The school supply vent threads, that is. I always enjoy reading them.
Looks like you've created one of your own!!

The school supply vent threads, that is. I always enjoy reading them.

This is directly related to the snowflake mentality-many schools won't allow teachers to use red pens because it hurts kids' feelings by having red marks on their papers. TOTALLY serious.
We are allowed to get our own rugs as long as they have a fireproof label on them. The sad thing is, if I asked my principal to order me one, we would have to go through one of the approved vendors and it would likely cost much, much more than what I paid, which is why it would probably be denied if I asked for it. For some things, it's easier to buy it myself.
Yep, here we can use green or purple, but no red. Eventually though, those colors will also be associated with wrong answers.
I used to have one english teacher who would rip my papers to shreds in bright green ink. Green ink to this day still sends shivers down my spine!

Re: the ink debate. I guess this means that teachers can no longer tell students that they "bled all over" a paper in grading it.
I first encountered this in 8th grade, and I tended to run into it again any time that I had a really good teacher who really cared about having my work improve.
What that 8th grade teacher told my mother was that lots of red ink is a good sign, because it means that the teacher REALLY read the work and concentrated on what was wrong with it, or what was right with it, and cared enough to write extensive comments on the work. He took pride in "bleeding all over" papers that his students wrote.

You are right, it is not. I've got family in both places and we talk about these things in actual dollars and pence terms, and we find that for the most part, at the same level of SES, people in the UK keep just about the same or a slightly larger percentage of their paychecks as Americans do, once you factor in the pre-tax private health care premiums we pay. (I won't go into any more detail than that, at the risk of having this stray into the political.)
It happens all the time in parts of my underfunded urban district. The teachers are underpaid as it is, and a lot of them just cannot swing the cost even if they want to. What happens is that the kids just do without. Even textbooks are an issue: the children are not allowed to take them home for homework, and they sometimes have to share one book between 3-4 kids whilst in the classroom. Quite a few teachers resort to selling emergency supplies to HS kids; $.5 for a pencil, $.1 for a sheet of paper, and the like.
There are at least 20 charity school supply drives being held in my community this month. One big one held last week gave away $130,000 worth of supplies and clothing items (mostly shoes) to 1000 carefully selected children.

The fee that gets me is the "textbook rental fee" that I think it's the schools in Indiana charge.![]()
I have to pay a $75 "book fee" for my DD and she doesn't use any books as well as a $65 registration fee. (she is severely disabled and goes to a day school) They tried to charge me the driver's ed fee as well as fee for PE lock and PE uniform but I got them to take those off after a lengthy phone conversation. I'm tempted to ask them for the books when I go to the district school next week for registration.
Then we hit the school supply shopping - 163.00 later his is done and there was nothing really odd on the list. Just lots of stuff.

$163?! That's over $10 a MONTH on school supplies for ONE child!![]()
That poster's son is in high school. High schoolers often need to purchase a certain kind of calculator which costs $100 or so for the math classes they will be taking. So that could be the bulk of the cost.

$100 for a CALCULATOR? For high school MATH?![]()
$163?! That's over $10 a MONTH on school supplies for ONE child!![]()
DS is going into 9th grade. $100 for a CALCULATOR? For high school MATH?![]()
$100 for a CALCULATOR? For high school MATH?![]()

My oldest DD skipped a year of math and in 8th grade is in the subject my son was as a sophmore. I sure hope I don't need a calculator this year or that in high school it isn't a different one every year. Those things are so overpriced it galls me just as printer ink does. Hell for what the ink costs you can pretty much buy a new printer!!
I do have to ask the kids to find all the flash drives though, we really use those here.
.DS18 has been using his since 9th grade and it is the same one he needs for college. All 3 of our kids have them.