We weren't asked to donate a specific amount of money just to sell sell sell. The activity is already costing us upwards of $8,000 a year, what's the point in fundraising to raise $2,000? |
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my sons activities do a lot of fundraising. it is exhausting and I minimize how many times and to whom i reach out too.
it does teach kids to work for what they want. better than me always paying for what they want. at least they have to work for it a little bit (car wash etc.) I give to other activities as well - marching band or whatever. |
Generally, no. It gets dicey when they choose to go to extra events outside of the HS schedule (and now they're not much different than a travel team). |
Same here. If the kid wants money, they should ask. |
lol, you think there aren't fees for HS sports? |
Then either sell, don't sell and donate your share of the 2K, or ignore altogether. Why do you need someone else to explain this? |
| My kid's team requires fundraising - it can come from mom or dad or others. It's an expensive sport and fundraising helps offset fees for folks who can't afford it. Parents are expected to contribute about $5k a year, and fundraising per kid is $1000 a year. Not every kid's family can afford that. |
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My kids are grown now but were involved in sports and music in school and we always resisted all kid fundraisers. Dh and I just donated ourselves, and dcs also participated in whatever fundraising events were hands-on and their responsibility.
I didn't even ask our parents/siblings: we're not wealthy at all compared to most on DCUM but our families are even less so, and I would never ask friends, acquaintances to chip in either. I feel pretty strongly that it was our responsibility to pay. |
If they can’t afford it, why do they choose to participate? |
No, this is not an exception. |
Want Vs need |
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I think it's tacky and I'll just buy the stuff and then give to neighbors instead of asking them to buy stuff.
I don't mind when the teens fundraise by providing an actual wanted service like car wash, mulch delivery/spreading, babysitting service, coaching services for younger kids, snowshoveling, etc. I am happy to support those things when it's a service or product I need, as opposed to "buy this overpriced item that you don't really want so Johnny's overpriced travel team can do to Orlando for a tournament." |
This. I donate if it's a high school team. |
My neighbor just came by last week selling raffle tickets for something at his school - it’s one of the wealthiest schools in the area. We live in a neighborhood where homes range $2-6M+. I bought one book because I’ve known the kid since he was a toddler. Yes, it’s tacky! His parents are not tacky and probably made him do it to follow the rules of whatever the tickets were for - they are the don’t skip corners type parents. Luckily my kids had never had to do this and they also go to wealthy private schools. OP - yeah it’s so so so tacky. It feels just gross to donate to schools that get millions a year in donations and whose families can afford whatever it is they are fund raising for. |
Popcorn is the worst. |