrs who are superior because they sacrifice their time (when it’s actually motivated by self serving intentions).