Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what about homemade cookies and a card?
Maybe I’m paranoid but I throw out homemade food. I have no idea how clean someone else’s kitchen is, if they let cats walk on their counters, etc
I hope that you never eat in a restaurant. Because it isn't pretty!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No you aren’t paranoid. I don’t know a single teacher that will eat homemade gifts. They go in the trash. Always.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what about homemade cookies and a card?
Maybe I’m paranoid but I throw out homemade food. I have no idea how clean someone else’s kitchen is, if they let cats walk on their counters, etc
That's awful. You could at least pass them off to a senior citizen's home or homeless shelter. Sorry anyone wasted any time or effort on you.
I have worked at both senior citizen homes and homeless shelters. Neither of those accept homemade treats or food in opened packages. It is much too big of a liability.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what about homemade cookies and a card?
Maybe I’m paranoid but I throw out homemade food. I have no idea how clean someone else’s kitchen is, if they let cats walk on their counters, etc
Not only this but those of us who work with kids know how dirty their hands usually are (we definitely ask them to wash or sanitize regularly at school!) so it can make us a little queasy when a student brings a gift of homemade food and proudly proclaims that they made it or helped make it themselves!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a specialist teacher, I am usually appreciative of anything... except cheap lotions that end up actually drying my hands out. Gift cards and notes from student are awesome.
As a parent, I have trouble drawing a line at where to stop giving gifts for all the adults that help my children. I can’t afford to even get $10 giftcards for all of them.
The money part is a big issue as we have a SN child who has multiple staff helping directly and indirectly. I'm doing gift cards for the 4 main and a small token gift for the rest. It still adds up.
PP here. Yes, we have a SN preschooler and with the teachers, aids, therapists, bus drivers & aids... and then our ES age child’s teacher and bus driver (and he likes giving the specialists gifts, too), it just gets to be a lot.
I drive my kid so that's a non-issue but there were two teachers, one student teacher and 3-4 aides and the teacher demanded that everyone get the same, so it really added up. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a specialist teacher, I am usually appreciative of anything... except cheap lotions that end up actually drying my hands out. Gift cards and notes from student are awesome.
As a parent, I have trouble drawing a line at where to stop giving gifts for all the adults that help my children. I can’t afford to even get $10 giftcards for all of them.
The money part is a big issue as we have a SN child who has multiple staff helping directly and indirectly. I'm doing gift cards for the 4 main and a small token gift for the rest. It still adds up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No you aren’t paranoid. I don’t know a single teacher that will eat homemade gifts. They go in the trash. Always.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what about homemade cookies and a card?
Maybe I’m paranoid but I throw out homemade food. I have no idea how clean someone else’s kitchen is, if they let cats walk on their counters, etc
That's awful. You could at least pass them off to a senior citizen's home or homeless shelter. Sorry anyone wasted any time or effort on you.
Anonymous wrote:As a specialist teacher, I am usually appreciative of anything... except cheap lotions that end up actually drying my hands out. Gift cards and notes from student are awesome.
As a parent, I have trouble drawing a line at where to stop giving gifts for all the adults that help my children. I can’t afford to even get $10 giftcards for all of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, this thread makes me never want to give a teacher a gift. Many of you are extremely ungrateful. Nobody gives me gifts for doing my job. Perhaps the practice should end all together.
This. I’m more than happy to get teachers gifts, and just get gift cards, but the teachers that respond to this thread you sound terrible. I believe what you are supposed to do is say thank you for any gift and move on. If you don’t like it, donate it, but don’t talk poorly about the person who gave you something or start a thread about what you don’t want.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, this thread makes me never want to give a teacher a gift. Many of you are extremely ungrateful. Nobody gives me gifts for doing my job. Perhaps the practice should end all together.