Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher and a parent, we don't expect or want gifts. We want your child to be on time, prepared to learn, present every day possible, and supported at home.
If you really feel called to give a gift, write a kind note about how I've impacted your child. If you absolutely must put in a gift card, $5 or $10 is plenty.
More than that often comes off as a bribe--seriously.
My understanding is that $20-30 is a totally normal amount for an elementary teacher holiday gift card in our district. I can't imagine it being viewed as a bribe.
I also don't write a note to the teacher because, frankly, I don't know them that well. My kid writes a note.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cash. Not gift cards, cash. Plus a nice note from my child
+1
We are giving cash. It feels a bit weird but way less fussy than a gift card. And kids write a nice note.
Guys, is it ok to give $20? For cash, the extra $5s and $10s are a lot, and we give to a lot of teachers and admin, and inflation is crazy. We both got salary decreases just from inflation this year.
Who wouldn't like a nice $20? I wouldn't say no!
This is a gift for a teacher who likely has a master's degree in their field, not a tip for the Doordash delivery person. Stick to a nice note from the student. Or a gift card. Not cash.
100% disagree. Professional employees are given cash bonuses, not gift cards. Gift cards are some pink collar thing to denigrate the work that professionals do.
NP. A gift from a little kid isn’t a “cash bonus” for an employee. A kid giving their teacher a gift card from Target does not denigrate the teacher’s profession. Jfc
Would you tip your lawn guy a gift card?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gift card between $200-$300 (not labeled so they don’t get in trouble) a card my kid helps write and a small meaningful physical gift if that’s something that makes sense — one year we got a book she and I had been discussing signed by the author, for example. I email the principal.
Generic teachers $20 card to Target and a card my kid helps with.
At our public school teachers are not allowed to accept such a large gift. They'd have to turn it over to the school. Families are capped at giving no more than $100 per teacher per school year.
That’s why I don’t write the amount on it.
You are putting the teacher in an extremely awkward situation. When they go to use it and find out how much is on it, they are supposed to report it and hand it over to admin to handle giving back. Will they? Probably not...but then it's a really uncomfortable set up. If someone else finds out they didn't, they could get in trouble. Please don't do this.
If you are feeling extremely generous, $20 is appropriate. It's supposed to be a token gift, not an annual bonus.
--teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gift card between $200-$300 (not labeled so they don’t get in trouble) a card my kid helps write and a small meaningful physical gift if that’s something that makes sense — one year we got a book she and I had been discussing signed by the author, for example. I email the principal.
Generic teachers $20 card to Target and a card my kid helps with.
At our public school teachers are not allowed to accept such a large gift. They'd have to turn it over to the school. Families are capped at giving no more than $100 per teacher per school year.
That’s why I don’t write the amount on it.
Don't risk their career. If others hear about it they could get in trouble. Just follow the rules.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gift card between $200-$300 (not labeled so they don’t get in trouble) a card my kid helps write and a small meaningful physical gift if that’s something that makes sense — one year we got a book she and I had been discussing signed by the author, for example. I email the principal.
Generic teachers $20 card to Target and a card my kid helps with.
At our public school teachers are not allowed to accept such a large gift. They'd have to turn it over to the school. Families are capped at giving no more than $100 per teacher per school year.
That’s why I don’t write the amount on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gift card between $200-$300 (not labeled so they don’t get in trouble) a card my kid helps write and a small meaningful physical gift if that’s something that makes sense — one year we got a book she and I had been discussing signed by the author, for example. I email the principal.
Generic teachers $20 card to Target and a card my kid helps with.
At our public school teachers are not allowed to accept such a large gift. They'd have to turn it over to the school. Families are capped at giving no more than $100 per teacher per school year.
That’s why I don’t write the amount on it.
Anonymous wrote:As a teacher and a parent, we don't expect or want gifts. We want your child to be on time, prepared to learn, present every day possible, and supported at home.
If you really feel called to give a gift, write a kind note about how I've impacted your child. If you absolutely must put in a gift card, $5 or $10 is plenty.
More than that often comes off as a bribe--seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gift card between $200-$300 (not labeled so they don’t get in trouble) a card my kid helps write and a small meaningful physical gift if that’s something that makes sense — one year we got a book she and I had been discussing signed by the author, for example. I email the principal.
Generic teachers $20 card to Target and a card my kid helps with.
At our public school teachers are not allowed to accept such a large gift. They'd have to turn it over to the school. Families are capped at giving no more than $100 per teacher per school year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cash. Not gift cards, cash. Plus a nice note from my child
+1
We are giving cash. It feels a bit weird but way less fussy than a gift card. And kids write a nice note.
Guys, is it ok to give $20? For cash, the extra $5s and $10s are a lot, and we give to a lot of teachers and admin, and inflation is crazy. We both got salary decreases just from inflation this year.
Who wouldn't like a nice $20? I wouldn't say no!
This is a gift for a teacher who likely has a master's degree in their field, not a tip for the Doordash delivery person. Stick to a nice note from the student. Or a gift card. Not cash.
100% disagree. Professional employees are given cash bonuses, not gift cards. Gift cards are some pink collar thing to denigrate the work that professionals do.
NP. A gift from a little kid isn’t a “cash bonus” for an employee. A kid giving their teacher a gift card from Target does not denigrate the teacher’s profession. Jfc
Anonymous wrote:I got enough **** on my plate. Thanks to teachers who work really hard, but in between doing 99% of everything for xmas at home, my job, my ailing parent, and my raging perimenopause, I have nothing left.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do your elementary schools not give class gifts? At ours we pool money and teachers typically end up getting $800+ in cash plus a basket of their favorite snacks, things for the classroom, etc.
No I've never seen that. I actually think a class pool would decrease the amount that people put in. How do you get $800? I bet 95% of kids give $25 or less.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cash. Not gift cards, cash. Plus a nice note from my child
+1
We are giving cash. It feels a bit weird but way less fussy than a gift card. And kids write a nice note.
Guys, is it ok to give $20? For cash, the extra $5s and $10s are a lot, and we give to a lot of teachers and admin, and inflation is crazy. We both got salary decreases just from inflation this year.
Who wouldn't like a nice $20? I wouldn't say no!
This is a gift for a teacher who likely has a master's degree in their field, not a tip for the Doordash delivery person. Stick to a nice note from the student. Or a gift card. Not cash.
100% disagree. Professional employees are given cash bonuses, not gift cards. Gift cards are some pink collar thing to denigrate the work that professionals do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cash. Not gift cards, cash. Plus a nice note from my child
+1
We are giving cash. It feels a bit weird but way less fussy than a gift card. And kids write a nice note.
Guys, is it ok to give $20? For cash, the extra $5s and $10s are a lot, and we give to a lot of teachers and admin, and inflation is crazy. We both got salary decreases just from inflation this year.
Who wouldn't like a nice $20? I wouldn't say no!
This is a gift for a teacher who likely has a master's degree in their field, not a tip for the Doordash delivery person. Stick to a nice note from the student. Or a gift card. Not cash.