mom2princessj
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2008
- Messages
- 559
An onsite bookstore?Lucky you - I still hand my kids $2.50 a day for lunch money. If my children need extra supplies or things for projects, either they tell me, or in the case of a project, it's on the assignment (which can easily become stuck in the bottom of a backpack
). Sure, the kids in the younger grades get a lot of notes sent home by the teacher, but by 4th grade, a lot less - the kids are responsible to write this information in their agenda pads (part of the teaching process, to make the kids more independent).
I had bookstores in my school when I was a kid and then again in high school...
Both Indiana and Illinois school systems (at least the one we lived in) encourage the 'account' system where you send in a check or pay online by direct debit/credit card for lunch so cash is not brought to school. I know some of the private schools still will allow the kids to bring lunch money in but they do also have the online system and would prefer the parents contribute to this. The school system I was in Illinois did not allow cash payments at all from kids...they didn't even take a check at the school you had to do lunch payments/account payments fully online or credit card/debit card over the phone.
Also assignments are posted online and progress reports posted online. Its a very nice system. I'm very happy that we'll get all of the info we need online for all grades not just the younger grades. No way the kids are going to hide things from you when they don't know the password (the parents have a different password to get in to the childs progress report, and parent only info) than the kids do for their online school account.
OP I'm glad you got it straightened out although I agree with the others that no credit should have been given for the 'assignment' in the first place. Maybe this first year teacher has learned a good lesson herself from this! Sounds like she had good intentions but didn't think it through entirely.
). Sure, the kids in the younger grades get a lot of notes sent home by the teacher, but by 4th grade, a lot less - the kids are responsible to write this information in their agenda pads (part of the teaching process, to make the kids more independent).
I know she has money to burn (hubby is a SR. VP at a fortune 500 co.) but I don't and neither do some of the other parents (one family just moved in with the grandparents...).
Isn't that what charity is about - doing good because it is a good thing to do - not because you get rewarded for it?
Yes, the organizations get the bodies in the door, and I suppose that is a good thing; every little bit helps. It just makes the whole thing seem so superficial, like there is a "show" being put on and the focus turns to the students, not to the charity they are helping.
Hopefully, the teacher will learn from this experience and find better ways to teach her students the lesson of giving to others.