Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone get the feeling there is just one person on here just posting weird retorts in hopes of getting people to actually like the Boosterthon? Very strange for a "mom" to be that adamant about a fundraiser and just keep bashing concerned comments. I don't get it.
It sounds like the PTA needs to put an asterick at the bottom of the flyers noting the percentage that go to the school. At least that takes the heat off of them. Would that work. Does that make it better?
there is a PTA person at my school who loves the boosterathon. So there is one person in real life.
Why does this person love it? Just curious
she believes it raises more money than anything else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't believe they are allowed in the school.
I can't believe the county allows this. And any PTA that considers this a way to raise funds is pathetic. You are cheating families out of half of their money (and not telling them) to go to a slimy for-profit company that doesn't deserve to make more than $2000 for the whole event. And you happily give them half of the earnings? And then you single out kids who begged their families the most.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone get the feeling there is just one person on here just posting weird retorts in hopes of getting people to actually like the Boosterthon? Very strange for a "mom" to be that adamant about a fundraiser and just keep bashing concerned comments. I don't get it.
It sounds like the PTA needs to put an asterick at the bottom of the flyers noting the percentage that go to the school. At least that takes the heat off of them. Would that work. Does that make it better?
there is a PTA person at my school who loves the boosterathon. So there is one person in real life.
Why does this person love it? Just curious
she believes it raises more money than anything else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone get the feeling there is just one person on here just posting weird retorts in hopes of getting people to actually like the Boosterthon? Very strange for a "mom" to be that adamant about a fundraiser and just keep bashing concerned comments. I don't get it.
It sounds like the PTA needs to put an asterick at the bottom of the flyers noting the percentage that go to the school. At least that takes the heat off of them. Would that work. Does that make it better?
there is a PTA person at my school who loves the boosterathon. So there is one person in real life.
Why does this person love it? Just curious
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone get the feeling there is just one person on here just posting weird retorts in hopes of getting people to actually like the Boosterthon? Very strange for a "mom" to be that adamant about a fundraiser and just keep bashing concerned comments. I don't get it.
It sounds like the PTA needs to put an asterick at the bottom of the flyers noting the percentage that go to the school. At least that takes the heat off of them. Would that work. Does that make it better?
there is a PTA person at my school who loves the boosterathon. So there is one person in real life.
Anonymous wrote:I can't believe they are allowed in the school.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone get the feeling there is just one person on here just posting weird retorts in hopes of getting people to actually like the Boosterthon? Very strange for a "mom" to be that adamant about a fundraiser and just keep bashing concerned comments. I don't get it.
It sounds like the PTA needs to put an asterick at the bottom of the flyers noting the percentage that go to the school. At least that takes the heat off of them. Would that work. Does that make it better?
Anonymous wrote:Boosterthon works on a sliding scale. The less you raise, the bigger the cut they take.
They disrupt classes every day for a week and a half. They read the names of the kids who got pledges each day and have them stand up to be recognized. Imagine how that makes the kids who can't raise money feel. We had kids who were asking not to go to school because they didn't want to be publicly embarrassed again.
I would hate to see my kids competing against each other.