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Teacher involvement frustration!

11 years 5 months ago #162150 by Rose H
Hi Always Busy,

Sounds like you got off to a good start and great to hear that you'll be working to bridge the gap! Good to hear from you!


Rose C.
Community Manager
11 years 5 months ago #162145 by AlwaysBusy
Replied by AlwaysBusy on topic Re:Teacher involvement frustration!
This is our first year as a PTO, and we had NO MONEY...But we went out there and asked for donations and pulled off a movie night without teachers help. Actually the only teacher that showed up was our liason. We profitted a great deal off of this movie night, but only because we recieved donations. We are now trying to bridge the teacher/staff gap.
11 years 5 months ago #162101 by gwraigamam
We are dealing with this at our school as well. None of the teachers ever come to the meetings and sometimes no one from the principal's office comes either. We have very low parental involvement as well. I came here looking for ideas to boost involvement for parents and teachers. It is somewhat comforting that our school isn't the only one dealing with these issues.
11 years 6 months ago #161994 by PTOSunshine
Hi! I really like Rose's idea of a Lego night, and may put that on our list of possible future events...

Frustrated, I have a couple of suggestions about your situation that may not help you now but could help you later. First, your group ought to work out a schedule and budget at the beginning of the year and stick pretty closely to it. Then, when people pop in with special requests, you can either accommodate them if you feel it's possible, or say it won't be possible this year, but your group will consider it for next.

We have our year's schedule lined up and voted on in the first meeting of the school year. The upside is what I said above, we have a plan, we stick to it, and we don't get surprised beyond our capacity. I will say that we don't automatically say no -- we look and see if there's any way we can make it work and if not, oh well. We don't sweat it. The downside is that you have to work carefully not to give the wrong impression to new parents, that you aren't open to new ideas. I don't think we're perfect at that, but we've gotten better, with new parents understanding that great big giant ideas, like new events, may not happen this year, but ideas to improve the existing events are definitely worth a try, and we do try them out if we can.

The teachers may not have a lot of extra time to spare. Some teachers are able and want to give a lot of their free time to the school, but others may be involved in church, hobbies, their own kids, whatever. I think you should try not to feel bitter because teachers don't automatically step up. Keep asking for help, and be thrilled when you get it!
11 years 6 months ago #161993 by Frustrated
Replied by Frustrated on topic Re:Teacher involvement frustration!
Thanks! Now that I have recovered (yeah, dramatic I know) I think one of the main problems is letting people make random suggestions. This is our 3rd year, and the first where people started showing up to meetings. I need to figure out how to get ideas without having a whole discussion. I'm thinking some sort of form that allows suggestions to be made and includes budget estimates and material/volunteer needs. Committees haven't worked for us in the past, but things are changing now that parents at least are more interested in what we're trying to do.
11 years 6 months ago #161987 by Rose H
Hi Frustrated,

I can see why the process is getting to you. Sometimes, there can be a lot of talking before decisions are made. It sounds like a couple things happened: The principal tossed out the idea for an author visit, perhaps not understanding that isn't necessarily a family event and the teacher may have offered an idea without realizing the cost. These are the things we end up juggling.. competing needs and ideas.

I'd say trust your instincts on the family event. It really is a great idea to do one in the fall to help bring everyone together and really foster that sense of community.

You could do something that doesn't cost much, like a spaghetti supper, or an ice cream social. If you are really strapped for cash, you can ask for donations, but try to present it to families as a family get together, not a fundraiser. We also heard about a family night that was a "Lego Night'.'' Virtually no cost. Families came with legos and got together with other families to build Lego creations.

Some other great ideas are in this story, 20 Fun Family Events, www.ptotoday.com/pto-today-articles/arti...20-fun-family-events


Good luck!
Rose C.
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