JerseyJanice
A Disboards original...
- Joined
- Aug 20, 1999
- Messages
- 10,764
This is an interesting thread to me as we were just discussing gift giving policies at work. I haven't read the entire thread (famous last words on the Dis
), so I will just address the OP.
I bolded one sentence above because its wording is confusing to me. I'm taking it that one or both of your DDs and their friend have the same teacher. I can't think of any other way to interpret your statement, but I'm also confused by why you mentioned that the teacher has a 6 year old DD. I don't see any relevance in that fact to the topic at hand, but maybe I'm missing something?
Is your DD's school a public or private school? If it's a public school, you can google your state's department of education and search on gift giving to see if this is a violation of administrative code. Fyi, if something isn't specifically written into admin code, then it's not a violation. In this particular case (and assuming that what these children are saying is true), depending on how your state's code is written, it may not be an ethics violation if the ticket giver didn't actually pay any money for the tickets.
If this is a private school, they may or not have policies on gift giving. If they do, you can probably find it in their parent handbook.
However, if you really like the teacher a lot and think she's doing right by your daughter, why worry about whether it seems fair? A lot of things in this world are unfair, but the only fairness you need to be concerned about is the way your daughter is being taught.

My daughters have a friend whose father works for a pro sports team. She is very bright. She seems to be a top student, I would guess. Well, her teacher is the same teacher as one of my daughter's teachers. And the teacher has a 6 year old daughter.
I bolded one sentence above because its wording is confusing to me. I'm taking it that one or both of your DDs and their friend have the same teacher. I can't think of any other way to interpret your statement, but I'm also confused by why you mentioned that the teacher has a 6 year old DD. I don't see any relevance in that fact to the topic at hand, but maybe I'm missing something?

Personally, I like this teacher a lot, and she really likes my daughter, but this doesn't seem like it is a practice that should be accepted, do you? That's close to $800 worth of tickets just since September.
I'm not gonna rat the teacher out or anything. Nor do I think it his hurting my daughter in anyway, but IMO, it just doesn't seem fair. I would have thought that the school would have a very specific policy against this.
Is your DD's school a public or private school? If it's a public school, you can google your state's department of education and search on gift giving to see if this is a violation of administrative code. Fyi, if something isn't specifically written into admin code, then it's not a violation. In this particular case (and assuming that what these children are saying is true), depending on how your state's code is written, it may not be an ethics violation if the ticket giver didn't actually pay any money for the tickets.
If this is a private school, they may or not have policies on gift giving. If they do, you can probably find it in their parent handbook.
However, if you really like the teacher a lot and think she's doing right by your daughter, why worry about whether it seems fair? A lot of things in this world are unfair, but the only fairness you need to be concerned about is the way your daughter is being taught.