Back in grade 10, I remember my business teacher telling me that he secretly gave away most of the gifts he received at the end of the year.
We were packing up the class after school, it was term four, and he had received another box of chocolates and bottle of wine from a student.
He gratefully said thank you, but the gift was problematic for two reasons:
1) Mr A. didn’t drink
2) He had lost about 50 kilograms that year and the chocolate wasn’t helping
Was the student to know about this? Maybe the weight loss, but they can’t be blamed for adding to his cellar of thanks-for-a-great-year wine.
The truth was, Mr A. stacked up the chocolates, mugs, and bottles of wine every single year. Often, the same students giving him a new mug 12 months later.
So, on behalf of every Mr A. out there who is a little bit done with smiling politely at another ‘WORLD’S GREATEST TEACHER’ cup, here is a public service announcement.
Wants…
In a 2016/17 survey conducted by GroupTogether, they asked teachers for the truth on the gifts they receive.
In all honestly, teachers really don’t expect anything.
Top Comments
Ha, a gift voucher. Good luck to the poor parent that has to organise that.
If teachers don't like the gift (which is often something that their student has picked out specially for them), just do what the rest of us do with unwanted gifts: pretend to love it and then either toss it or re-gift it.
Public Education in NSW requires teachers to declare any gift over $49.95. I will be honest, my most treasured gifts have been letters or cards, t-shirts and second hand missy higgins CD which all have a special place in my home.