The Scoop on School Supplies

August 14, 2007
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The lists arrived via email the other day–what my children needed to buy to go back to school next month. There was the usual suspects on the list–spiral notebooks, multi-subject binders, pencils–which I could probably find in my sleep at my local office supply store. This year, though, there were some new and different requirements that made my budget-minded self shudder.

The first item was some fancy-schmancy calculator that my 7th grader would need in advanced algebra. I was too afraid to price it on the Internet ahead of time, for fear that its sticker will have three digits on it. The other item was something my 5th grader needed–color-coded spiral notebooks to correspond with subjects. The blue, red and green ones were no problem to find but a yellow-covered single-subject spiral notebook seems to be quite elusive in my hometown supply store, probably because all of the other parents of 5th graders have already been out to do their back-to-school shopping.

I searched up and down the aisles of the store looking for a yellow spiral notebook, finally stumbling across an employee who was crouched down, restocking erasers. When I asked her about the yellow notebooks, she looked down at the ground and shook her head.

“Follow me,” she said.

I wasn’t sure why asking about a yellow notebook was bumming her out. Then she stopped at a shopping cart piled high with bundles of shrink-wrapped spiral notebooks. The first notebook in the bunch was yellow.

“These are the only yellow notebooks we have,” she told me, laying a hand on the pile. “You have to buy the six-pack.”

This wasn’t all bad news–three of the other notebooks were red, green and blue, the colors we needed. But that meant we would have two notebooks left over, which hopefully my 7th grader would be able to use in one of her classes. (Her supply list is 5X as long as my 5th grader’s list and since she was at a friend’s house today, we’ll shop for her another day. Nonetheless, I’m hoping that two, single-subject spiral notebooks are on her list somewhere.)

About the time I was returning the other red, green and blue notebooks that’d we’d originally placed in our cart but no longer needed, I ran into a mom I know, who was also shopping with her 5th grader. We exchanged our hellos and then I began complaining about the fact that I neeeded to buy 6 notebooks in a bundle when all I really needed was 4 of them.

“I know what you mean,” she said, “That’s one of the reasons we started our own school supply box at home.”

“What do you mean your own school supply box,” I asked. “Do school supplies somehow magically appear in your box before each Labor Day?”

She laughed,” No. I mean, every June at the end of the school year, we take any leftover school supplies that are still in good condition and add them to our school supply box. We also add any extras from before-school shopping, like those extra notebooks you’re going to have, to the box. This way, when it comes time to shop, like we are today, I make sure I check our box first so I don’t end up buying anything we arleady own.

She also told me how she washes those stretchy-fabric book covers that are all the rage these days and then dries them on the line. That way she doesn’t have to buy new ones each year. And she condenses all of the unsharpened pencils and never-used highlighters into separate zipper-top bags.

Brilliant! Just brilliant. This is an excellent way to recycle and reuse school supplies and reduce spending at the same time.

Then it dawned on me: last year my now-7th grader came home from 6th grade with a never-opened pack of loose-leaf paper and two blank spiral notebooks–all of which were on her necessary school supply list but never got used. (Hey, when was the last time the schools actually updated their lists? You have to wonder.) Those supplies were still sitting on her bedroom floor, where she’d dumped her back-pack on the last day of school. (Note to self: get 7th grader to clean her room before the first day of school.) As soon as I got home, I was going to scoop them up and put them in a new “school supplies” box for our house.

My 5th grader just informed me that she, too, has a pile somewhere on her bedroom floor of left over school supplies from 4th grade. (Note to self: she needs to clean her room, too.) Great, now she tells me, after I’ve just spent $45 on new supplies? Well, once we get home, I’ll compare the new with the old, see where we’ve got any duplicates, and then do some returning tomorrow. Next year I’ll make sure I check our school supplies box before heading out to shop.

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5 Responses to The Scoop on School Supplies

  1. Daisy on August 15, 2007 at 1:56 pm

    Great thinking! In an extension of this thought, I made it through grad school without buying notebooks or binders because I used my children’s hand-me-downs and unused supplies.

  2. Barb Freda on August 16, 2007 at 10:03 pm

    Today I made sure to take advantage of the 10 folders for $1 (normally would have been $5) and am getting an early start on the supply box. I am bummed that I never got any of the reading list from the library…I am way down on the waiting list…I had to break and buy…oh well. Win some, lose some.

    b

  3. Frugal Disney Mom on August 18, 2007 at 12:53 pm

    Growing up we had a shelf in the closet. My mom would buy extra at this time of the year and put the year before’s stuff there too. Always seems in Jan. the kids need to replenish the new stuff.

    Oh and I was a bad mom with the color coding thing. If I could not find a color. I would use a different color and write the subject on the cover. My thoughts were if you can’t see that your yellow one says MATH then I have much bigger issues than finding a black notebook for math. Always seemed a color was picked that was impossible to find.

    This year my son is with my Dad so I have not had to buy school supplies.

  4. shymom on September 1, 2007 at 6:07 pm

    One of the moms from school said she spent $140 on school supplies for her one daughter! Since her oldest is in the same grade/school as my son, I about had a heart attack. I then went home and had the kids look at their supply lists and then treasure hunt through the house to find as much of what they needed as possible. After that we went to the store to buy what was left on their list. I did end up spending a total of $100. Much more than I wanted to spend, but it did include 2 reference books that will be useful for a long time.

  5. Leah Ingram on September 1, 2007 at 6:32 pm

    Something to keep in mind is, if possible, trying to time your school supply shopping to those amazing deals that stores offer from time to time. We went shopping for my 7th grader last week, when our local supply store was selling pocket folders for 10 cents and binders for 25 cents. Even though my daughter’s list was almost a full page long, we got out of the store for about $88. If the folders and binders had been the usual price, I’ll bet we would have paid well over $100 for everything.