Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wait I thought the standard was 1 week tuition, to be split evenly across the teachers?
BWAH HAHAHA. This is a joke, right? Like the man is supposed to spend 3 months of his salary on the engagement ring?
Not a joke. That's normal.
This is "normal" only if you are affluent or you like adhering to arbitrary rules. My husband did not spend 3 months of salary on my engagement ring, he spent what he could afford and he still ended up taking out a zero interest credit card and paying it off over the course of a year. Similarly, we are not going to spend a week of tuition money on our daughter's caregivers. For us that would be an extra $500 at a time of year when we are already stretched thin between family gifts for the holidays and expensive cross country flights. We will be giving each of DD's 5 caregivers at her home day care $40 or $50 each, and that's still a sacrifice for us. Yes, we value our caregivers. Yes, we understand that they are underpaid and wish it weren't so. Yes, we make over $100K. However we also do not own a home, do not have inherited family money, have had major medical bills this year, and have spent the last decade paying down over $100K of combined student loans, saving for a down payment for a home, and paying for our wedding.
OP and PP, you need to read up a little bit about privilege and understand that people give what they can afford.
I meant one week's salary is normal for a daycare bonus. I am not privileged, but I know how hard they work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wait I thought the standard was 1 week tuition, to be split evenly across the teachers?
BWAH HAHAHA. This is a joke, right? Like the man is supposed to spend 3 months of his salary on the engagement ring?
Not a joke. That's normal.
This is "normal" only if you are affluent or you like adhering to arbitrary rules. My husband did not spend 3 months of salary on my engagement ring, he spent what he could afford and he still ended up taking out a zero interest credit card and paying it off over the course of a year. Similarly, we are not going to spend a week of tuition money on our daughter's caregivers. For us that would be an extra $500 at a time of year when we are already stretched thin between family gifts for the holidays and expensive cross country flights. We will be giving each of DD's 5 caregivers at her home day care $40 or $50 each, and that's still a sacrifice for us. Yes, we value our caregivers. Yes, we understand that they are underpaid and wish it weren't so. Yes, we make over $100K. However we also do not own a home, do not have inherited family money, have had major medical bills this year, and have spent the last decade paying down over $100K of combined student loans, saving for a down payment for a home, and paying for our wedding.
OP and PP, you need to read up a little bit about privilege and understand that people give what they can afford.
Anonymous wrote:I don't do the group gift because a lot of slackers don't give anything or only give $5 and I want to give my daycare teacher $200. I want her to know that my family appreciates her and how much it means to us that she cares for our baby. I'm not donating to a group gift at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wait I thought the standard was 1 week tuition, to be split evenly across the teachers?
BWAH HAHAHA. This is a joke, right? Like the man is supposed to spend 3 months of his salary on the engagement ring?
Not a joke. That's normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wait I thought the standard was 1 week tuition, to be split evenly across the teachers?
BWAH HAHAHA. This is a joke, right? Like the man is supposed to spend 3 months of his salary on the engagement ring?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wait I thought the standard was 1 week tuition, to be split evenly across the teachers?
That's for nannies and small in-home daycares. This is not standard for daycare centers or private preschools and certainly not for elementary schools and higher.
Anonymous wrote:wait I thought the standard was 1 week tuition, to be split evenly across the teachers?
Anonymous wrote:wait I thought the standard was 1 week tuition, to be split evenly across the teachers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
+1. I was in charge of one of these end-of-year gift baskets. We asked $10 of each family. Only four or five sent anything. So we retaliated by putting the names of the families who had actually paid on the gift basket (there were 16 or so in the class). OP you are asking too much on top of tuition.
That’s a really crappy thing to do.
Anonymous wrote:You are generous. And crazy. Seriously.
$20 per teacher is great.
-teacher