I am a little upset by those posting that they throw out the mugs, ornaments, etc. Couldn't you give them away somewhere?
Sell them on Ebay or Craigslist and donate the money or use it for school supplies for kids who cannot afford to bring them in? There has got to be something better than throwing them away.
And about the homemade treats - schools have a lot of bake sales and holiday parties. The same parents who send in the homemade treats for Christmas are the ones who bake for other events. Why would they be thrown away?
If you are sick of eating treats, bring them to a church or food shelter. I am sure that they know of someone who would welcome the treats.
Don't know if this has been covered already, still reading through the 10+ pages.
These suggestions, at first, sound good but, what you are saying is the teacher, who already is overworked, underpaid, has to correct homework & tests at home, then has to
also put in time to take pictures, list, wrap up the gifts with her own mailing supplies and bring them to the post office?

That's like adding insult to injury.
As for food shelters & soup kitchens, perhaps people aren't aware of this, but many of them make the donators sign liability forms & waivers before accepting any open foods. They are very worried about lawsuits and with good reason.
A homeless person comes in, eats the food they hand out, gets sick. It is proven in the hospital that the food from the shelter made them sick, and suddenly, they can go from homeless to millionaires.
If the shelters didn't make the people/organizations donating sign liability forms, the shelter could be sued and shut down, unable to help the many who need it.
My cousin books waiters for one of the most prestigious, celebrity caterers in NYC. I used to work there. At the end of evenings, we'd have to throw out literally bags upon bags of good, fresh, edible food. I'm talking the size of those huge, black, lawn & leaf trash bags. The amount of wasted food was sickening.

But the caterers wouldn't take the chance, because they have no guarantee (after signing a liability form,) of how once the food left their hands, that it was delivered properly, stored, or refrigerated properly and that they'd be the ones sued.
I can't see a teacher, who didn't make the food herself, or know the freshness, cleanliness or how the food was prepared could donate & sign one of those forms, verifying the food is fresh & taking responsibility for it.
It's just not worth it. This is a great thread to inform parents what to buy or give instead.
