LOL
I believe while reading thru this I must have time traveled.
I believe MMWRIGHT must be my daughter in the future. You all must know this child. The one who asks, asks, pleads, begs & doesn't hear your answer until they get the one she's looking for.
Ugh! I hate those days with a passion. So I believe the answer MMWRIGHT is looking for would read something like this:
My understanding of the traditional roll of a PTO is to be "the voice of the people" working with and (when necessary) against the administration of the school....
"The ByLaws of our newly formed PTO shall read that our purpose and mission is to fully advise the Board of Education on their job performance."
It seems that in some schools the Principal actually takes control of the PTO; obviously in conflict with my understanding....
"The Principal, the person with top management authority in the school building, will not control any aspect of what or how the PTO operates."
Can anyone confirm my understanding????
"Please accept anyone who agrees with you as confirming your understanding. Do not allow a difference of opinion to be considered as understanding what you think."
Are there differing "traditions" for parochial schools???
"The differing tradition for parochial schools is that all matters are in God's hands."
Can anyone direct me to an article discussing the issue???
Search Engine "PTO purpose and mission" or ByLaws and it should discuss what the PTO role should be."
in cases of
1) negative and/or damaging behavior on the part of the administration
"The PTO shall speak for any parent's voice. It doesn't matter what the issue is."
2) policies in conflict with the wishes of parents (such as dismissal of a popular staff member)
"The PTO shall have direct hiring/firing powers over the knowledge of the School Administration."
Who speaks for the parents and against the administration???
"The PTO shall have the voice of all parents. They will not be allowed to speak on their own behalf."
Is there a group other than the pto,....
"Bring in the Lawyers if you're not happy with the PTO!"
In another post, ptomember111 further questions:
who opposes the principal when needed??? can we agree it would be wrong for a principal to expel a student simply because his parents are outspoken???
if this, or something like it, happens isn't it the role of the pto to oppose the action????
if not the pto, then who???
Are these the questions you are really refering to MMWRIGHT? Gee, I can't believe a student would be expelled because the parents are outspoken. Must be pretty vocal about something? If this has happened, I would have a group of concerned parents address the Superintendant and the Board of Education. Not to mention, if they won't allow a forum to address an issue, the parents could always go to the media....
We've had an issue within our school that involved a student & teacher. The student's parents addressed their voice by going to the media. Several parents of students in that same class addressed their voices to the Board of Education. The PTO felt this was a school issue not a part of our PTO purpose and as such, we didn't address it in any meeting.
Hopefully these are more inline with what you were looking for. They differ from nearly every poster here who
answered ptomember111's questions. Again, I think that you are simply not happy that everyone disagreed with the idea of the PTO not being the voice of the people for/against the administration, but that if a person has an issue they should address it themself with principal/administration.