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Monday, 2 January 2012

Fund Raising For Schools

By Owen Jones


Many schools have to take part in fund raising because of a shortfall in government funding. This lack of adequate government funding will only get worse given the cutbacks that the governments of the world have seen fit to enforce in order to help put an end to the financial crisis brought about by the collapse of so numerous financial institutions.

It is commonly called the banking crisis and it is being used as an excuse for slashing the funding of government departments like schooling and health care. You will get able to judge how hard your local schools have been hit by the amount of school fund raising in your region.

A conventional method of school fund raising is the selling of goods from a catalogue from door to door. Typically, school children are given the catalogues to take home and to take around their neighbours. Those who sell the most often win prizes.

The season of school fund raising usually starts when the kids go back to school in the autumn after the summer break. If the schools in your area have been badly hit by the cutbacks, you may have dozens of children knocking on your door trying to sell you over-priced knick-knacks.

However, some schools endeavor to be more imaginative in their fund raising, because fewer and fewer people are prepared to pay way over the top for emergency plugs, wrapping paper and scissors.

Some of these inventive approaches include selling sandwiches, pizzas, hot dogs, barbecued chicken and cookie dough. Other ways are to hold a bring and buy sale or a fair with sideshows, stalls, bingo and a bouncy house. Raffles are also well-liked ways of raising money for schools as long as the prizes are worth winning.

Although school fund raising is a pain for parents, it is a necessary evil, if the school is to meet its responsibility to supply children with a good education. One good method of raising money is to produce a monthly school magazine. Kids and teachers can write articles and stories for the magazine and a board of students and teachers can edit and compile it.

It is a decent idea if the head teacher gives a report in each issue. Local businesses can be asked to purchase advertising space and the magazine can be sold for a small amount. This will provide a regular and fairly stable monthly income and each parent will want one as will other individuals who live in the vicinity of the school.

The difficulty of underfunding is a big one and it will not be going away any time soon, however, families are suffering from the financial squeeze as well so schools ought to shift their focus while trying to raise money. People definitely do not like to feel obliged to purchase over-priced rubbish because it is children who are flogging it - it is a form of moral blackmail.

The best way to raise money for schools is to provide value for money. So, if you have to organize school fund raising, give out catalogues by all means, but make them decent ones or make your own in conjunction with a large, local department store; put on a Christmas pantomime, nativity play or/and carol service; in the warmer months organize public events like bazaars, fayres and bring and buy sales and publish a monthly school magazine all the way through the year.




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