Many if not all of these schools donate a not insignificant amount to poorer schools in DC. So if it’s so gross why don’t you give back that 20k. |
| The Distrct just wasn’t better off in the 80d and 90s, when few UMC families would touch a DC public school. If the city moves to limit or block PTA fundraising and spending, professional parents will just find alternative routes to providing their children with rich learning experiences. Much better to keep them onboard in our struggling public school system than to drive them away. |
I guess it depends on how much you are making. For me that is my pay for 2 weeks. For others it is more manageable. Frankly, I don't see the issue. Everyone can decide on whom to donate their money to. My advice is give as much as you want. |
Many states? We're not a state. |
| i think its nice when families who have the additional resources choose to donate money to programs at their local public school. it benefits all of the kids at the school. its one of few instances where you have a very direct, firsthand idea of precisely where your money is going and what it is contributing to. the problems only really start if there is any pressure in the community to donate (despite it being a taxpayer funded public school), perceived social status benefits, control over school programming etc. associated with these type of donations. |
Because DC plunders the UMC with ridiculously high taxes for very little in return. Those schools have to fundraise because they are intentionally underfunded by DC compared to other schools. |
I agree. Parent donations directly benefit the school and all the kids. |
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Some parents on here are so naive. You actually think the disparity in donations is only a DC thing? It’s a nation wide thing.
Rich schools in any school county get a lot more donations than their poorer counterparts. Classic example is our neighbors in VA and MD. The only difference is that theses families also pay to buy the expensive real estate in the best schools. At least in DC, you have a shot at going to a better resourced school with the lottery. |
Yeah, our kids went to Key. We never gave anywhere close to this. Bizarre. |
Typical DC Schools mentality. Better to hold the top down so you don't have to be accountable for lifting the bottom up. We see it with academics all the time. |
DCPS could also fix this by funding more teachers and coaches so PTOs didn't need to, and providing more supplies so PTOs didn't need to, and maintaining school buildings so PTOs didn't need to advocate for that too, and so on and so forth. I wish they would, but until they do i guess I'll keep donating to my PTO where I can (lord knows it's better than volunteering to man a booth!) |
| Our school is in your list, it asks for $500 per child. I usually give more around $200 per kid, but typically spend between $2,500-$5,000 at the auction depending on what I feel like buying that year. |
| I don’t think any school on that list asks for that much. Highest I’ve heard is around $1,200 (but they stress that any amount is welcome) |
This. It’s just a suggested amount. Give however much you want or don’t give at all. We donate, attend the auction and buy things, etc… It’s not a big deal if you can afford it. If you can’t that’s fine, give what you can. Some families will give much more than suggested, others much less and others none. DCPS schools and charters with majority higher SES families are easily going to raise 6 figures plus. The more money raised, the more it will help the school. That money will go directly to the school with what they urgently need and benefit each and every student, no matter what their SES status. |
No threat. My property taxes are outrageous. But I made choices that put my child’s education as top priority. What is it you want folks to do? DC spends the highest amount per student in the country. Demand better. |