I have been active in my childrens PTO's for many years now. The mission statement has always been, "...to benefit all the children of the school in the year in which the fundraising money has been raised"
We are in a low income area and it was very common for participation in the fundraisers to be 15% or lower. That means in our elementary school of 600 students, under 100 orders was common. It really didn't matter what we were selling; pies, t-shirts, catalogs, entertainment books, candles, etc.
Our best participation was chocolate roses that sold for a dollar and anyone who purchased at least one, was entered into a raffle for a gift card. Even with this, only about 30% of the students participated.
We always used the money to benefit the entire school with field trips, activities, guest performers and donations to the school. I always thought this is the way it should be and never questioned how the money was spent.
Now that I am involved in the middle school, the participation is even less. With 500 students, 45 (9%) orders was considered a good turnout.
I know times are tough, and many families have multiple children and activities that are all looking for money, but is it fair for kids that do not even try or give a darn to benefit along with those that try and care about making an effort?
Is there a better way to approach this, either at the elementary or middle school level?
I know when I went to high school, many, many years ago, different clubs and boosters that had fundraisers would keep track of individual accounts. Money you raised would go directly into your account and you would use that to pay for uniforms, trips, etc.
I don't think this would work for the elementary or middle school but I am at a loss for ideas.
Any thoughts or comments on how others handle this is greatly appreciated.
ps-sorry for the long post, but I wanted to give enough details.
Thanks.