Anonymous wrote:This is OP, took me a while to go through the responses. I am not saying I like the idea of these fundraisers, but I still contribute since it does help the school fund things it needs (there is a list of what the money raised will be used for). And I am genuinely shocked that people are not more generous on here - do you not donate to friends’ fundraisers? I try to contribute a little something to most donation requests just to be nice and support different causes that can make a difference for others.
All raffle prizes are donated so the school gets nearly all money - and the prizes are things like annual museum memberships, sports game tickets, iPads, video games, etc. And yes this is a public school. And yes, the class who sells the most tickets gets an ice cream party and extra recess. And the 5 kids that sell the most get things too like front row tickets to the school play, teacher for the day, etc.
And for those who asked - my DD is one of two grandkids (my other child is younger). DH’s older sister never married (has no kids) and no cousins or other kids asking for donations to anything.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP, took me a while to go through the responses. I am not saying I like the idea of these fundraisers, but I still contribute since it does help the school fund things it needs (there is a list of what the money raised will be used for). And I am genuinely shocked that people are not more generous on here - do you not donate to friends’ fundraisers? I try to contribute a little something to most donation requests just to be nice and support different causes that can make a difference for others.
All raffle prizes are donated so the school gets nearly all money - and the prizes are things like annual museum memberships, sports game tickets, iPads, video games, etc. And yes this is a public school. And yes, the class who sells the most tickets gets an ice cream party and extra recess. And the 5 kids that sell the most get things too like front row tickets to the school play, teacher for the day, etc.
And for those who asked - my DD is one of two grandkids (my other child is younger). DH’s older sister never married (has no kids) and no cousins or other kids asking for donations to anything.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP, took me a while to go through the responses. I am not saying I like the idea of these fundraisers, but I still contribute since it does help the school fund things it needs (there is a list of what the money raised will be used for). And I am genuinely shocked that people are not more generous on here - do you not donate to friends’ fundraisers? I try to contribute a little something to most donation requests just to be nice and support different causes that can make a difference for others.
All raffle prizes are donated so the school gets nearly all money - and the prizes are things like annual museum memberships, sports game tickets, iPads, video games, etc. And yes this is a public school. And yes, the class who sells the most tickets gets an ice cream party and extra recess. And the 5 kids that sell the most get things too like front row tickets to the school play, teacher for the day, etc.
And for those who asked - my DD is one of two grandkids (my other child is younger). DH’s older sister never married (has no kids) and no cousins or other kids asking for donations to anything.
Anonymous wrote:I hate fundraisers that highlight wealth disparities among students. It's really gross to give prizes to kids whose families/friends can afford to donate and I'm surprised you would even participate. Just give directly to the PTA. If I were a grandparent, I'd decline buying a ticket but offer a donation. Elementary aged kids are certsinly old enough to understand why fundraisers that have a financial barrier to participation are just wrong.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP, took me a while to go through the responses. I am not saying I like the idea of these fundraisers, but I still contribute since it does help the school fund things it needs (there is a list of what the money raised will be used for). And I am genuinely shocked that people are not more generous on here - do you not donate to friends’ fundraisers? I try to contribute a little something to most donation requests just to be nice and support different causes that can make a difference for others.
All raffle prizes are donated so the school gets nearly all money - and the prizes are things like annual museum memberships, sports game tickets, iPads, video games, etc. And yes this is a public school. And yes, the class who sells the most tickets gets an ice cream party and extra recess. And the 5 kids that sell the most get things too like front row tickets to the school play, teacher for the day, etc.
And for those who asked - my DD is one of two grandkids (my other child is younger). DH’s older sister never married (has no kids) and no cousins or other kids asking for donations to anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to know what these amazing prizes are.
Probably like wrapping paper sales for HS where if sell $500 of paper the kid gets $10 or their name in drawing with bunch of other kids for something else that costs <$20.
These fundraisers are about as enjoyable as MLM events.
Anonymous wrote:I want to know what these amazing prizes are.