Message Boards

×

Notice

The forum is in read only mode.
×
Looking for advice? Join us on Facebook

Get advice, ideas, and support from other parent group leaders just like you—join our closed Facebook group for PTO and PTA Leaders & Volunteers .

membership

18 years 3 weeks ago #77109 by Shawn
Replied by Shawn on topic RE: membership
We miss Calahan :(
and the wonderful staff

<font size=""1""><font color="#"black"">Liberalism is not an affilation its a curable disease. </font></font><br /><br><font color="#"gray"">~Wisdom of Shawnshuefus</font><br /><br><font color="#"blue""><font size=""1"">The punishment which the wise suffer, who refuse to take part in government, is...
18 years 3 weeks ago #77108 by Jennia
Replied by Jennia on topic RE: membership

Originally posted by Shawn:
Do you have a sister or relative that teaches 1st grade at an LAUSD school?

I have a sister that teaches first grade in LAUSD. She's in Northridge. :D :D
18 years 1 month ago #77107 by Rockne
Replied by Rockne on topic RE: membership
Hi Kelly -

Sounds like your 340 members all kicking in $15 is great. Really great. Tons of people here will be jealous of that $5000+ from membership.

I'd say you're well above-average. PTA's nationally (where you can glean the numbers pretty easily) average about 240 paid members (and their charge is typically less than $15), so by that measure you're doing very well.

That sais, I think your paid membership count is a fairly ineffective measure of involvement. To me, a $15 membership count is more akin to a fundraiser. So your 340 paid memberships is like 340 people buying a roll of gift wrap or a tub of cookie dough. Still a good number, but more reflective of simple $$ support than involvement.

When measuring involvement (especially on the parent group level), I prefer to look at things like: numbers attending school/family events; numbers volunteering in some way over course of the year; numbers interacting with teachers and school admins meaningfully.

The 340 paying for membership is a great sign that you're probably ahead of the game. But if that was all that was happening (ie. vast majority of those 340 did virtually nothing else), then you'd have big issues. On the other hand, if 250 of those 340 are also connecting with school, attending events, volunteering, etc. -- then wow!

Tim

PTO Today Founder
18 years 1 month ago #77106 by Shawn
Replied by Shawn on topic RE: membership
I wanna school with 175+ members-- never seen that even in PTA -- I know its an average based on total #'s

300+ at $15 a 'pop- I think would be Phenominal-

Do you have a sister or relative that teaches 1st grade at an LAUSD school?

<font size=""1""><font color="#"black"">Liberalism is not an affilation its a curable disease. </font></font><br /><br><font color="#"gray"">~Wisdom of Shawnshuefus</font><br /><br><font color="#"blue""><font size=""1"">The punishment which the wise suffer, who refuse to take part in government, is...
18 years 1 month ago #77105 by Kelly Cieslak
Replied by Kelly Cieslak on topic RE: membership
Tim,
I am new to this website and also a new board member on my son's elementary school PTO. We had a discussion today at our board meeting about whether our membership was good our not. We have about 900+ students in the school - not sure how many families that translates to. Anyway, we have about 340 PTO members. We charge $15 to be a member, which includes a free student directory. I see from your above posting that you would estimate 175- 250 members per PTO. Based on this figure, I would say we are doing very well membership-wise. What are your opinions based on how large our school is? In short, I think our membership numbers are very good and I would like to reassure other board members of this as well. Since there are no "global" reports for PTOs, I'm hoping you can give me some insight. Thanks so much. Kelly
18 years 2 months ago #77104 by SAFin RI
Replied by SAFin RI on topic RE: membership
Hi Tim;

I do know that many if not most members join the Local Lions club, or Rotary for the work they do in the local community. Just as parents join the school's PTA (or PTO) for the work they do at their local school level.

I think the point is that as a Lion or Rotarian you also get access to the benifits provided by a national organization. No matter if you use them or not, just like joining PTA.
I think the analogy is acurate.
Time to create page: 0.066 seconds
Powered by Kunena Forum
^ Top