DISvirgin1
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2010
- Messages
- 266
That amount doesn't seem like a lot at all, nor does it mean they are communal. As many others have pointed out, they will get lost, broken, etc.
OK, teachers. Come on now. Someone explain why these (usually amounts) are "required" for EACH child...
3rd Grader
72(!) Pencils
6(!) Black Dry Erase Markerts
1st Grader
36(!) Pencils
I'm guessing these go into a "community" pile and those that bring what's required will support those who don't. But these just seem extreme to me.

I don't know about you all, but the backpacks in our house are holding themselves together by two threads by the end of the school year. Duct tape has been known to get us through the last month or so.
The lunch boxes just get gross....
) and the lunch boxes (Vera Bradley, of course) go in the washer very well. 

So, on the high side, 36 pencils/week. With a class size of 20, that's a little over 1.5 pencils/week/student.The class would go through 2-3 12packs of pencils each week. Pencils get lost, broken, taken home, and even chewed on.
Sure, it's not much, until you have multiple kids. Also, it's not like you're spending $50 over 180... it's all coming at once. With multiple kids, it adds up, and it's all one lump sum.I understand parents being upset about supplies that a required then not used, but $40 or even $50 over 180 or so days of school really isn't much.
So because they're packaged that way, parents should be happy to get them?Goodness knows they come in large packs so it's not like it costs a fortune to get that number and it's not like they dry out or go bad or something.

