We can all agree, I think, that we are all busy and we all have lives. We can all agree, I think, that teaching and volunteering are both noble areas of work.
The thing I wanted to say was that teachers are not always the ones who know what is best for 'the children' as a whole. They know what their class needs, maybe even what their grade needs. I don't believe they have their finger on the pulse of the school like the principal or a good PTO leader. For example, our 2nd grade teachers needed new individual chalk boards for their students. The 6th grade needed a new set of Moby Dick to share between classes. Do you think that either knew what the other needed? No. If they had both attended a PTO meeting, they might have. Fact is, it is up to teachers to make sure their requests are considered, and the best way to do that is at a PTO meeting. It isn't like the meeting is once a week. Once a month is not a lot to ask, considering how much they stand to gain. The 2nd grade got their chalkboards because someone from the 2nd grade was at every meeting. The 6th grade, who needed those books more than the 2nd graders needed those individual chalkboards, didn't get them because no one came to champion their cause. How the hell were we supposed to know how important those books were? We knew both grades wanted and needed those things, but look who got them and why. It may not be fair, but it is a fact of life.
Raptordad, it is obvious that you are a teacher because you are talking to adults as though they were naughty children in your class. I have noticed this in several of your posts. Stop it. Stop it now...lol...
Under #4 of your previous post in this forum:
<blockquote>quote:</font><hr> 4. Want to know why some teachers don't come to PTO meetings?
-time of the meetings
-they have no input, voice or vote at a meeting
-negative comments flung at them regularly "To include the "T" in PTO at our school is a joke"
-horrible PTO experience at a different school
-there is a teacher rep coming so some feel that there is no need for them to come
-not enough minutes in a day with the other things going on in their family (see #2)
-second job
<hr></blockquote>
I just want to add this: 1. I notice that when teachers want something, they can make the day and time of the meeting. 2. Our teachers have a voice and do get to vote. I suspect the same is true in your PTO, because you are a teacher who also holds the office of PTO prez. 3. I've over heard teachers dissing the PTO too. 4. They are old and wise enough to know each school and each PTO group is different, I mean afterall, isn't that what they tell their students? 5. Teachers Reps are there to get info to pass along, not make requests and 'fight' (for lack of the correct word) for what every teacher personally needs. 6. See posts from Jepto and IMovePeople. We have families and lives too. 7. 2nd jobs are not unique only to teachers.
For parents and teachers who can attend meetings, they get something out of it. For parents and teachers who participate in PTO activities, they get something out of it. Parents decide who gets the dough. For teachers who want the dough from PTO's, they need to attend regularly. The fact is that PTO's are more likely to give money to the faces they see and know from meetings than they are to give it to a faceless teacher request. If they can't, don't or won't attend, they really don't have the right to complain about how funds get spent. Kind of like voting in an election. If you didn't vote, don't complain about the administration.