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| #Post#: 19056-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Back to School: The 70s vs. Today | |
| By: vintagegal Date: November 15, 2018, 7:04 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I also used to go home for lunch, the first few grades. And I | |
| would bring a dime to school for recess milk for the week, and I | |
| think 50 cents for buying government bonds. I wonder when that | |
| stopped being a thing. | |
| #Post#: 19063-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Back to School: The 70s vs. Today | |
| By: RubyCat Date: November 15, 2018, 8:53 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I think I started first grade in 1971. I walked to the closest | |
| public school, usually with another group of children but no | |
| adults, 0.4 miles in almost any kind of weather. Nobody thought | |
| anything about it, it's just how it was. All I needed to bring | |
| was milk money and my lunch. I had the cutest plaid lunch box! | |
| Everything else was supplied. | |
| In third grade I changed over to a parochial school and it was | |
| pretty much the same. We could bring our own pens and pencils, | |
| crayons and markers, but it was not required. | |
| Fast forward to the late 1980's when my daughters attended the | |
| same parochial school and I was given a lengthy list: crayons, | |
| kleenex, purell(!) and so forth. When we moved and they went to | |
| public school, the list grew: certain types of notebooks, | |
| certain types of pens, pencils, markers, and so forth. One year | |
| even required an expensive calculator. Some teachers were | |
| really great about giving out a list at the end of the summer so | |
| the parents could take advantage of sales. Others, for whatever | |
| reason, did not give out the list until the first day of school. | |
| I still remember walking the aisle of Staples, desperately | |
| looking for certain items. The shelves were picked over and the | |
| lines at the register were long. I don't miss that at all. | |
| #Post#: 19077-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Back to School: The 70s vs. Today | |
| By: camlan Date: November 15, 2018, 3:11 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Thitpualso link=topic=647.msg13250#msg13250 | |
| date=1536332189] | |
| I started school in 1952 so I�m quite antediluvian. | |
| Back then, the school provided everything we needed for the | |
| first few years. When learning to write we used odd paper with | |
| very wide rules. The paper also had dotted lines between the | |
| solid lines. This was to indicate the proper height of lower | |
| case letters. We also used very fat pencils that I have never | |
| seen in stores. By 4th grade we were allowed to use ball-point | |
| pens. | |
| I attended a public school but girls were not allowed to wear | |
| trousers. The end of summer shopping trip for a school wardrobe | |
| included a pair of stout shoes (usually Buster Brown) and dark | |
| cotton dresses. Pleated or circle skirts with white blouses and | |
| cardigans or twin sets were also worn. We had book bags instead | |
| of back packs. | |
| Every week we brought 25 cents to school for milk that was | |
| served at 11 AM but I never ate lunch at school. My friends and | |
| I went home for lunch. It would be unheard of now but then, it | |
| was perfectly fine for 1st graders to ride their bikes the mile | |
| and a half from school to home for lunch and back. Kindergarten | |
| was only half a day so lunch didn�t enter into the equation. In | |
| 7th and 8th grade we were allowed to go to the diner across the | |
| street for lunch. How grown-up it felt to sit at the counter | |
| and order a bowl of soup! | |
| When I see the lists of things kids need for school these days, | |
| i�m appalled. No wonder more parents are turning to home or | |
| alternative schooling. | |
| [/quote] | |
| I started Kindergarten in 1964 and it was very similar. For | |
| Kindergarten, we were told the first day that we needed to bring | |
| in a towel, which we put on the floor for our "rest" time every | |
| day, and a "smock" for art class--usually an worn-out men's | |
| shirt that the teachers would put on us backwards and button it | |
| up the back. This was to protect our clothes from paint and | |
| glue. We also got the fat round pencils about 5 or 6 times a | |
| year--ours were a dark green--and had the really wide lined | |
| paper. I walked the half mile to school every day from | |
| Kindergarten on. | |
| Somewhere around 2nd grade I got a book bag. And we started | |
| having to bring in glue or paste and crayons. I had the 64 | |
| crayon box with the sharpener. We needed to buy notebooks from | |
| about 5th grade on, but we could choose what we wanted--the main | |
| thing was to have paper to write on. | |
| I went to a mix of public, Catholic and Department of Defense | |
| schools depending on where we were living. Never saw lists such | |
| as they have today. | |
| Almost never ate the hot lunch. Lunch was a sandwich and an | |
| apple or orange, packed by Mom. Sometimes she'd slip in a home | |
| made brownie, which I'd immediately trade for a Hostess cupcake | |
| or TastyKake--we never, ever had those at home. I | |
| brown-paper-bagged it until 2nd grade, when I got a red plaid | |
| metal lunch box for my birthday. (And boy, did I want that lunch | |
| box! Everyone else had a lunch box and I felt so out of place | |
| with my crumpled paper bag that I had to bring home every day so | |
| that it could be reused for a week at least.) Teachers collected | |
| milk money weekly, every Monday morning. | |
| #Post#: 19145-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Back to School: The 70s vs. Today | |
| By: Rose Red Date: November 16, 2018, 1:55 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=RubyCat link=topic=647.msg19063#msg19063 | |
| date=1542293592] | |
| I think I started first grade in 1971. I walked to the closest | |
| public school, usually with another group of children but no | |
| adults, 0.4 miles in almost any kind of weather. Nobody thought | |
