Anonymous wrote:Here's a suggestion for the folks who like to do the back-to-school shopping: find a local backpack program, choose the age of a kid you want to buy for, get the supply list, then go to Target or wherever with your kid. Have them help you pick out supplies for kids whose parents can't afford to buy them, and take the tax donation. My daughter was still in preschool last year, but we had a lot of fun going to Target and picking out school supplies for someone else's kindergartener - she took a lot of time finding just the right backpack, folders, etc. and we threw in a few extra fun things. We'll do it again this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've done the kits for a couple years but my kids have asked me not to do it for next year. They like picking out their own stuff and complained that the folders supplied in the kit didn't hold up well.
My kid opened the required writing notebook and all the pages fell out. All that hard work. We buy our own now. the quality at the discount stores does not hold up to a whole year of writing.
Anonymous wrote:This is a little OT but reminds me often Trapper Keepers weren't allowed at school and we'd have a list including a binder "but no Trapper Keepers"! Why is that? Always wondered.
Anonymous wrote:I've done the kits for a couple years but my kids have asked me not to do it for next year. They like picking out their own stuff and complained that the folders supplied in the kit didn't hold up well.
Anonymous wrote:Some of my fondest back to school memories were from the first day. First the new outfit and then afterschool supply shopping with my mother. There was nothing like a new three ring notebook (trapper keeper anyone?) paper, reinforcements, highlighters, new folders decorated with whatever was popular at the time (cabbage patch kids anyone?). To this day I love ofice supplies.
That said I will buy the kit, and will be happy to have the supplies shared but I am a bit sad to think my DS won't get to have the same fun back to school supply shopping experience I did.
And yes I know he will live. Please dont jump down my throat for recounting a sweet memory from my childhood.
Anonymous wrote:I've started seeing posts here and on another listserve about ordering your child's school supplies or back to school kit. When I was a kid you had to go out and buy your own pencils, crayons, 3-ring notebook, eraser, ruler and other random things for your own personal use.
I looked at the list for the rising kindergarteners at my DS's future school and it includes boxes of Kleenex, hand sanitizer, multiple glue sticks, box of Ziploc bags and other random things. Other grades have to bring in things like dry erase markers and bottles of liquid soap. Clearly this looks like the families are stocking the classroom for the year for collective use.
I'm new to all this and it's kind of got me raising an eyebrow. Isn't this why school systems have budgets? Especially in this area where jurisdictions spend crazy huge amounts per pupil. We can afford it so this isn't a hardship for our family, but I'm wondering why the school isn't stocking up its own tissues, dry erase markers and so on?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD's school has 5 reams of copy paper on each grader's supply list. Ummmmm. No! That's the school's job to provide.
But what if the school doesn't provide it? And the parents all think like you?
Anonymous wrote:My DD's school has 5 reams of copy paper on each grader's supply list. Ummmmm. No! That's the school's job to provide.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd be really pissed if I bought my child the higher quality markers and someone else bought the cheap ones that dry out quickly and then the teacher gave my child the cheap ones. I buy everything on the supply list, and specify my child is to keep everything I send them to school with.
I buy a box of tissues for the classroom and DH drops off a box of reams of paper within the first week for the classroom. We don't believe in hand sanitizer.
Our kid's supply list specifies brands to that this problem can be avoided. If your kid picks a dried out marker out of the communal bin he can grab a different one. Your kid isn't going to be screwed over because other parents are cheap.
Our school supply list also specifies brands but that's total bs. I'll get the brands I want my child to have. Sorry but in public school you can't BOTH not provide the school supplies AND dictate which brands to buy. You can say blue pens or black, but not Bic vs. Papermate.
Most parents aren't such pains in the ass that they would refuse to buy the suggested brand and then insist that the teacher go out of her way to make sure that Suzy have exclusive use of THIS pack of markers. All the other kids notice that Suzy does things differently, and god forbid her markers mix and mingle with the others on the table because the teacher has been given EXPLICIT INSTRUCTIONS that this not happen.
I hope you are putting Suzy's name on every pencil, eraser and marker because otherwise there's little chance that they will remain hers alone in a classroom where all those items are pooled. Aside from hers, of course.
It's a total non-issue. This is what pencil cases are for. She keeps all her things in her desk. I do label her box of crayons, which she also keeps in her desk, as well as her bag of markers and her pencil case. It all stays in the desk.
I feel really sorry for your kid.
Yes, someone needs to read Mrs. Piggle Wiggle and the Selfishness Cure.
http://annieandaunt.blogspot.com/2013/07/mrs-piggle-wiggle.html