Anonymous wrote:As a room mom, is it necessary to collect funds from other parents for end of year or teacher appreciation gifts? Or should every student send in their own gift? Our ES stressed the $20 limit during the holidays. I'm not sure how to handle it, especially when the other parents weren't really responsive for the holiday gift.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is really lovely! I am a teacher, but we are not allowed to accept gifts over $25. We actually have a yearly training on ethics, so it's not like someone can claim ignorance. Do some people receive more than that? Perhaps, but I never have. I would not be comfortable with that at all - nor alcohol. You never know if someone is in recovery or their family is. Or that their religion condones it. A very nice gesture, but honestly, what means the most to me are real, heartfelt notes. I had a student - a really 'tough' guy in 7th grade - write me a note at the end of the year. It said' Don't open until you have a really bad day' So I waited. And I opened it on a particularly tough day. The kid who everyone else dismissed - apparently somehow something I did made a difference. Please have your kids tell your teachers how they made a difference. We need to hear that. It stays with us so much longer than a bottle of wine, a gift card, or some trinket. (Just my 2 cents as a very exhausted middle school teacher)
We don't have ethics training every year?
Anonymous wrote:This is really lovely! I am a teacher, but we are not allowed to accept gifts over $25. We actually have a yearly training on ethics, so it's not like someone can claim ignorance. Do some people receive more than that? Perhaps, but I never have. I would not be comfortable with that at all - nor alcohol. You never know if someone is in recovery or their family is. Or that their religion condones it. A very nice gesture, but honestly, what means the most to me are real, heartfelt notes. I had a student - a really 'tough' guy in 7th grade - write me a note at the end of the year. It said' Don't open until you have a really bad day' So I waited. And I opened it on a particularly tough day. The kid who everyone else dismissed - apparently somehow something I did made a difference. Please have your kids tell your teachers how they made a difference. We need to hear that. It stays with us so much longer than a bottle of wine, a gift card, or some trinket. (Just my 2 cents as a very exhausted middle school teacher)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do not ignore the $20 rule.
I have been ignoring this rule for the past 10 years. MCPS has lots of silly rules and this is one of them. We are at a lower-income school and we are not wealthy by DCUM standards (if we were, my kids would be in private).
But teaching in MCPS is hard. MCPS doesn’t seem to support teachers the way it should.
So, when my kids have had a good teacher, I do a $50 gift card at the end of the year with a nice note and sometimes a nice note emailed to the principal to go into that teacher’s file.
MCPS can suck it. $20 is ridiculous. When was that rule even implemented? With inflation and how much things cost now, I have even upped how much I give elementary aged kids gifts for birthdays. Used to do $20 or $25 and have upped that up to $30. Why wouldn’t I do the same for teachers?
I've always followed the rule but also give gift cards several times a year including winter break, teacher appreciation and the end of year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do not ignore the $20 rule.
I have been ignoring this rule for the past 10 years. MCPS has lots of silly rules and this is one of them. We are at a lower-income school and we are not wealthy by DCUM standards (if we were, my kids would be in private).
But teaching in MCPS is hard. MCPS doesn’t seem to support teachers the way it should.
So, when my kids have had a good teacher, I do a $50 gift card at the end of the year with a nice note and sometimes a nice note emailed to the principal to go into that teacher’s file.
MCPS can suck it. $20 is ridiculous. When was that rule even implemented? With inflation and how much things cost now, I have even upped how much I give elementary aged kids gifts for birthdays. Used to do $20 or $25 and have upped that up to $30. Why wouldn’t I do the same for teachers?
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thank you for the suggestions. I would definitely not feel comfortable gifting wine as I'm not sure the teacher drinks and would not want to break any rules regarding alcohol on school property- so will probably go with a gift card - but was also looking at a personalized swig or yeti travel mug. If anyone has ordered something like this from a good website, please share. As far as the email to cc to the teacher - I guess I feel a little odd about that, but if you all think that's really important I will do that. However, this teacher has been teaching for decades and is probably not looking for letters in her file for advancement so not sure this will be helpful if that makes sense. Thanks again for your insights.
Anonymous wrote:Don't think you can demand higher grades. It's not fair to the kids earning their grade.