Finny came home a few days ago with a packet...it contained a summer workbook (beautiful...all in color, etc) with a matching reader rabbit CD-ROM....these were labeled as a summer enrichment program. I thought this was a really wonderful thing for the school to do and we loaded the CD-ROM into the computer......I went to the airport to pick up my mom and Andrew came home with one....Thomas loaded it into the computer, etc....and the kids were sooooo excited...THEN, I noticed in Andrew's packet that there was a note that was missing from Finnys...it stated that we could 1. purchase each set at almost $28 per set or return it after we took the weekend to look at it...
Call me a wiener, but that really bothers me that people would send these things home with children as if they were some sort of a gift...let the children see the CD-Rom and really cool looking workbook, touch them, etc...and then put a parent in a position to say no. They could simply send a letter home stating that they had this to offer the parents if they wanted it. The problem was that Finny's recital and birthday were coming up and to purchase these two (I couldn't purchase only one) it would have cost me around $60! We simply didn't have the money....it was kind of either tickets for the ballet recital OR these workbooks...and I was really bothered by this....The kids were disappointed, but accepted that I was going to have to send it back....they really had believed that the school gave them a present.....
I took it back to each teacher and simply stated that I really regreted that they had sent this home as we weren't currently in a position to purchase it and that the school was marketing to children.....One teacher was in total agreement with me, but the other teacher went off half-cocked about the fact that her children didn't have a problem with sending it back, so why did mine?
How would you have responded to this whole situation?
Kris
"I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I intended to be."
Douglas Adams
Call me a wiener, but that really bothers me that people would send these things home with children as if they were some sort of a gift...let the children see the CD-Rom and really cool looking workbook, touch them, etc...and then put a parent in a position to say no. They could simply send a letter home stating that they had this to offer the parents if they wanted it. The problem was that Finny's recital and birthday were coming up and to purchase these two (I couldn't purchase only one) it would have cost me around $60! We simply didn't have the money....it was kind of either tickets for the ballet recital OR these workbooks...and I was really bothered by this....The kids were disappointed, but accepted that I was going to have to send it back....they really had believed that the school gave them a present.....
I took it back to each teacher and simply stated that I really regreted that they had sent this home as we weren't currently in a position to purchase it and that the school was marketing to children.....One teacher was in total agreement with me, but the other teacher went off half-cocked about the fact that her children didn't have a problem with sending it back, so why did mine?
How would you have responded to this whole situation?
Kris
"I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I intended to be."
Douglas Adams
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