If I knew the students were using the dry erase markers, I could understand each needing six. If it's only the teacher? I can't believe she'd need 120 markers in a year (assuming a class size of 20).Dry erase markers dry out and are unusable pretty quickly. Glue and glue sticks are used extremely liberally by the young ones..they go through them like water so lots are always helpful..same with crayons, markers..etc.
Ah, THERE'S the problem.Also as a pp has pointed out you would be astounded at how few parents actually do send supplies so if they are communal then again..not so outrageous.
So 20 pencils for each kid over the year? That makes sense to me.My usual class size is about 10 and a few years ago, they managed to go through 200 pencils in a school year. I had some students that seemed to need a new one every day, while others rarely needed one of my mine.
tiggger1 said:here is the list for my kids school. You have the option of buying it yourself or buying into the supply fundraiser...
4th grade-$30 if you bought it in the fundraiser
1 box #2 24 pencils (Oriole)
1 pkg 3x5 lined index cards
3 pkgs of 3x3 sticky notes
1 composition notebooks 3 rolls of Scotch tape
1 Crayola crayons 24 pk
1 box Crayola markers 10/ct (asst. colors)
1 pkg Crayola colored pencils 12/ct
2 highlighters
2 lg.erasers latex free
1 clip board
1 pencil sharpener with chamber
2 glue sticks
1 pair Fiskar sharp point scissors
binder
loose leaf paper
Kindergarten $20 if you bought it in the fundraiser
10 glue sticks
2 pkg of crayola 24 pk crayons
2 sheets of 500 copy paper
1 pk 12 washable crayola markers
2 pkg mr clean magic erasers
1 pkg of expo dry erase markers black
So, on the high side, 36 pencils/week. With a class size of 20, that's a little over 1.5 pencils/week/student.
That's still about 50 pencils/student/year, and that's the HIGH side.
Sure, it's not much, until you have multiple kids. Also, it's not like you're spending $50 over 180... it's all coming at once. With multiple kids, it adds up, and it's all one lump sum.
So because they're packaged that way, parents should be happy to get them?
If I knew the students were using the dry erase markers, I could understand each needing six. If it's only the teacher? I can't believe she'd need 120 markers in a year (assuming a class size of 20).
Ah, THERE'S the problem.
So 20 pencils for each kid over the year? That makes sense to me.
Jansport backpacks are totally worth it. After years of buying new ones every year with cartoon characters I got smart & bought each kid a Jansport. Both are still going strong & have been well loved.
I was a sub for 9 years in elementary school, and being in the classroom really opened my eyes to the supply question. If you're in doubt, volunteer for a day. In any class, there are at least three boxes of Kleenex opened at any time -- one by the door, one on the teacher's desk, one by the art supplies. The music/art/health/gym teachers don't get supplies from the kids, so the classroom teachers share kleenex, pencils, ziplocs, crayons, binders, folders. Pencils -- have you ever seen a 2nd grader sharpen a pencil? Nice new long pencil becomes 2" long in a matter of seconds. Crayons -- color both sides of your spelling paper because you finished early and the teacher is working with the slower students, and there goes all the red and blacks. Dry erase -- you need multiple colors to indicate consonants, vowels, things in (), spelling and grammar and math -- not all is in black, and they dry out really quick. Hand sanitizer -- every kid gets a blast on their way to lunch and after recess -- at least two bottles a week. Glue sticks -- tops get lost, the glue is dried out by morning, need another one.
Those of you who say "I only send in what I think my kid will actually use" -- you're the ones that cause everyone else to have to send in extra -- you think it's your neighbor who couldn't be bothered, but if you think your kid will only use 12 pencils and that's what you send in, you're making someone else subsidize your kid's pencil habit. Or if you send in 2 glue sticks or 2 pencils at a time, do you really think your kid is telling you when they need another one, or remembering that they borrowed one from their tablemate three days in a row?
Our family budget has been stretched more years than not, but I'm not going to ask a teacher to pay for supplies that I couldn't be bothered to send in for my kid because I don't believe that they really use all that stuff.
So, on the high side, 36 pencils/week. With a class size of 20, that's a little over 1.5 pencils/week/student.
That's still about 50 pencils/student/year, and that's the HIGH side.
I teach 4th grade, and we ask for 48 pencils from each student. I can assure you that is not an excessive amount. I basically allow for one pencil per week with 12 leftovers for homework, lost pencils, broken pencils, etc. By the end of the year, we are using pencils from my stash.
Also, I wanted to point out that our classroom supplies are not communal. I expect my students to be responsible for their own supplies. I also have sets of supplies (that I have bought) for students who do not bring them in during the first week.
Sure, it's not much, until you have multiple kids. Also, it's not like you're spending $50 over 180... it's all coming at once. With multiple kids, it adds up, and it's all one lump sum.
I don't get this statement. The beginning of school is roughly the same time every year, right? Maybe you should put a little aside throughout the year to pay for supplies.
So because they're packaged that way, parents should be happy to get them?
If I knew the students were using the dry erase markers, I could understand each needing six. If it's only the teacher? I can't believe she'd need 120 markers in a year (assuming a class size of 20).
I ask for four dry erase markers per student, because they use them multiple times per day. When they run out, and they always do, the replacements come out of my pocket.
Ah, THERE'S the problem.
So 20 pencils for each kid over the year? That makes sense to me.
Coconut36 said:With the youngest entering school we got oldest an LL Bean one for this year..I hope it holds up as well as the Land's End one did.
LL Bean had a lifetime warranty, not sure if they still do? My brother who graduated college 10 years ago still has the ll bean book bag he got in 6th grade!
It's the Dis, it was only a matter of time until this thread became "a hill I want to die on".As for the bold..are you really getting in a twist over a few bucks for 36 pencils? From the sales I am seeing..the most expensive place it would cost you $3 tops for those. Maybe $7 total for the 72 (Walmart has a 72 count on sale). If that's a hill you want to die on I guess that is up to you. If they don't get used up this year keep them for next year..they don't expire, dry up or go bad.
I'm not protesting in front of the school, I'm not writing nasty notes to the teacher, I'm not calling the principal and complaining. But somehow, I'm making a "big deal" because I'm arguing on a message board. Ask your husband... what percentage of kids in the class don't bring in the supplies. When I say a class of 20, isn't it possible the class size is 25, but only 20 kids bring in the supplies? Oh wait, didn't you say your school system supplies everything, that you don't send out lists? So how would you know how many parents don't send in the list.Dry erase markers wear out and dry out fast...120 a year seems like alot but again..go back to the fact that NOT everyone is bringing them and of all the supplies asked for parents are least likely to get what they know is supplies for the teacher/class (Kleenex, hand sanitizer, dry erase markers..etc) so you are looking at a much much lower number..hence the reason the teacher asks up front.
Next time I think something is horrible, I'll make sure to check with you to make sure it's ok for me to post.I never understand why parents get in such a rage over school supplies...everything else about parenting is thought of as "if you can't afford kids, don't have them" (referencing the "when you have multiple kids it adds up" comment..everything else about our kids we should be prepared to be able to handle/pay, right?) but when it comes to their education it's often outrageous that they need X, Y Z items because you have "multiple kids" or because it "all adds up". How dare the schools ask for the children to be prepared for class?!?! Of course if it is horrible you likely don't need all 72 up front but when you can pay less than a $1 per pack for pencils now or twice that or more later in the year..what makes more financial sense?
And this thread was an opportunity for teachers to explain why they need so many items. I have no idea what they do with whatever they get. What's wrong with asking? But, as is normal with the Dis, instead of explaining "the other side", MY opinions get shot down simply because "I don't understand."Do you think the teacher is selling dry erase markers and #2 on the black market to make some profit or something? Of course not (although at what teachers get paid they probably wouldn't mind the profit!). What do you think they are doing with the "alleged" 120 dry erase markers? Do you think if they have tons and tons of stuff that is going unused they want to store all that crap and carry it over to the next year as well? Of course not..it's because the reality you have in your head of a certain number of items is unrealistic. It's highly unlikely in a class of 20 each student is bringing in dry erase markers or has 72 pencils or has their own pack of crayons and so on.