| anything about it, it's just how it was. All I needed to bring | |
| was milk money and my lunch. I had the cutest plaid lunch box! | |
| Everything else was supplied. | |
| In third grade I changed over to a parochial school and it was | |
| pretty much the same. We could bring our own pens and pencils, | |
| crayons and markers, but it was not required. | |
| Fast forward to the late 1980's when my daughters attended the | |
| same parochial school and I was given a lengthy list: crayons, | |
| kleenex, purell(!) and so forth. When we moved and they went to | |
| public school, the list grew: certain types of notebooks, | |
| certain types of pens, pencils, markers, and so forth. One year | |
| even required an expensive calculator. Some teachers were | |
| really great about giving out a list at the end of the summer so | |
| the parents could take advantage of sales. Others, for whatever | |
| reason, did not give out the list until the first day of school. | |
| I still remember walking the aisle of Staples, desperately | |
| looking for certain items. The shelves were picked over and the | |
| lines at the register were long. I don't miss that at all. | |
| [/quote] | |
| Did you mean the 90's? I don't think they had Purell in the | |
| 80's. | |
| Anyway it didn't seem my school was too concerned about health | |
| and safety back in the 80's. Good times. | |
| #Post#: 19146-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Back to School: The 70s vs. Today | |
| By: RubyCat Date: November 16, 2018, 2:00 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| You're right. It would have been the 1990 and now that I think | |
| about it, the Purell would have been for the youngest daughter's | |
| class which would have been late 1990's. | |
| #Post#: 59095-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Back to School: The 70s vs. Today | |
| By: TootsNYC Date: October 16, 2020, 4:18 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=vintagegal link=topic=647.msg13049#msg13049 | |
| date=1536151676] | |
| Add me to the list of "always wished for the 64 pack of | |
| Crayola"!!Never got them. When I look at what the grandkids have | |
| now... | |
| [/quote] | |
| I bought them for myself as a grownup. But I never used them, | |
| actually. | |
| #Post#: 59167-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Back to School: The 70s vs. Today | |
| By: BeagleMommy Date: October 19, 2020, 8:31 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I started Kindergarten in 1970. For kindergarten all we were | |
| required to bring was a mat/blanket for nap time and a smock for | |
| painting. | |
| From kindergarten through 8th grade the school provided all | |
| pencils (we had the fat green ones through third grade; then | |
| switched to No. 2), paper, crayons, paints, glue, etc. Third | |
| through sixth grade it was recommended we bring a pencil box and | |
| what was referred to as a book bag. Kind of a satchel with a | |
| shoulder strap. | |
| My mom always made my lunch but we had milk around 11 am that | |
| cost .15. I usually got a new lunch box each year. Don't | |
| remember most of them but I did have a Miss America lunch box | |
| and a pink and white plaid one that I thought was so grown up. | |
| My brother had Evel Knievel. Lunch was always some kind of | |
| sandwich, fruit, a cookie (sugar-free in my case) and a thermos | |
| of Kool-Aid (sugar-free in my case). | |
| In high school we had to provide our own No. 2 pencils, blue or | |
| black pens (red was for teachers only), and college ruled | |
| notebooks. However, we had a "School Store" where you could buy | |
| anything you might have forgotten at home and there was a pen | |
| machine in front of the main office where you could buy a pen | |
| for 10 cents. | |
| When my youngest niece started kindergarten in the 90s the | |
| teacher begged parents not to send boxes of more than 8 crayons | |
| because the kids would drop them and then cry while they were | |
| trying to put them all back in the box. | |
| #Post#: 59173-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Back to School: The 70s vs. Today | |
| By: Gardensgrey Date: October 19, 2020, 9:39 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Ritual of a bygone era: I started kindergarten in 1960. My | |
| parents had 5 kids. For weeks before school started, they would | |
| double down on stockpiling brown paper grocery bags. The first | |
| evening after textbooks were distributed on the first day, we�d | |
| clear the dinner table & the book cover production line would | |
| start. My parents wielded the scissors, cutting rectangles out | |
| of all those grocery bags. The rest of us would fold those | |
| rectangles around the books, making sure to make deep pockets | |
| for them to slide in. Most of the time, these brown paper bag | |
| book covers lasted all year. Back then, there wasn�t such a | |
| thing as a store-bought book cover, and later on, only a few had | |
| these. | |
| #Post#: 59175-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Back to School: The 70s vs. Today | |
| By: Wanaca Date: October 19, 2020, 9:58 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I remember the book covers. I stared school in 1970. First I | |
| had the brown paper bags. Then I wanted the new fancy covers. | |
| I hated the store-bought covers! They were waxy and I couldn't | |
| draw on them. Part of the fun of the brown paper was that I | |
| could draw and decorate my books any way I wanted. I went back | |
| to the paper for the rest of my school years. And yes, they | |
| lasted me all year too. It was cool at the end of the year to | |
| see all of my doodles and drawings---and the various hearts with | |
| initials that were crossed out. | |
| #Post#: 59189-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Back to School: The 70s vs. Today | |
| By: jpcher Date: October 19, 2020, 2:14 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Oh, my, Gardensgrey! That brings back such memories! ;D | |
| Doodling on the covers was a must! ;D | |
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