Anonymous wrote:Boosterthon puts employees on site for a week or so before the event. The payroll is a real cost.
If your PTA doesn't want to do any work to raise money, Boosterthon will do it for you. There are many ways for a PTA to raise money without resorting to them, though. It just takes a lot of (free) parent time and effort.
Anonymous wrote:This is our first year at MCPS so we’re new to this. The school (well the PTA to be precise) recently organized a boosterthon to raise funds for the school, which is of course fine. What really surprised me was that after saying that this is to benefit the school community, everyone contributes what they can, etc, it appears that kids got rewards based on what their own parents contributed.
Am i the only one that thinks this isn’t right? Yes it seems all kids get at least a small little something. But I heard some kids talked about how much their parents paid per lap, complaining (crying even) why their parents didn’t pay more, and got very upset when they saw their friends take home much larger gifts. Just really baffled that something like this happens in what’s perceived as one of the wealthiest areas. What are we teaching the kids with this - you’re as good as what your parents can pay???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you are going to complain, please make it a point to (1) go directly to the PTA, not "above" or elsewhere first and (2) volunteer your own time and energy to find/staff something different. It's not an easy job and sometimes PTA leaders take opportunities that are manageable with the level of volunteerism in the community (or lack thereof).
OP. This is taking the discussion somewhere else. Are you with the PTA? You don’t think it’s unfair for kids to be treated differently like that? Rather than being defensive and saying why don’t you do it yourself, you could at least acknowledge that there is a (much broader) problem with boosterthon.
Anonymous wrote:It's crazy this is legal. MCPS should ban donations to individual schools. Donations go countywide or nowhere.
Anonymous wrote:It's crazy this is legal. MCPS should ban donations to individual schools. Donations go countywide or nowhere.
Anonymous wrote:OP, if you are going to complain, please make it a point to (1) go directly to the PTA, not "above" or elsewhere first and (2) volunteer your own time and energy to find/staff something different. It's not an easy job and sometimes PTA leaders take opportunities that are manageable with the level of volunteerism in the community (or lack thereof).
Anonymous wrote:My daughter brought home a popcorn fundraiser for her club, we found out the vendor takes 50 percent. Scholastic book fair takes about 65% of the profits. It's a dirty business all in the name of helping schols