I bet there is a black market for those binders!
No way I'm letting them go! Who knows what they will need in High School

Actually my dd hasn't gotten her list yet, I'm hoping she needs them for 7th grade.
I bet there is a black market for those binders!
I was one of those parents who went out and paid $2.39 for the 16 packs of crayola crayons because the list specifically said "no roseart and no boxes over 16". I only did that once, after that my kids always brought in the box of 24 and no teachers ever said anything about it.
I was one of those parents who went out and paid $2.39 for the 16 packs of crayola crayons because the list specifically said "no roseart and no boxes over 16". I only did that once, after that my kids always brought in the box of 24 and no teachers ever said anything about it.
It really hurt to spend $12 on 4 notebooks todayI still have to find the elusive yellow one too
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Just a budget tip- I pay my kids if they can provide me with the supplies on my list from the previous year's stash. They get 50% of what I would have paid at the store.
Hope your not using walmarts prices as teh 50% rule - your kids won't get to much $$$.
Glue is $.25 and folders are $.17.
That would only be $.21 profit for them![]()
My current complaint is not being able to find everything on the supply list. I went to 4 stores looking for 2 packages of dividers with pockets and didn't find any. Plus none of those stores carried a wierd size post it note that the school wanted.
I found dividers with pockets at Target. They were in the special school supply section under 3 ring binders. They were mixed in with the regular cheaper dividers and were a little pricey. Good luck!
My DD will use the same thing in 1st grade this year. They have workbooks for each subject that are 3 hole punched and go in the binder. The binder comes home every night with a homework sheet in the front that tells us which pages to do in which workbooks, and any extra homework that doesn't come from the workbooks gets hole punched and put in the front of the binder. All of the communicatoin form the teacher, grade reports, lunch order forms, ect all go in the front pocket of the white binder. it keeps workbooks from getting torn up, lost ect, keeps all paper work in the same place, and really streamlines homework time!aggg... my second grader needs a 3 inch 3 ring binder.. WHITE!!
my question....
FOR WHAT?!
My DD will use the same thing in 1st grade this year. They have workbooks for each subject that are 3 hole punched and go in the binder. The binder comes home every night with a homework sheet in the front that tells us which pages to do in which workbooks, and any extra homework that doesn't come from the workbooks gets hole punched and put in the front of the binder. All of the communicatoin form the teacher, grade reports, lunch order forms, ect all go in the front pocket of the white binder. it keeps workbooks from getting torn up, lost ect, keeps all paper work in the same place, and really streamlines homework time!
My DS list said 48 crayola washable crayons !!! I could not find them anywhere. .
If you are spending $3 on one notebook this time of year you are not shopping at the right places. With all the back to school sales it is nearly impossible to not find a good sale.
no problem! Just wanted to pipe up b/c I thought the same thing when we were told we would be using them. DD gets a supply kit as parto f her tuition, but they let us know ahead so we couldbuy backpacks. If that is actually what they are using them for in your case, be aware that they DO NOT fit in the regular child sized backpacks with characters on them. You will need a bigger bag if it is coming home every day. Our school requests a bag with wheels through 3rd grade, and many of us get the LL Bean deluxe rolling bookbag. It is pricey, but they replace it if it breaks. Most kids use that one bag all the way from 1st to 5th!ohhhh!
thanks for the response.. ill pick it up tomorrow before they sell out![]()
My kids are young but I am not. I am an older mom who taught middle school for 20 years. Again, I don't like that there are parents who don't do for their kids when they are able, but in the end the kids suffer, not the parents. I provided for many during my years of teaching. Yes, it got old, but I am not going to let a student go without.
Now I just didn't just dole out the pencils because the student didn't have one. If the student wanted to borrow a pencil, they had to leave me one of their shoes. When it was time to change class, they had to give me the pencil back in order to get their shoe back. I never had anyone leave my room wearing one shoe.
I can see where that would be a problem. The Crayola website doesn't even list them as something they make. Just 8, 16, and 24 in washable.
http://www.crayola.com/products/list.cfm?categories=CRAYONS&categories=WASHABLE
My children will be well supplied for school because they fear repercussions from their teachers. After having read your replies to this thread, it's clear that their fears are well founded.
Not everyone, in every school, takes Disney vacations worth thousands of dollars. The purpose of schools supplying materials is to make sure that ALL students have what they need, not just the wealthy or comfortable families.
And to those of you who think buying supplies is no big deal, ask yourself what is next. When the schools don't have enough money will you be purchasing textbooks? How about desks? Maybe they can't afford the teacher's salary. Will you be splitting that with the other parents too? Maybe we should just make all public schools tuition based? Seems to me that would defeat the purpose of a public school system. It's a slippery slope.
There are clear differences in opinions here which is okay, but when some resort to being rude it ruins the opportunity for an intelligent debate.
Yes, sadly, we have had kids who wet their beds at night and did not take a bath, so they smelled like urine. The principal has taken a child into his bathroom and washed him up and the counselor gave him new clothes. The next day, same thing, because the sheets were not changedOr kids come in short sleeved shirts with no jacket in the winter. We have coats they can take home and keep, but often they will come back without the coat. It's very sad.
I really, really don't mind supplying this type of child with what they need, even if it comes out of my grocery budget. It bothers me a lot more when the kids with the designer clothes(on mom and kid) don't bring in the supplies we request. We do our best with what we get. I think some people want to make a point that the school should supply everything, but they don't, so someone has to do it.
Marsha
One of the teachers in my school got in trouble for doing this. We had a fire drill and our vp saw kids outside without shoes on. The teacher didn't think about giving them their shoes back when the alarm went off.
I use golf pencils when kids start wasting pencils in my classroom. They hate writing with them and tend to hold on to their real pencil later.