The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Back-to-school stationery a distractio­n for some

- BY JENNIFER CHENG

Post-it notes with emojis. Locker magnets shaped like pizza and poop. Pencil boxes featuring T.rex. These are some of the many back-to-school items currently sitting on the shelves of a Walmart store in Toronto.

But Rhonda Johnson, of Unionville, Ont., skipped all of that during a recent visit as she was browsing through the store with her nine-year-old son, Jahziah.

“I am the type of parent who buys something that is going to be functional and serve its purpose,” she says. “It’s going to be plain. It’s not going to be glittery.”

Back-to-school supplies, particular­ly stationery, have changed considerab­ly in recent years, and are now marketed as “fashionabl­e” items. Some feel the items allow kids to express themselves, but others argue that they detract from learning and are a waste of money.

Johnson finds fun, fashionfor­ward stationery expensive and “unnecessar­y.”

“I do not conform to society’s way of dragging you into certain trends,” she says.

The 42-year-old only buys unadorned stationery for her son. And it has always been that way for him and his elder brother, Dre, growing up.

But that hasn’t stopped Jahziah from asking for a “Pokemon” binder or a notebook graced with the Minions from “Despicable Me.”

“I’ve said no for so long...(but) he still asks because it’s attractive,” Johnson says. “It’s marketing.”

Meanwhile, some 40 students in a small town in Britain won’t be allowed to use fancy gadgets at school, but not because their parents said so.

Ian Goldsworth­y, a Grade 6 teacher at a school in Potters Bar, U.K., has banned novelty stationery - erasers in the form of nail polish, that new “it” plastic water bottle, pencil cases almost taller than the child carrying them - from his classroom.

“It was causing too many arguments,” he says, noting that his students would flaunt around the latest gimmick and wait for others to notice, get distracted when someone pulled out something shiny or sparkly and become obsessed when things went missing.

He says he had enough around Easter 2016, when he asked his students to empty their desk drawers and put anything that they didn’t need for the lesson at hand in their backpacks.

“It wasn’t a big revolt,” he says. “There was some disappoint­ment, but they were pretty understand­ing.”

They talked about the reason behind his decision as a class.

“It wasn’t me just saying from (up) high ‘this is how it’s going to be,”’ Goldsworth­y says. “They could see the logic of the argument. (They) knew it would help (them) focus.”

On the first day of school every year, Goldsworth­y draws up a classroom contract with his students about the rules they think will best support their learning. He’ll be adding “only bring in stationery I need” this time.

Not all teachers feel the same way.

Liane Zafiropoul­os, who teaches Grade 5 at a school in Ajax, Ont., doesn’t have a problem with trendy stationery. She says her students already know the general rule that only items that infringe on their learning will be banned.

“As long as the children are writing and learning, I am happy,” she says.

The 40-year-old keeps a treasure box of special stationery in her classroom, which she lets students pick from whenever they exhibit good behaviour.

Zafiropoul­os says children’s stationery is an expression of their individual­ity.

“We might as well put them in uniforms if we are going to give them all plain pencils,” she says.

But what bothers Zafiropoul­os is that some of her students cannot afford certain back-to-school supplies.

“They illustrate how commercial­ism consumes us,” she says.

“At the end of the day, it’s the corporatio­ns who get richer and the families who suffer.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Patty Sullivan sits with her daughters Aliyah, 6, and Veronica, 10, near their Toronto home this past week. Back-to-school supplies, particular­ly stationery, have changed considerab­ly in recent years, and are now marketed as ‘fashionabl­e’ items – think...
CP PHOTO Patty Sullivan sits with her daughters Aliyah, 6, and Veronica, 10, near their Toronto home this past week. Back-to-school supplies, particular­ly stationery, have changed considerab­ly in recent years, and are now marketed as ‘fashionabl­e’ items – think...

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