Anonymous wrote:Serious question: in public school districts there is a formal limit on amt that can be given for gift cards per parent (in MCPS it's $20) - how are you all able to circumvent it in case of larger individual gifts? Just buy an item and remove the price? Ignore the limit?
Anonymous wrote:I’d just do an individual gift and skip the group gift. Or contribute $5-$10 (as that seems to be the norm for the group) to the group gift, and give an individual gift if you like.

Anonymous wrote:Every class I’ve ever been in the room parent has all kids sign the card regardless of donation participation or not. This whole situation just sounds a bit off to me.
Anonymous wrote:Wow I've never seen such little appreciation for a person who spends an entire school year with the most precious person in your life - a child! Cheap cheap cheap and ungrateful. No wonder America is the mess it is.
Anonymous wrote:I am shocked at how many people think $10 is an appropriate amount for a class gift! I also give $50. I've never had the room mom publicize how much the total is and I'm OK with not knowing. I give what I think we should. Its sad that others don't though. Honestly makes me want to give more to cover the lower amounts!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I prefer when room parents calculate the various gifts throughout the year and ask for a suggested amount up front at the beginning of the year. That said, my mom was a teacher and I find it ridiculous that our teachers are regularly getting $500 gift cards multiple times a year - yes they work hard, but honestly the teachers in the less fortunate neighborhoods work harder, spend more of their own $$ and get much less (we have a family friend who teaches at one school, so I asked her). Maybe consider matching your annual gift to a less fortunate school?
Do you work? Do you get a holiday or annual bonus? Is it at least $500? For many, many people in this area the answer to that is yes. Why shouldn't teachers receive bonuses as well?