Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I used to teach I remember the PTA assembled cookie plates for everyone that were beautiful-everything homemade. Then in the teacher's lounge you saw a sea of the plates everywhere and to be honest the people willing to take extras home were either young male teachers or people entertaining that weekend. So much ended up in the trash. I remember the head of the PTA coming into the the teacher's lounge with even MORE treats and being horrified to see all that hard work set out on tables because so few people wanted it. They still did it every year. So many teachers are watching their weight or have pre-diabetes or diabetes or just prefer healthy stuff.
Point is-do NOT feel guilty for not baking cookies.
One year the teacher in the room next to me asked me to stop by because she felt so bad for the PTA moms in there. So much food and no one was going. It was embarrassing. I went and took a plate, said thanks so much and then threw it out. We really don’t want the cookies.
Anonymous wrote:
I never participate in food exchanges, partly because my child has a deadly nut allergy, partly because I don’t trust what random people bake in their kitchens (more so in times of Covid). It all seems unappetizing and risky to me.
I volunteered on the PTA for years and logged countless hours at school in the course of my duties.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers don't want baked goods...they want gift cards. And I agree, I don't want anymore $5 crap in my house...it all ends up in the landfill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously do what you want. But I can’t imagine depriving my child of the secret Santa from their activities and teams. They love it so much and it’s not that time consuming.
OP here. We do the secret Santa’s. I question why the parent organizers of all these spoiled kids (mine included) feel the kids “need” this. And as for the teachers, the baking is in addition to the gift. I get that some people are really gung-ho, but the pressure and “reminder” emails are really high to get full buy in on this.
It’s not about need. It’s about celebrating the season and giving gifts is part of the celebration. As for the baking, I don’t think it’s any big deal not to do it. There were a few years where I didn’t join the PTA and I never got the emails to participate. So there’s that option as well as just declining.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously do what you want. But I can’t imagine depriving my child of the secret Santa from their activities and teams. They love it so much and it’s not that time consuming.
OP here. We do the secret Santa’s. I question why the parent organizers of all these spoiled kids (mine included) feel the kids “need” this. And as for the teachers, the baking is in addition to the gift. I get that some people are really gung-ho, but the pressure and “reminder” emails are really high to get full buy in on this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All these things started when there is as one parent at home. Now, most parents work and most teachers don't need cookies.
I don't think this is true. I've been teaching a long time, and my mother was a teacher before me. This kind of performative parenting is a recent phenomena.
Anonymous wrote:All these things started when there is as one parent at home. Now, most parents work and most teachers don't need cookies.