Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One slice of large Dominoes pepperoni pizza is 300 calories. Add some juice to that, fruit, cake, or whatever, and you have plenty for a meal. If you want to provide 2 slices + cake and whatever other stuff, you're going to be close to 1000 calories. That means a class of 20 should need no more than 5 pizzas, especially since I'm sure some of the girls would only eat one slice.
If your kid needs more than about 1000 calories for lunch, it's on you to provide that for your child.
Pizza, water, carrots and a cookie. Fairly balanced for a treat lunch and far from 1000 calories. We double slice the pizza so two slices are equivalent to one slice calorie-wise and it’s about 288 calories. Add 2 more slices (2 full sized pieces) is still reasonable for a treat lunch. Tons of these kids eat crap daily with school lunch.
Crappizza + water +crapcookie+ overdue carrots....Please keep the crappy balance for yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how much the kids really appreciate it. It seems like the room mom is appreciating it the most.
That's crap. In my kid's school, lots of parents volunteer for parties (not just the room mom), and while I enjoy watching the kids, it takes time to buy snacks, come up with an idea for a craft/game, and decorate. It's definitely work, and in my kid's school, the kids seem to love the chance to celebrate Halloween, Valentine's day or the end of the year.
Kids very much appreciate and enjoy it and for some kids its the only parities they attend. I have no issue putting all the work into it and heavily funding it but for someone to then complain their child isn't getting enough slices of pizza is absurd when they will not contribute. Ours are not at lunch and the end of the day.
+1. My kid’s parties are also at the end of the day so they can be dismissed immediately after. Never any pizza. While some room parents do more elaborate parties with fancy crafts and decorations, we’ve had others that consisted of mini cupcakes, salty snack and fruit and a few craft packs or seasonal games picked up from target (25$ Total). Kids love these parties.
See, these are the moms who know what they are doing. Snacks and some interesting crafts make the kids very happy. The Valentines party my DC had this year was so much fun for DC - no over the top decorations, just streamers and confetti and some heart themed table cloths and napkins and plates. The kids were served pink and red cupcakes, juice, chips, yogurt and a fruit. There were 4 games (a hand made craft and 3 games that the parent volunteers conducted). The kids loved it.
My guess on the budget:
6 Tablecloths - $6
2 packs of napkins - $2
Cutlery - $2
Streamers - $5
Confetti - $3
Heart shapes - $5
Large Cupcakes - $15
Two 12 count Juice boxes - $7
Yogurt squeezies - $7
Fruit - $7
------------------
Food and Decor - $59
Kids crafts - $1 per kid - $20
The three games - each game around $7 = $21
$100 budget, give or take a few dollars. I'm being generous with the budgetting for decorations and food. It could cost $10 less.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those that found a $5 or $6 pizza...where was that and what's the coupon code? Was it for a large or extra large? I've looked at local pizza shops as well as Dominos and Papa John's and they are still about $12 for the extra large, not including tax or delivery.
Pizza Hut. $5 is for a medium, though. I think the $7.99 large is probably better.
https://www.pizzahut.com/index.php?msclkid=bae82072c6421b8208077c028d92f2c8&gclid=CKPosIeI0OACFUxXgQodsqULkw&gclsrc=ds&menu=deals#/menu/deals
They have a $4 delivery fee, making the pizza almost $13.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those that found a $5 or $6 pizza...where was that and what's the coupon code? Was it for a large or extra large? I've looked at local pizza shops as well as Dominos and Papa John's and they are still about $12 for the extra large, not including tax or delivery.
Pizza Hut. $5 is for a medium, though. I think the $7.99 large is probably better.
https://www.pizzahut.com/index.php?msclkid=bae82072c6421b8208077c028d92f2c8&gclid=CKPosIeI0OACFUxXgQodsqULkw&gclsrc=ds&menu=deals#/menu/deals
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One slice of large Dominoes pepperoni pizza is 300 calories. Add some juice to that, fruit, cake, or whatever, and you have plenty for a meal. If you want to provide 2 slices + cake and whatever other stuff, you're going to be close to 1000 calories. That means a class of 20 should need no more than 5 pizzas, especially since I'm sure some of the girls would only eat one slice.
If your kid needs more than about 1000 calories for lunch, it's on you to provide that for your child.
Pizza, water, carrots and a cookie. Fairly balanced for a treat lunch and far from 1000 calories. We double slice the pizza so two slices are equivalent to one slice calorie-wise and it’s about 288 calories. Add 2 more slices (2 full sized pieces) is still reasonable for a treat lunch. Tons of these kids eat crap daily with school lunch.
