Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NO---many, many parents don't go to the Janney auction. When my child was in PK we were one of 2 families who went from our child's class. A few more joined in K.
The cool cliquey moms are definitely out in force. It's one of those nights that feels like high school all over again.
You can deride the" cool, cliquey moms" all you want, but they are the ones who do the most for the school. Does the term "free rider" hit close to home?
NP here. Er, are we not talking about a PUBLIC school? PP has already paid everything she needs to, it's called taxes. And our kids have a right to a free education.
Only taxes? If that's all you intend to pay, then you'll get exactly what you paid for--the basics.
Education is a right not a privilege. If you want to send your kids to a private school go right ahead. The rest of us are entitled to a decent education without having to treat our kids' school like a charity. We pay our taxes, our kids are are entitled to an education.
DC does not provide a lot of the elements of public education that parents at many public schools want. Like art classes, science classes, field trips, tutoring, librarians and sports. Parents in those schools decide to use their money to pay for those things, and in doing so keep their kids in the school system (instead of going private). The money that these parents contribute makes opportunities available to all the kids at these schools, not just the kids whose parents contributed. It's a win for the kids.
Is it fair that other kids on other schools don't have the same opportunities? No. Would it be better if those parents didn't contribute that money and the kids did not get art or science or tutoring or a functioning library? No. Taking away from some schools does not make other schools better.
Anonymous wrote:Mann's auction was last weekend. I'm curious to know how much was netted. Does anyone know? TIA.
Anonymous wrote:I know people work hard to organize the auction and I am sure it is fun to go but we simply can't afford a sitter and 2 tickets (75$ each in advance) to go to the auction. I may bid in the online auction but not on anything huge. I donate my time to my school because that is what I have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NO---many, many parents don't go to the Janney auction. When my child was in PK we were one of 2 families who went from our child's class. A few more joined in K.
The cool cliquey moms are definitely out in force. It's one of those nights that feels like high school all over again.
You can deride the" cool, cliquey moms" all you want, but they are the ones who do the most for the school. Does the term "free rider" hit close to home?
NP here. Er, are we not talking about a PUBLIC school? PP has already paid everything she needs to, it's called taxes. And our kids have a right to a free education.
Only taxes? If that's all you intend to pay, then you'll get exactly what you paid for--the basics.
Education is a right not a privilege. If you want to send your kids to a private school go right ahead. The rest of us are entitled to a decent education without having to treat our kids' school like a charity. We pay our taxes, our kids are are entitled to an education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, I'm amazed at the amount of bad writing coming from the JKLM parents on this thread, particularly 14:54 and 14:44. Kinda frightening, really, if this is a representative sample of DC's best & brightest.
Glad the the grammar police have this under control . . .
moving on
I get the impression the auctions/fundraisers are as much about building esprit des corps as much as $$$. If it was only $$$ it's far easier to just donate cash.
Anonymous wrote:I am going to the Janney auction to check out the cool SAHMs.
Have they ever thought about auctioning off a date with some of them?
That would really raise a ton of money