Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Individual supplies is actually less time-consuming. Also, students learn to take better care of their resources and less things for a student having a temper tantrum to readily throw at you.
- signed, teacher who works with first graders.
Maybe you need to work on your classroom management skills if first graders are throwing school supplies at you.![]()
Or maybe parents need to pay attention to their kids so they don't seek negative attention because negative attention is better than no attention at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Individual supplies is actually less time-consuming. Also, students learn to take better care of their resources and less things for a student having a temper tantrum to readily throw at you.
- signed, teacher who works with first graders.
Maybe you need to work on your classroom management skills if first graders are throwing school supplies at you.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Individual supplies is actually less time-consuming. Also, students learn to take better care of their resources and less things for a student having a temper tantrum to readily throw at you.
- signed, teacher who works with first graders.
Maybe you need to work on your classroom management skills if first graders are throwing school supplies at you.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Individual supplies is actually less time-consuming. Also, students learn to take better care of their resources and less things for a student having a temper tantrum to readily throw at you.
- signed, teacher who works with first graders.
Maybe you need to work on your classroom management skills if first graders are throwing school supplies at you.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other than glue sticks and pencils and tissues and baby wipes, my children have always kept everything we have bought in their desks and/or put their name on it at the Open House.
My kids have never had "their" desks. They have tables, which are moved around as needed to suit the day's work. They would have to keep things in their cubby/locker, and it would be a pain if every kid had to got whatever stuff they needed from their cubby every time they needed something.
Pp here. They only had tables in K and yes then they had a cubby with all their stuff in it. By 1st they had storage desks. My kids like choosing their folders/binders/notebooks, having their own scissors, crayons, etc. They take care of their stuff so I think communal supplies are unfair for things like scissors and crayons that can be abused. I guess pencils and notebooks are okay because they are new when you take them from the bin. But some kids ruin glue sticks. I’m amazed how many kids don’t have manners/good sense by K.
Anonymous wrote:Individual supplies is actually less time-consuming. Also, students learn to take better care of their resources and less things for a student having a temper tantrum to readily throw at you.
- signed, teacher who works with first graders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a teacher and don’t love it for germ reasons (I’m immunosuppressed) but a lot of my students come from cultures that have more collectivist than individualistic beliefs, so it’s more within their comfort level. There really isn’t an issue with people not getting things back that they’ve shared so it works and doesn’t make the kids who don’t have enough supplies feel shamed.
We don’t get many parent donations (focus school) so I supplement from my own pocket and it’s less expensive to buy stuff kids can use communally than to make sure each child has their own set of every supply they’ll need.
Thanks for spreading the flu due to your respect for their collectivist beliefs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does my 1st grader still have to share his school supplies with all he’s “friends”?
Personally I don’t like it. Do you?
Personally I don't like it when people complain that they have to contribute school supplies for the whole class instead of just for their own first-grader.
Even better would be if school supplies were school-funded, but we don't get to have such nice things here.
Our schools and school system ARE well funded. Its how the schools and school system choose to use the money. I have no issue buying my child school supplies and buying extra. If you can afford it, is it really that hard to contribute a bit more for another child whose parents cannot or will not buy.
Compared to what?
Our teachers and staff are well paid compared to other locations in the us especially given they work 10 months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a teacher and don’t love it for germ reasons (I’m immunosuppressed) but a lot of my students come from cultures that have more collectivist than individualistic beliefs, so it’s more within their comfort level. There really isn’t an issue with people not getting things back that they’ve shared so it works and doesn’t make the kids who don’t have enough supplies feel shamed.
We don’t get many parent donations (focus school) so I supplement from my own pocket and it’s less expensive to buy stuff kids can use communally than to make sure each child has their own set of every supply they’ll need.
Thanks for spreading the flu due to your respect for their collectivist beliefs.