Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Questions for you - what specifically are you fundraising for? Pizza at school events? Food and childcare at PTO meetings? Enrichment activities/field trips? That may help tailor the responses.
Thank you. Great question. At this point, we are just hoping to help support the school in whatever way the principal/assistant principal and teachers ask. This year, for instance, we helped fund the annual picnic and a teacher appreciation lunch, helped a staffer attend a virtual conference for professional development, and gave out smallish Amazon gift certificates - $100 I think - for every teacher to buy classroom supplies.
I've heard that schools with wealthier demographics than ours are able to do big things like provide every teacher with an aide, fund a mindfulness coach...all sort of wonderful things.
Our school has significant needs and we would love to be able to offer that kind of support some day. For instance, teachers tell us the school could use more mental health counselors since many students have experienced trauma.
But for now, something like bringing in new staff is totally pie in the sky. We are thinking small - money to help with events and celebrations, fill in resource gaps for teachers, that sort of thing.
If you're able to do that many $100 gift cards, you're actually doing pretty well. Where is that money coming from?
Well, that's good to hear! It's a very small school so it wasn't that many gift cards.
For now, money is mostly coming from parents like me who have some disposal income and are planning to stay at the school long-term. There are maybe 10 or so of us who made significant donations ($100 or more).
Honestly you'll never get a ton of money from parents of young kids. They just have too many other expenses.
Form a tiny grants committee (like two people) and set a goal of applying to one grant each. It gets a lot easier after the first few, because you can recycle a lot of the text. You can ask the teachers for suggestions, sparing them the work of doing the applications themselves. Do not neglect in-kind grants such as Kennedy Center's Get On The Bus. You can estimate a value and include it in your year-end PTO report to the school.
Consider getting insurance for the PTO, it isn't that expensive. Fraud happens all too often!
Congrats on your transition from baby PTO to a growing organization!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Questions for you - what specifically are you fundraising for? Pizza at school events? Food and childcare at PTO meetings? Enrichment activities/field trips? That may help tailor the responses.
Thank you. Great question. At this point, we are just hoping to help support the school in whatever way the principal/assistant principal and teachers ask. This year, for instance, we helped fund the annual picnic and a teacher appreciation lunch, helped a staffer attend a virtual conference for professional development, and gave out smallish Amazon gift certificates - $100 I think - for every teacher to buy classroom supplies.
I've heard that schools with wealthier demographics than ours are able to do big things like provide every teacher with an aide, fund a mindfulness coach...all sort of wonderful things.
Our school has significant needs and we would love to be able to offer that kind of support some day. For instance, teachers tell us the school could use more mental health counselors since many students have experienced trauma.
But for now, something like bringing in new staff is totally pie in the sky. We are thinking small - money to help with events and celebrations, fill in resource gaps for teachers, that sort of thing.
If you're able to do that many $100 gift cards, you're actually doing pretty well. Where is that money coming from?
Well, that's good to hear! It's a very small school so it wasn't that many gift cards.
For now, money is mostly coming from parents like me who have some disposal income and are planning to stay at the school long-term. There are maybe 10 or so of us who made significant donations ($100 or more).
Anonymous wrote:I had a similar position once and eventually it came down to big picture goals:
1) what scope of money are you trying to raise funds for/what do you want to do with the money? What I mean is - if you can't raise enough to do more than buy some supplies for classrooms or food for events, you may want to just skip the middle step and ask people to buy classroom supplies and offer up food for events.
2) are you doing 'fundraising' to raise money or to just create social opportunities at school? If so, you may want to lean into the high participation/social aspect and just organize fun events, with fundraising being a sideline/hopefully a benefit of large-scale participation.
3) in a school with a portion of the parents being upper income, you might want to just simplify the Rube Goldberg fundraising machine and say,
"hey parents who've got the means to donate: we're asking that if it's easy for you, and so that you won't stress thinking about fundraisers, that you all offer a donation of $200 this year. Or $100 if you can manage that better. We're not going to check if you gave, won't pester, and you can still contribute how you see fit, but we're just making this straight up ask so that you can simply give and not have to follow all the details of fundraising for school events if that's too much for you. We know being a parent is a lot of work and appreciate you regardless of whether you give or not."
Anonymous wrote:I have better luck with real estate companies than law firms. Maybe work on drafting an appeal letter that is professional and rather than emphasizing neeeeeed, emphasize what is excellent about your school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Questions for you - what specifically are you fundraising for? Pizza at school events? Food and childcare at PTO meetings? Enrichment activities/field trips? That may help tailor the responses.
Thank you. Great question. At this point, we are just hoping to help support the school in whatever way the principal/assistant principal and teachers ask. This year, for instance, we helped fund the annual picnic and a teacher appreciation lunch, helped a staffer attend a virtual conference for professional development, and gave out smallish Amazon gift certificates - $100 I think - for every teacher to buy classroom supplies.
I've heard that schools with wealthier demographics than ours are able to do big things like provide every teacher with an aide, fund a mindfulness coach...all sort of wonderful things.
Our school has significant needs and we would love to be able to offer that kind of support some day. For instance, teachers tell us the school could use more mental health counselors since many students have experienced trauma.
But for now, something like bringing in new staff is totally pie in the sky. We are thinking small - money to help with events and celebrations, fill in resource gaps for teachers, that sort of thing.
If you're able to do that many $100 gift cards, you're actually doing pretty well. Where is that money coming from?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Questions for you - what specifically are you fundraising for? Pizza at school events? Food and childcare at PTO meetings? Enrichment activities/field trips? That may help tailor the responses.
Thank you. Great question. At this point, we are just hoping to help support the school in whatever way the principal/assistant principal and teachers ask. This year, for instance, we helped fund the annual picnic and a teacher appreciation lunch, helped a staffer attend a virtual conference for professional development, and gave out smallish Amazon gift certificates - $100 I think - for every teacher to buy classroom supplies.
I've heard that schools with wealthier demographics than ours are able to do big things like provide every teacher with an aide, fund a mindfulness coach...all sort of wonderful things.
Our school has significant needs and we would love to be able to offer that kind of support some day. For instance, teachers tell us the school could use more mental health counselors since many students have experienced trauma.
But for now, something like bringing in new staff is totally pie in the sky. We are thinking small - money to help with events and celebrations, fill in resource gaps for teachers, that sort of thing.
Anonymous wrote:Reach out to the DC Lawyers committee. Every DCPS school is matched with a law firm. They usually donate and can also help you with legal issues that may come up, such as forming a nonprofit.
Anonymous wrote:Questions for you - what specifically are you fundraising for? Pizza at school events? Food and childcare at PTO meetings? Enrichment activities/field trips? That may help tailor the responses.