Only fund-raising thing I ever look forward to is Girl Scout Cookies, and we miss out since we don't know any GS families.
Too bad you don't live near us. We'd hook you up.

Only fund-raising thing I ever look forward to is Girl Scout Cookies, and we miss out since we don't know any GS families.
We have 2 fundraisers during the year and they send those *&^$% scholastic book flyers home once a month trying to get us to buy books all year.
Good luck. I would think for a private school they would just raise tuition $100 and get rid of the fundraisers. I would sign up for that one.![]()
My MIL is a teacher, and she spends her own money every year on school supplies for her classroom. My FIL usually goes to Sam's Club and just buys everything, and it's really expensive even at club prices. In general, men don't look at prices, they just throw everything in the cart and that's that.
I'm sure he has spent hundreds every year.
I started buying things for her when it goes on sale, we get the Sunday paper and I look through it all for Back to School sales, usually Walgreens has the best doorbuster deals. And Office Depot and Staples also sometimes have good sales.
She buys 5 different color 2 pocket folders for all the kids in her class, plus tons of paper, pencils, mechanical pencils, markers, highlighters, sharpies, composition notebooks, glue, rulers, etc, etc.
I had bought so many supplies one year, I spread it out on our kitchen counter and took a photo, I paid about $30 for nearly $200 of supplies.
Folders were on sale for .05/ea. at Walgreens, some highlighters for .09/ea., multipacks of mechanical pencils for .20 a pack of 5, pencils .19 a pack of ten, etc.
It is upsetting that the OP got taken advantage of. They should really tell people what they are buying, it's a hard pill to swallow when you get ripped off. It really stinks. You would think the school would be honest, saying it only costs "a little more" is really dishonest.
I think you missed the original poster's point.
They charged her $90 for a "school supply kit" that was worth maybe $25.
She isn't complaining about the cost of the supplies, she is unhappy about getting ripped off. Where did the other $65 go? Why did they not disclose this was a solicitation for a donation?
I'm sure most parents want to make their own decisions about what additional funds they contribute in the form of a donation or fund raiser, rather than being tricked into making a "contribution" under the guise of purchasing needed supplies.
The fund-raising must be really profitable to the companies running them, I wonder what real benefit the schools are getting for all the trouble. If we had kids, I wouldn't let them go door to door trying to sell stuff. I remember when I was in elementary all the stupid fund-raising BS, and my dad would end up peddling the wares at his work, where I'm sure co-workers felt obligated to buy the garbage, and ultimately how much does the school even get?
Only fund-raising thing I ever look forward to is Girl Scout Cookies, and we miss out since we don't know any GS families.
You don't have to buy books from the scholastic book flyers. IF you choose too, your child's teacher earns points that he/she can use towards books for the classroom. I spent 12 years teaching first and second grade. I purchased many books myself from the flyers to use in the classroom. Then I used the points I accrued combined with the points parents accrued to order even more books for my class. I was moved to 5th grade four years ago and am starting over.
I'm a mom and a teacher. I buy school supplies for my children as well as for my own classroom. I spend WAY more on my classroom than I do for my own children.
To the original poster: you got taken for a ride by your school! I get fundraisers, but that's a ridiculous price for those items not to mention a ridiculous list for K. There's no way they should ask for some of those quantities. Maybe these supplies are going to last until your child completes 2nd grade...![]()
I have mine rip out the ten pages they used and reuse the notebook next year. Older DS is in middle school and can reuse some of his binders too. No such luck with his agenda binder, which he carries everywhere and doubles as a hall pass. We went through two of the $9 heavy duty binders last year just for that. I buy supplies year round, especially hen the spiral notebooks are on clearance at Target.
Thank you for what you and your mom do. I grew up in a community where at least half the children could not afford school supplies and back then we didn't have Wal-Mart with the good sales. I feel so lucky to be able to kick in a large bottle of hand sanitizer and some extra folders or whatever.
Welcome to Catholic School and their ripoffs!!!!
I can assure you, that list would have easily been bought at WalMart for $30 tops. (probably more like $25 with the school sales)
Steer clear of their fundraisers. My "fave" is the one where they sell dollar store crap for $10 or their "Raffles" where the same people always just happen to win (the ones where the parents are always up the principal's butt)
I had my daughter in Catholic school for 5 years: K thru 4th ONLY because we were in a bad school district. I finally moved and she is now in public school. BEST move I ever made and her educational experience is so much better now. Don't believe the hype that your child is getting a better education in Catholic school --- they're definitely not.
Instead of writing all that information on the front of notebook. Use a 2" x 4" white address label and write it on there. That way next year just put another one on top of that one.
Wow. Do parents complain this much about the cost of their kids' sports team fees and equipment or is it just school supplies? For those who do not participate in school fundraisers - do you also refuse to support fundraisers for sports teams and activities like cheerleading? I'm curious.
