9/23/2010

So Now I'm Going To Pick on Parent Volunteers

So yesterday I went to my first "parent coffee" at the elementary school. It was so we could sign up to volunteer.

Now, I realize that my main experience with elementary school has been as a teacher in an urban district where kids sometimes confused thunder with gunfire, but OH MY GODDESS. I mean, I knew that in the suburbs parents actually sent in all the treats for the parties and did the setting up and stuff. I was prepared for that. And hell, even I had parents volunteer on field trips. So that's what I was expecting to do. Help with parties and field trips.

I am so freaking naive.

I also had the chance to sign up to stock the teacher's prize box, come and do crafts (where I bought the supplies) with the kids for each holiday, take photos of class events (where I would make enough copies of each photo for each kid in the photo), put together class memory books from the aforementioned photos, organize the teacher's take home story bags and several other things I can't remember.

This sign-up was separate from the PTO sign-up, where I could sign up to present art to the kids (my mom used to do that), read to the kids, organize the indoor recess games for the teachers, help with various school events, provide meals or rides for families going through illness and I can't remember what else.

I'm pretty sure that this is what happens when CEOs quit their jobs to stay at home with children.

What kills me is that there's a district not too far from here where kids rarely even get class parties. Where a lot of them don't even have photos of their families, let alone a precise record of kindergarten. Where the teachers have to organize everything themselves. Where there aren't even any field trips.

And I wonder why - with all this prodigious energy and skill - not one thing is being done for kids outside of our privileged zip code.

This is the real problem with public education in this country - shitty pay, bad preparation, immovable teachers' unions and ineffective administrators aside. No one cares about any kids but their own. And I'm not saying we all need to put in the hours at some less privileged school instead of getting to see our own kids enjoy their own Halloween party. But surely the fact that the class moms pull our names out of a hat for field trip chaperoning because so many of us want to go says that maybe some of us have some free time to spare?

Back when I was teaching, one of my colleague's classes was adopted by a high school class from the suburbs (the two teachers were friends). The high school kids basically stepped into the parent volunteer roles that aren't very easily filled by people who are single, working 2 jobs or otherwise hindered. And yeah, I was kinda jealous.

There's no reason that this couldn't be done a grander scale. If people actually cared. A friend of mine recently asked a question on Facebook;

How do you get people to care about the education of other people's children as much as they care about their own children's education???


I'd settle for half as much as their own children's education, at least for the people around here. But I sure as hell don't know.

16 comments:

Cathy Jurick said...

Jen- very well said and thank you for writing it. It's a sobering reminder of what many of us do. We also live in an affluent district with very good schools. Some of the parent involvement borders on neurotic. I always pictured myself as getting involved in the PTO, but when I saw the obsessive, overbearing nature of many of the parents, I was completely turned off.

We do have a "Food-2-Go" program I'm involved with, which gathers and sends food home to kids that aren't getting fed on the weekends. This provides evidence that there are kids, even in affluent districts, being overlooked. As you said, all it takes is looking outside your own child's needs. Think of the lesson you are teaching them by doing so.

I am wondering one thing, though- was "OH MY GODDESS" a typo or on purpose? :)

silken said...

wow. I am guilty. not of the going all out on sponsoring, etc. but guilty of not looking past my own kids most of the time. I really like the idea of the high schools adopting an elementary school. I know some of the high schools around here have teacher training tracks and that could be perfect for those students. plus I know there are other teens who would be interested in helping out younger kids like that.

Tammy said...

What else bothers me about "education" is how much unrelated factors like a brand new state-of-the-art school or winning football team make people feel like they have a successful school. Forget that a shocking percentage are dropping out, can't read, etc. You said it well--and I don't know how long it will take until people really understand the effects not educating "the other kids" have on them. Hopefully not too long!

Jaime said...

I live in a suburb of Buffalo and it's the same thing. Buffalo school kids get the crap while our kids here in Williamsville get the cream of the crop. I don't know what to do to try to even things out but I know most people don't even care.

Jerseygirl89 said...

Jaime - I don't even think they understand the differences.

Jerseygirl89 said...

Tammy - I don't have high hopes. So many people were poorly educated themselves.

Jerseygirl89 said...

Silken - It's so easy to do - I would be the same way if I hadn't taught somewhere so different. No one puts this kind of stuff on the news.

Jerseygirl89 said...

Cathy - I like the sound of that program. And "Goddess" was on purpose. :)

Jerseygirl89 said...

Soccermom - Well, when I taught my colleagues and I always paid for party stuff, prizes and supplies for the kids who didn't bring any. It's all the other stuff that amazes me.

mafe insurance said...

I'm glad you said that!!!

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Elmo FAIL?

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The greatest thing I read all week!!

Jean

habitational insurance applica said...

Elmo FAIL?

mafe insurance said...

I'm glad you said that!!!

Jerseygirl89 said...

Soccermom - Well, when I taught my colleagues and I always paid for party stuff, prizes and supplies for the kids who didn't bring any. It's all the other stuff that amazes me.

Cathy Jurick said...

Jen- very well said and thank you for writing it. It's a sobering reminder of what many of us do. We also live in an affluent district with very good schools. Some of the parent involvement borders on neurotic. I always pictured myself as getting involved in the PTO, but when I saw the obsessive, overbearing nature of many of the parents, I was completely turned off.

We do have a "Food-2-Go" program I'm involved with, which gathers and sends food home to kids that aren't getting fed on the weekends. This provides evidence that there are kids, even in affluent districts, being overlooked. As you said, all it takes is looking outside your own child's needs. Think of the lesson you are teaching them by doing so.

I am wondering one thing, though- was "OH MY GODDESS" a typo or on purpose? :)