childrenfirst;133230 wrote: New to this thing but...
Just by reading many of these messages I see that there is a lot of egos at work. The purpose of the PTO at our HS has always been to put the children first and we have found that the Principal of our school is at the pulse of the needs of our school. When there is a need from a teacher, staff, or parent they will always contact the Principal. Then it is passed on to our PTO. To think that you know the needs of the school more than someone that is there everyday including many weekends is quite presumptuous. Once again putting egos aside who is really benefiting from having an independent organization. If there is a harmonious setting then there is no need for it. I have seen the PTO work both ways and if the school has a solid volunteer basis then it will work either way with a president or committees. Just remember why we are there. It is to support not to divide. Good luck
Children First
IMO, an independent group is the only way to truly give parents a voice.
A parent group typically funds things that are a)over and above the school budget, such as playgrounds, additional computers, additional classroom resources, supplemental landscaping, supplemental field trip funds; b) small details that fall by the wayside when staff gets ' too busy', such as prizes for academic incentives; and c) social, community-building events that the school often can't use its funds for.
A principal should have enough going on where also being in charge of these types of things could be excessive.
I don't know if I was included in the 'lot of egos,' but in my case, the exact opposite is true. We are striving to clearly define roles and set up systems so that the group will continue to work as long as willing and competent leaders step up and replace those who must leave. The new leaders should have a really good idea of what they need to do, without shaking everything up and starting from scratch.
Our group has a system where any member -- parents, faculty, and support staff, can request the PTO make any kind of purchase. The requests are first run by the principal who may deem it inappropriate, then by the executive board who decides to either bring it to the next meeting or hold it. They may need more research before bringing it to the meeting. The request becomes part of the permanent record of the group, and will never leave the system unless withdrawn by the original member. Once the idea is brought to a meeting, the idea is assigned a priority, and when its turn comes up and the funds are available, it is purchased.
I do not agree with the idea that the principal inherently knows what will be best for the school. No single person should define what is best, which is why there should be discussion.
People (parents and teachers) are often intimidated by the thought of bringing new ideas to a principal. Using the PTO channel is less intimidating, we hope.
Before our PTO was established, we would have votes at meeting regarding where dollars should go. The principal would usually hold to those, but she strayed from them often enough where I started to feel like the group's opinion was not really taken seriously.