Anonymous wrote:Oh boy…do I have opinions on this! Yes, high school sports are so messed up. In so many ways. It’s far different than when you grew up, OP.
But, to answer your question Our affluent district does NOT fund sports. There is some money in the budget (field maintenance and facilities), but all extra’s get paid for by booster club and team fundraising. Uniforms, transportation, equipment, balls, scoreboard replacement, and many field improvements- many of these larger items are funded by booster clubs).
Your niece & nephew are required to hit up friends/family. My kid’s team just sat in the gym during practice and the coach made all players send out these emails. They probably don’t care if you donate or not (although are touched if you do!) They’re most likely extremely embarrassed to send you the emails, and are praying you don’t think it’s too cringy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD was fundraising to cover travel expenses to a tournament the school will not pay for (hotel and dinner). Some girls didn’t participate at all in the fundraising and some only raised $50. Each player had a goal of $500. We didn’t need this much money from each player but because some just didn’t participate others had to make up the difference.
If parents want kids to do things like this, they should be prepared to pay. I'd pay whatever my kids expenses were. I mean, all throughout youth sports, parents pay happily. Why should it be different in HS? I think in most sports there is an expectation that the school covers somewhere between some and all of the cost but if its not all covered, just pretend its another club sport and write a check for you part of the costs.
I just don't do fundraisers, sorry. Just get the amount needed for each player from each player. If the cost is $2000 and there are 10 kids...bring your $200 or don't come on the trip.
And I think the first thing to do in cases where its known funds will be needed is to have a participation fee. Pay to play. Then any travel or unusual expenses can be collected later.
But it isn’t a travel team- it is a public school where all should be able to participate if they make the team. That would not be fair.
I also despise fundraising. The best way I have seen this handled was for an overnight field trip for my kid’s elementary school (a long time ago). A letter was sent to parents saying “cost is $250 per kid, please make check out to xyz. If you are willing to donate extra for a child whose family cannot afford the cost, we would be very appreciative ” I am sure it was written more eloquently and I can’t remember the exact dollar amounts, but many families just donated/paid an extra $50-$100 etc and it worked out. I wish sports would do this, and save us all the fundraising headaches. The only person who would have to know who did/didn’t pay would be the person collecting the $.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD was fundraising to cover travel expenses to a tournament the school will not pay for (hotel and dinner). Some girls didn’t participate at all in the fundraising and some only raised $50. Each player had a goal of $500. We didn’t need this much money from each player but because some just didn’t participate others had to make up the difference.
If parents want kids to do things like this, they should be prepared to pay. I'd pay whatever my kids expenses were. I mean, all throughout youth sports, parents pay happily. Why should it be different in HS? I think in most sports there is an expectation that the school covers somewhere between some and all of the cost but if its not all covered, just pretend its another club sport and write a check for you part of the costs.
I just don't do fundraisers, sorry. Just get the amount needed for each player from each player. If the cost is $2000 and there are 10 kids...bring your $200 or don't come on the trip.
And I think the first thing to do in cases where its known funds will be needed is to have a participation fee. Pay to play. Then any travel or unusual expenses can be collected later.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD was fundraising to cover travel expenses to a tournament the school will not pay for (hotel and dinner). Some girls didn’t participate at all in the fundraising and some only raised $50. Each player had a goal of $500. We didn’t need this much money from each player but because some just didn’t participate others had to make up the difference.
If parents want kids to do things like this, they should be prepared to pay. I'd pay whatever my kids expenses were. I mean, all throughout youth sports, parents pay happily. Why should it be different in HS? I think in most sports there is an expectation that the school covers somewhere between some and all of the cost but if its not all covered, just pretend its another club sport and write a check for you part of the costs.
I just don't do fundraisers, sorry. Just get the amount needed for each player from each player. If the cost is $2000 and there are 10 kids...bring your $200 or don't come on the trip.
And I think the first thing to do in cases where its known funds will be needed is to have a participation fee. Pay to play. Then any travel or unusual expenses can be collected later.
Handy how your system keeps poor kids from participating with yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD was fundraising to cover travel expenses to a tournament the school will not pay for (hotel and dinner). Some girls didn’t participate at all in the fundraising and some only raised $50. Each player had a goal of $500. We didn’t need this much money from each player but because some just didn’t participate others had to make up the difference.
If parents want kids to do things like this, they should be prepared to pay. I'd pay whatever my kids expenses were. I mean, all throughout youth sports, parents pay happily. Why should it be different in HS? I think in most sports there is an expectation that the school covers somewhere between some and all of the cost but if its not all covered, just pretend its another club sport and write a check for you part of the costs.
I just don't do fundraisers, sorry. Just get the amount needed for each player from each player. If the cost is $2000 and there are 10 kids...bring your $200 or don't come on the trip.
And I think the first thing to do in cases where its known funds will be needed is to have a participation fee. Pay to play. Then any travel or unusual expenses can be collected later.
Anonymous wrote:DD was fundraising to cover travel expenses to a tournament the school will not pay for (hotel and dinner). Some girls didn’t participate at all in the fundraising and some only raised $50. Each player had a goal of $500. We didn’t need this much money from each player but because some just didn’t participate others had to make up the difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Districts don't fully fund sports. Even FCPS high schools have booster clubs to make up the difference
Can you please define why you mean by this. I really have no idea. Where exactly is the booster money going? What happens if they didn’t raise the money? This sounds like extras, like it goes towards an end of season party and personalized gear? I can’t imagine a season being cancelled because the soccer or swim team didn’t raise enough money.![]()
Uniforms and equipment are the biggest expenses for our school's lacrosse team
If a school is rich enough to have a lacrosse team, let them budget for uniforms, for pete's sake.