Neyite wrote: » Ours is only €40 and the school PTA run an excellent book club which means that from JI to sixth class the books will cost me €40 per year and handed to me every August in a pile, covered. I don't have to buy a single other thing than a school bag, not even a pencil. The uniform has generic alternatives too. So I'm happy to pay what we pay. I think we get great value for our money compared to some schools. In return, I offer to help out any fundraising event if I can.
Ger Roe wrote: » Parents partially funding or providing their time and services to schools hides bigger problems with the system and in the end leads to educational facilities inequality where those who can pay ... have, and those who can't ... have not.
meeeeh wrote: » That's true however I think many of us wouldn't want facilities to deteriorate to be at the same level as schools in poorer areas. If that means contribution for school extension so there are no prefab classes or that there is proper gym, building is adequately heated and so on, many of us would contribute. It might not be fair to poorer areas but who wants their kids in a school that just about meets minimum standards.
Ger Roe wrote: » It's a question of what type of society you want to have. Of course some of us can look at a bad system and pay our way out of it.... but people in government and their associated departments are being paid (by us) to manage that system. Why stop at the Dept of Ed?, should we help every other government department out too, so that they can continue to operate systems that clearly aren't fit for purpose?
Andy From Sligo wrote: » My children are all grown up now but i remember this 'voluntary contribution' their schools were looking for around about this time when they went back to school after their summer holidays. - do you agree with it?
bluewolf wrote: » Do they give a breakdown of what it's for? From what i hear it's threatening and bullying if you don't pay
Grayson wrote: » 50 grand of hobnobs though......
Snugglebunnies wrote: » I haven't ever paid it to my daughters school because I simply can't afford it. I'm a single mother scraping by on a minimum wage job. The costs of getting her back to school are huge without forking out another 150 euro. I feel so embarrassed that I haven't been able to pay it.
doolox wrote: » The upper class will always be able and willing to pay more for their children's education than lower class people can afford. The government effort at funding education is an attempt to equalise opportunity and give every citizen born in this country an equal chance of grabbing a good job and getting a good wage in their future lives. The present system only partially works. The upper class can still pay large amounts to private grinds schools, educational therapists etc and get their children through the complex maze of modern education. It all boils down to parental expertise and support. I was lucky that my wife is well connected with health and education professionals and could manage to get our two daughters through education despite difficulties with anxiety, bullying, problem teachers autism etc. In my day school was a nightmare with almost constant bullying, undiagnosed autism, difficulties with concentration and performing complex and demanding tasks and making progress so very necessary in modern education. Aspergers was not known or recognised in the 1970's and I was not diagnosed until I was 52 yrs of age in 2010........ Too late to do anything with my atrocious academic record or my mediocre work life. It is a safe bet that lesser able and lesser funded families do not get access to special needs, educational therapy or solutions to learning problems as easily or readily as their richer neighbours, like what happens in our health service. It is also a safe bet that one of the main causes of poverty, inequality and lack of opportunity to be self sufficient is underperformance by individuals in education. The government do not want to do more than a token effort at resolving this problem of underfunding because it will create more competition for scarce well-paid jobs, something the rich do not want to happen. Until people perceive education as a general good for all of society nothing will be done. The present system is a cram contest for scarce University places and a generally negative and hostile experience for a lot of people who lack the critical parental support and effective guidance and financial support needed to get through Irish education successfully.