Anonymous wrote:For those that found a $5 or $6 pizza...where was that and what's the coupon code? Was it for a large or extra large? I've looked at local pizza shops as well as Dominos and Papa John's and they are still about $12 for the extra large, not including tax or delivery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how much the kids really appreciate it. It seems like the room mom is appreciating it the most.
That's crap. In my kid's school, lots of parents volunteer for parties (not just the room mom), and while I enjoy watching the kids, it takes time to buy snacks, come up with an idea for a craft/game, and decorate. It's definitely work, and in my kid's school, the kids seem to love the chance to celebrate Halloween, Valentine's day or the end of the year.
Kids very much appreciate and enjoy it and for some kids its the only parities they attend. I have no issue putting all the work into it and heavily funding it but for someone to then complain their child isn't getting enough slices of pizza is absurd when they will not contribute. Ours are not at lunch and the end of the day.
+1. My kid’s parties are also at the end of the day so they can be dismissed immediately after. Never any pizza. While some room parents do more elaborate parties with fancy crafts and decorations, we’ve had others that consisted of mini cupcakes, salty snack and fruit and a few craft packs or seasonal games picked up from target (25$ Total). Kids love these parties.
See, these are the moms who know what they are doing. Snacks and some interesting crafts make the kids very happy. The Valentines party my DC had this year was so much fun for DC - no over the top decorations, just streamers and confetti and some heart themed table cloths and napkins and plates. The kids were served pink and red cupcakes, juice, chips, yogurt and a fruit. There were 4 games (a hand made craft and 3 games that the parent volunteers conducted). The kids loved it.
My guess on the budget:
6 Tablecloths - $6
2 packs of napkins - $2
Cutlery - $2
Streamers - $5
Confetti - $3
Heart shapes - $5
Large Cupcakes - $15
Two 12 count Juice boxes - $7
Yogurt squeezies - $7
Fruit - $7
------------------
Food and Decor - $59
Kids crafts - $1 per kid - $20
The three games - each game around $7 = $21
$100 budget, give or take a few dollars. I'm being generous with the budgetting for decorations and food. It could cost $10 less.
Anonymous wrote:PP here. Two parties $200. And you still have $200 left over if you collected $20 at the beginning of the year from 20 kids. I would think atleast 10 kids would have given $20 making 2 parties possible. Any remaining amount can be given to the one teacher (in my DC's class, there is only one teacher). If all kids paid the $20, you have $400 - $200 for the teacher and $200 for the 2 parties. Or $100 for the teacher and $300 for 3 parties. I would think most parents give their own gifts anyway in addition to the class gift (at least we do). How else do we show appreciation for all their hard work.
I think the moms complaining about not enough money for the parties must be from affluent schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how much the kids really appreciate it. It seems like the room mom is appreciating it the most.
That's crap. In my kid's school, lots of parents volunteer for parties (not just the room mom), and while I enjoy watching the kids, it takes time to buy snacks, come up with an idea for a craft/game, and decorate. It's definitely work, and in my kid's school, the kids seem to love the chance to celebrate Halloween, Valentine's day or the end of the year.
Kids very much appreciate and enjoy it and for some kids its the only parities they attend. I have no issue putting all the work into it and heavily funding it but for someone to then complain their child isn't getting enough slices of pizza is absurd when they will not contribute. Ours are not at lunch and the end of the day.
+1. My kid’s parties are also at the end of the day so they can be dismissed immediately after. Never any pizza. While some room parents do more elaborate parties with fancy crafts and decorations, we’ve had others that consisted of mini cupcakes, salty snack and fruit and a few craft packs or seasonal games picked up from target (25$ Total). Kids love these parties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how much the kids really appreciate it. It seems like the room mom is appreciating it the most.
That's crap. In my kid's school, lots of parents volunteer for parties (not just the room mom), and while I enjoy watching the kids, it takes time to buy snacks, come up with an idea for a craft/game, and decorate. It's definitely work, and in my kid's school, the kids seem to love the chance to celebrate Halloween, Valentine's day or the end of the year.
Kids very much appreciate and enjoy it and for some kids its the only parities they attend. I have no issue putting all the work into it and heavily funding it but for someone to then complain their child isn't getting enough slices of pizza is absurd when they will not contribute. Ours are not at lunch and the end of the day.