
09-11-2004, 02:24 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Michigan
Posts: 5,810
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Quote:
Originally posted by aephi alum
I found a listing online for what elementary-school children in my district's public schools are required to have. It varies slightly by grade, but the basics are safety scissors, an eraser, a clipboard, markers, a pen, crayons, pencils, composition books, glue, a 3-ring binder, tissues, math flash cards, and a box to keep everything in. From the itemized list, it doesn't appear that any items would go into a community chest (they only call for 1 pair of scissors, 1 eraser, etc).
The PTO sells all the required supplies as a kit for around $25 (it varies slightly from grade to grade). Apparently they order in bulk then pass the savings along to parents. Parents get a break and kids have exactly what they need.
The mandatory donation idea rubs me the wrong way, though. The wish list is a good idea - yes, you'll get cheapskates who won't donate if it isn't required, but you'll also get some generous parents, and the teacher will probably get a wider variety of stuff needed for the classroom (white-board markers, card stock, things to decorate bulletin boards with, etc. rather than 30 boxes of pencils).
I still don't get the soap thing. When I was in elem. school, all bathrooms had liquid soap dispensers that were kept stocked (most of the time, anyway!) Have our school budgets gotten so slim that we're cutting soap??
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Your first paragraph I agree with.
And it's nto a hit at teachers. I guess what I don't understand is that all this stuff was provided by teh school when I was in elementary. Maybe I just went to a really good school, but we were never asked to buy scissors and all that. And dictionaries were already in the classroom.
And in kindergarten when our teacher accidentally left our crayons on the heater and they all melted, the school provided more.
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