Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anybody else feel bad for the parents who feel the need to volunteer for everything their kid does-helps on the field for every football game, chaperones every field trip, flies to every school trip?
And they act like they know all the kids and the “kids just love” them.
It’s almost like they are reliving their youth
Have not read through the comments to this post but as a working parent with three kids can confirm that I have encountered maybe 1-2 moms who are kind of like this. The vibe to me is more like they see being present for all this stuff as their mom job. They either have one child and don’t work or have 2-3 kids and a nanny.
The moms and dads at our school who volunteer take off work to do it 🤷♀️ There are definitely some SAHMs who don’t help out. But I guess if they did, they’d be judged negatively anyway…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anybody else feel bad for the parents who feel the need to volunteer for everything their kid does-helps on the field for every football game, chaperones every field trip, flies to every school trip?
And they act like they know all the kids and the “kids just love” them.
It’s almost like they are reliving their youth
Have not read through the comments to this post but as a working parent with three kids can confirm that I have encountered maybe 1-2 moms who are kind of like this. The vibe to me is more like they see being present for all this stuff as their mom job. They either have one child and don’t work or have 2-3 kids and a nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anybody else feel bad for the parents who feel the need to volunteer for everything their kid does-helps on the field for every football game, chaperones every field trip, flies to every school trip?
And they act like they know all the kids and the “kids just love” them.
It’s almost like they are reliving their youth
Have not read through the comments to this post but as a working parent with three kids can confirm that I have encountered maybe 1-2 moms who are kind of like this. The vibe to me is more like they see being present for all this stuff as their mom job. They either have one child and don’t work or have 2-3 kids and a nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Anybody else feel bad for the parents who feel the need to volunteer for everything their kid does-helps on the field for every football game, chaperones every field trip, flies to every school trip?
And they act like they know all the kids and the “kids just love” them.
It’s almost like they are reliving their youth
Anonymous wrote:Wow that’s quite a take.
Anonymous wrote:Huh? We step up to coach, be scout leaders, volunteer at school because no one else will. Not trying to relive anything.
Field trips are fun, but my kids beg me to go on them. I only go on one per year per kid. I'm very annoyed at parents that sign up for every field trip because it doesn't give others opportunity to go.
PTA is where I draw the line. I'm not stepping up to do things that I think admin or central office should be doing. I also just want to treat teachers like professionals, not some pink collar job where we give them free snacks one week a year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anybody else feel bad for the parents who feel the need to volunteer for everything their kid does-helps on the field for every football game, chaperones every field trip, flies to every school trip?
And they act like they know all the kids and the “kids just love” them.
It’s almost like they are reliving their youth
What is the explanation for your character defect? Seriously, who thinks this way?
Someone who is wildly insecure and never volunteers for anything.
Anonymous wrote:No, I'm grateful for these parents so I don't have to volunteer at every event.
Anonymous wrote:You have some growing up to do, OP. Why be gratuitously nasty?
I'm a low-energy introvert, and occupying a board position for years on the elementary school's PTA was the most I could do.
But other people are different, and have lots of energy and want to help out a lot. That's great!
There just needs to be rules in place because there's always the risk of embezzlement or child abuse. Parents need to keep an eye out. My kids are adults and teens now, and I've seen my share of situations.
Anonymous wrote:The only parents that annoy me are the ones who take every field trip slot. In my eldests grade it's one married couple. In 6 years I've never gotten to go on a field trip but this same couple is always there.
For every other volunteer slot, there is generally no competition and we're just there to get the job done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only parents that annoy me are the ones who take every field trip slot. In my eldests grade it's one married couple. In 6 years I've never gotten to go on a field trip but this same couple is always there.
For every other volunteer slot, there is generally no competition and we're just there to get the job done.
Our elementary school allowed all parents who wanted to chaperone field trips to do so, but they only provided free admission and transportation for a limited number of chaperones. The rest had to pay for their admission provide their own transportation. They tried not to give free admission and transportation to the same parents every time. That seems like the fairest way to do it.