Anonymous wrote:1. Ask your coworkers if they have extra classroom decorations. I always gave stuff to new teachers.
2. Create a Go Fund Me for your classroom. Share it on social media.
3. Visit Teachers Pay Teachers. https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/?gclid=CjwKCAjwiJqWBhBdEiwAtESPaNMZcZonydokedGBTSl7bX3OOc9KkCzyUa7_ZbRUf2YRRU0U9PDnnBoCDJQQAvD_BwE
4. Don’t feel like you have to have everything by the first day. Keep it simple and add as you can.
5. Ask on FB Marketplace. Visit thrift stores. Let people know you are looking for.
Anonymous wrote:
OK, I'm just going to put it out there, OP.
My children, now teens and tweens, always found the walls of their classroom WAY, WAY too distracting. There's always too much on there. It's visually confusing and not aesthetically pleasing at all. For my child with ADHD, it was worse than that - he couldn't find anything that the teacher said was on the walls, because every surface was covered by posters and pictures and admonitions! It made functioning in the class harder than it should have been.
So by all means, ask the Principal, ask the PTA, and inquire as to whether you have a sister school who can help. I was a PTA board member for years at my children's elementary and we donated to our lower-income sister school. Your administration should not be leaving you in the lurch like this.
But please also think about the beauty and calm of empty surfaces. Your students will thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just in tears, since I’m not currently getting paid, I do not have any extra funds. My coworkers are talking about buying legos for back to schooo night, wallets for their class cash, prizes for the treasure box. I can’t even afford a bookshelf to my books on! I don’t have decorations, posters, supply carts, organizers, clipboards….I don’t have anything and I don’t know what to do. I mean I always knew teachers had to spend some of their own money, but I never realized how much. It’s a low income school so we also have to make sure to have extra supplies on hand for the kids who do not bring anything. We also cannot ask parents to donate. I’m just so discouraged and have cried all day.
If you cried all day about such a petty matter, are you really emotionally stable enough to be teaching in a low income school? Seriously, you need to transfer to a school where the PTA has funds to help teachers decorate classes. Absent that, have the children decorate the class with you. Go into any real estate office, and they will have stacks of magazines that they will happily hand to you. Cut out pictures of flowers, birds, skies -- most of which are included in the photos You or the kids can pin them up or create paper chains out of colorful pictures from the magazines. Use some ingenuity. Instead of sobbing into those tissues, makes them into paper flowers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just in tears, since I’m not currently getting paid, I do not have any extra funds. My coworkers are talking about buying legos for back to schooo night, wallets for their class cash, prizes for the treasure box. I can’t even afford a bookshelf to my books on! I don’t have decorations, posters, supply carts, organizers, clipboards….I don’t have anything and I don’t know what to do. I mean I always knew teachers had to spend some of their own money, but I never realized how much. It’s a low income school so we also have to make sure to have extra supplies on hand for the kids who do not bring anything. We also cannot ask parents to donate. I’m just so discouraged and have cried all day.
If you cried all day about such a petty matter, are you really emotionally stable enough to be teaching in a low income school? Seriously, you need to transfer to a school where the PTA has funds to help teachers decorate classes. Absent that, have the children decorate the class with you. Go into any real estate office, and they will have stacks of magazines that they will happily hand to you. Cut out pictures of flowers, birds, skies -- most of which are included in the photos You or the kids can pin them up or create paper chains out of colorful pictures from the magazines. Use some ingenuity. Instead of sobbing into those tissues, makes them into paper flowers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m just in tears, since I’m not currently getting paid, I do not have any extra funds. My coworkers are talking about buying legos for back to schooo night, wallets for their class cash, prizes for the treasure box. I can’t even afford a bookshelf to my books on! I don’t have decorations, posters, supply carts, organizers, clipboards….I don’t have anything and I don’t know what to do. I mean I always knew teachers had to spend some of their own money, but I never realized how much. It’s a low income school so we also have to make sure to have extra supplies on hand for the kids who do not bring anything. We also cannot ask parents to donate. I’m just so discouraged and have cried all day.
If you cried all day about such a petty matter, are you really emotionally stable enough to be teaching in a low income school? Seriously, you need to transfer to a school where the PTA has funds to help teachers decorate classes. Absent that, have the children decorate the class with you. Go into any real estate office, and they will have stacks of magazines that they will happily hand to you. Cut out pictures of flowers, birds, skies -- most of which are included in the photos You or the kids can pin them up or create paper chains out of colorful pictures from the magazines. Use some ingenuity. Instead of sobbing into those tissues, makes them into paper flowers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have a nieghborhood listserve? There are probably a bunch of lego boxes, books, and games gathering dust on a few shelves. Monitor freecycle Can you do a DOnors Choice request?
I have picked up lots of books at garage sales/goodwill and have some board games. I need to buy several book shelves, a rug, calendar set, calming toys for the calm down center, books bins, desk caddy’s, I’ll need storage carts, and supply organizers. I’m so overwhelmed. When I taught preschool we got a budget at the beginning of the year to set up our room and I naively thought elementary school would be the same. The only thing in my new classroom is desks, a projector, a small group table, a teacher desk and some filling cabinets.