Anonymous wrote:I would rather see my PTA have no funding, and offer no programs at all, including all of the fun stuff my kids love and the programs that help less fortunate kids, than help with boosterthon
Anonymous wrote: We do just bookfairs and direct donations. It seems to work.
Anonymous wrote:
Kid at new school now, and they had Boosterthon for the first time this year. Not as bad because a number of kids had done it prior and simply opted out. Some even created an "anti-Boosterthon" group.
Children should not be the primary means of soliciting within fundraising activities.
Anonymous wrote:My ES is doing Boosterthon this year in the spring. I'm considering keeping DD home all of April and May out of protest and I don't want her near the Boosterthon cult.
NotAnArtist wrote:Anonymous wrote:I asked at the PTA meeting if families are made aware upfront about the percentages and they looked at me like "Why the F would we do that?"
Same experience here. I asked that EXACT question at my PTA meeting and the PTA prez said something like, "Well, I'll say it - our revenue would be lower."
We shouldn't then wonder why we get kids like the one in this 15-second video: https://youtu.be/rP4qssVser8
Alas, I don't think individual parents dashing off an Email to the school administration or BOE here 'n there will move the needle.
Anonymous wrote:I asked at the PTA meeting if families are made aware upfront about the percentages and they looked at me like "Why the F would we do that?"
Anonymous wrote:Our school is doing this event this year and I am just shocked it is even allowed. They are asking the kids to raise money for the school but the company takes half the money. I asked at the PTA meeting if families are made aware upfront about the percentages and they looked at me like "Why the F would we do that?" I felt a few of use were wondering why this is happening but the board was so happy to have it like it is going to make so much money. It just seems corrupt. Can anyone tell me anymore info. Pros/Cons?
"Fun run companies market their product as a fundraising tool, but the central aspect of their work is to bring all the players into alignment with the commercial values that validate their existence. That is, all the adults involved participate in manipulating the children to harass family and friends for contributions, to work for trinkets, and most significantly, to learn that manipulation, harassing their family and friends, and working for trinkets are all desirable if they lead to getting the money in the end. Social pressures discourage objections."