Dept of Education’s Rules About Teacher Gifts

Did you know that the NYC Department of Education prohibits gifts from individuals of more than a modest nature to teachers in public schools?

 

While class gifts are permitted — although only modest amount should be asked from each family. — all names of families and children must be on the card whether or not that family contributed.


According to a note from the administration of PS 321, It is very important that you follow this regulation or else you put teachers in danger of violating conflict of interest regulations.


Below is the Chancellor’s Regulation C-110 with more information about gifts for teachers:

      

E. Gifts, Fundraising, and Celebrations for
  New or Newly-Promoted Staff Member

1. Gifts and Fundraising       
      

No student, parent, guardian, school class, official or employee is required or expected to contribute toward any gift or testimonial to an official or employee of
  the Department of Education. No class, student, parent, official or employee shall be expected or required to
  participate in any fundraising activity.

      

a. Gifts from individual students, parents
  and/or guardians

      

Individual students, parents and/or guardians
  may wish to make gifts to officials and employees at the end of the year and at similar occasions, such as holidays,
  weddings, and the birth of an official’s or employee’s child. However, discretion must be used to ensure that
  officials and employees do not accept gifts of value from individual children, parents or guardians. Only those gifts
  that are principally sentimental in nature and of small financial value may be accepted.

      

b. Gifts from School Classes

      

In addition to individual gifts, sometimes an
  entire school class may wish to make a gift to officials and employees at the end of the year and at similar occasions,
  such as holidays, weddings and the birth of an official’s or employee’s child. Officials and employees may
  accept gifts from whole classes of students, their parents and/or guardians, provided that each student, parent or
  guardian in the class has the opportunity to sign the card or note that comes with the gift, whether or not the
  student, parent or guardian contributed to the cost of the gift.