Category Archives: Fundraising

The Eternal Struggle of Fundraising

Last month On Parenting in The Washington Post ran a column about those annoying third-party fundraisers by Darlena Cunha: the wrapping paper, the cookie dough, etc. Yes, I agree with her thesis: they are annoying and the fundraising companies take too much of a cut. I don’t like kids asking for money. I’m not in love with third-party fundraising companies myself.

As much as I agree, however, I ran out of patience.

She had to make several phone calls to get to the bottom of her school’s wrapping paper fundraiser before figuring out she should have just contacted the PTA president or fundraising chair to begin with. Or, hey, maybe she could have attended a PTA meeting—she might not have felt so blindsided. Them unsurprisingly, the fundraising vendor didn’t instantly leap to answer her phone call demanding info on the percentage the PTA got to keep. Oh, the horror! Oh, the lack of transparency!
She then goes on to say that it would be so much better if people would just donate money to the school/PTA so we wouldn’t have to have these stupid fundraisers and give the fundraising vendor their cut. I too think that would be awesome.
But for some reason I don’t understand, people just don’t give donations without some kind of…enticement. Not in my experience, anyway.

Full disclosure: I hate fundraising. If someone offered me the role of Fundraising Chair or Vice President for Fundraising, I would rather have a toenail pulled out. (Maybe my baby toe, not the big toe.) Our culture in general has a strange, roundabout approach to charity and raising money for causes in general. You can’t just donate money to cancer research, you have to ride a bike for hundreds of miles and get sponsors. You can’t just donate money to find a cure for ALS, you have to have ice water dumped on your head. You can’t just ask for money for your PTA, you have to sell cookie dough. People need an incentive or a gimmick to donate, and you have to work with that.

That’s where the dreaded third-party fundraisers come in. They offer a solution to a problem to a group of parent volunteers tight on time. For better or worse, they’re filling a gap. Can you blame them?
I don’t understand, but I’ll leave the “why” for a sociologist. I think it has something to do with building relationships, or community, or something. For now, all you need to know is that:

1) The biggest job of your parent volunteer group is fundraising for your school, whether it’s for extras or for basic supplies.

2) People won’t (necessarily) donate money just because you ask nicely, no matter how worthwhile your cause or how serious your needs are.

I’ve heard about a few schools that have had “non-fundraisers.” Sounds a little bit like protection money to me—donate or we’ll make your kids sell desserts! There’s another alternative: Fun Runs and “-athons.”

A fundraiser based on an event brings the community together much more than a gift wrap sale. And unlike the cookie dough sale, it’s based around a healthy activity. That’s sure to get the administration, staff, and families more excited. And it allows families to donate what they can, whether you go by a flat donation or a pledge system.

The downside…there’s a lot of organization involved. Much more than just sending out a catalog. And you have a big choice: use a third party organizer, or take care of the details yourself.

Next post I’ll do a case study of my own experience with a fun run fundraiser. For now, here’s my advice: get informed about your group’s fundraiser. Attend meetings and get involved in the decision-making process, and maybe you won’t feel so blindsided when you get a cookie dough catalog.

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Stuck with the Book Fair

It’s that time of year again, when leaves begin to fall and preparations are underway for the annual Scholastic Book Fair. This is a wonderful way to raise funds for the school, get more books for the classroom, and build literacy.

It’s also perhaps one of the most painful tasks that a PTA or parent volunteer group can manage.

Parent volunteers have to publicize the fair, unload the books out of those enormous Dalek-like metal carts (thus dislodging some poor teacher for a week), manage the cash register, and of course pack it all away at the end of the week. Don’t forget about special orders and restocking shelves!

Of course, the vast majority of book fair sales are not books but trinkets: big funny pencils, novelty erasers. A disturbing amount of volunteer time is spent preventing shoplifting. (An ingenious parent at my own school hit upon the idea of hot-gluing a sample of each gee-gaw to a big stand-up display board along with prices so the kids could see the things without putting their grubby mitts on them. The tiny treasures were kept behind the cash register table.)
Another temptation for children: those stupid books with a piece of jewelry or a toy attached to the cover. Better keep those behind the counter too. If the trinket gets separated from the book, it’s a loss.

Let’s also not forget sales tax drama. How many children’s hearts have been broken because they were missing the last seven cents? How many volunteer parents have dug through their pockets, muttering, for that spare change?

So I’ve painted an exhausting picture here. Why again are we bothering with the old-fashioned Book Fair in this day and age? There are alternatives:

  • Scholastic does offer ebooks through its Storia app – or at least, they used to. The Storia app is closing and is only currently available for teachers. (Too bad, we used it at home…)
  • Scholastic also offers an online Book Fair option at the same time as the standard book fair.
  • Barnes & Noble offers a book fair, and while parents have to publicize, it’s held at the store as well as online. A lot less work for parents.

So there are options. But can they really take the place of the good ol’ in-school book fair? Here are a few things to consider.

  • There’s just something about those real books. Kids are tactile. Kids like to touch stuff, including books. And having a home library contributes toward a literate home environment.
  • It’s affordable. Scholastic offers some cheap stuff – much cheaper for the most part, sadly, than most other book stores. I’m certainly not in love with all the gee-gaws and trinkets – and yet, it’s nice to see that a kid with only a dollar to spend can still participate.
  • It’s there. At our school, all the kids are encouraged to visit, once with their class to fill out a wish list and then on their own. Parents don’t have to haul everyone to the store. We also have had success having the fair open for one evening shift, to coincide with a PTA Ice Cream social.
  • It teaches kids about handling money.
  • It makes your school look good. Book Fairs are disruptive, and school administrators are not in love with disruption. Yet they tolerate the Book Fair. Building literacy is one reason; the other reason is that, frankly, it looks good for your school to host a Book Fair. Not all schools have the volunteer support or organization to pull it off.
  • It’s a nice change of pace for kids. Short recesses, lots of seat work, lots of testing, fewer field trips…isn’t it good to have something to make the kids look forward to at school for a change?
  • Not everyone is online. I can’t stress this enough. Not everyone in every community has regular Internet access. Don’t leave a significant part of your neighbors behind.

So, difficult as it is, I think we’re all stuck with the Book Fair for the foreseeable future. And maybe it’s not a bad thing. Now, where did that flyer go?

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