School supply lists get crazier here with every passing year! It is a huge complaint of mine..... Retailers sell notebooks that the kids want, BUT oh no we must all be cookie cutter and have red for this subject, green for that. We all know that what works for organization for one person doesn't for another, so why can't kids do their own thing? The joke is that I KNOW my son will not use some of the required binders at all & it will have NO impact, other than the money I will be missing from having purchased them! Huge ease of time and money. We will also end up with the 10 pages used in 70 sheet notebook phenomenon; still have some we are using up from 2 years ago! I hate this time of year!!!
I don't think you can generalize either way. Some are better, some aren't. I moved my 7th grader from a fairly well-respected public district to a Catholic school and I can say with 100% confidence that she is getting a better education there. Her class size is less than a quarter of the size of her public school classes, and her teachers are wonderful about working with her at her own pace which is something she'd never get in a class of 30+.
Our school also doesn't have a lot of fundraiser expectations. Parents are required to put in a certain amount of volunteer time to help run community fundraisers (bingo is the biggest, followed by Lenten fish fries) but the only selling fundraisers are activity specific - last year the 8th grade chose to sell pizza kits last year to offset the cost of their class trip, and the middle schoolers sold pies from a local company to help fund winter camp. A nice side effect of that is when it is just the kids from one class/activity/team that chooses to sell, there's a lot less competition rather than every kid in the whole town selling the same thing (which is the case for the public elem PTA fundraisers).
That's what we started doing a couple years ago. That way if the folders are in good enough shape or the notebooks are mostly unused we can reuse them.
Absolutely.
I hate fundraising in general - you pressure your friends and neighbors to buy overpriced crap for your school/organization to get a small percentage. In almost every case you're better off just making a direct donation, and that's what we do except for certain fundraisers where the product actually provides a value. Right now there are two fundraisers we do: DS's football program sells discount cards - local businesses opt-in, usually with a 10% discount offer, and the team has the list of participating businesses printed up on a credit-card-sized plastic card that has the team schedule on the reverse. Those I'll sell. For $10, the buyer gets 10% off at many of the most popular mom-and-pop places in town, and it is almost all profit to the team (after the cost of printing is covered). And my daughter sells Girl Scout cookies, because as anyone with a scout knows people look forward to that sale all year long. All of the other fundraisers we skip - I'd rather write a check for $50 than sell $100 worth of overpriced chocolates and wrapping paper for the school to see the same benefit.
As far as supplies, sports are nothing like school lists. I've never, in 10+ years as a sports mom across 7 or 8 different sports and two communities, had a coach specify a particular brand or color of anything, nor have I had any coach request parents supply anything that isn't actually used. And that's what annoys me about school supply lists - the buying things that aren't used or are hardly used and the very, very specific requests that can often be hard to find (at least if, like us, you don't have big-box stores nearby).
DS will be in K this school year at a Catholic private school (not that the latter makes a difference). In the Spring (March, maybe?) we were urged to utilize School Tool Box to purchase the pre-packaged school supplies. We were told they would be delivered to the classroom by the first day of school. The appeal was that it was convenient and we were told "it's a little pricier than paying in stores, but not by much."
So we decided go this route, even though the new supply lists had not been finalized yet. The cost was around $90.
Now that the lists are out, this is what my NINETY DOLLARS paid for (1st number denotes quantity):
SUPPLY LIST
(4) - Crayola Washable Markers Conical/Broad Tip Assorted Colors 12ct
(15) - Elmer's Large Glue Stick Washable Purple, Dries Clear (EACH)
(5) - Pure'n Gentle Baby Wipes Fragrance & Alcohol Free Resealable Refill (no tub)
(3) - Kleenex Facial Tissue Medium Box
(4) - Crayola Crayons 24ct
(1) - 4-Pack 2-Pocket Folder Poly w/out Clasp (RD,BL,YL,GN)
(1) - 2-Pocket Folder Poly w/out Clasp Orange
(2) - Fiskars Scissors Blunt 5"
(2) - Elmer's Washable School Glue White 4oz
(2) - Dixon Ticonderoga Pencil #2 Yellow Sharpened 12ct
(1) - Sealable Storage Bags Sandwich
(1) - School Box (9Lx6.5Dx2.5H)
I'm estimating that at most, these items would cost $30 total. UGH.![]()
Wow. Do parents complain this much about the cost of their kids' sports team fees and equipment or is it just school supplies? For those who do not participate in school fundraisers - do you also refuse to support fundraisers for sports teams and activities like cheerleading? I'm curious.[/I]
YES!!!!!!!!!!! I do complain as much about both! LOL My DD is in cheerleading/dance/gymnastics, AND Girl Scouts. My boys play football. They all go to school
I used to be the fundraising chairperson for our elementary school, even though I rarely sold anything outside of DH and I. We both have huge families with a LOT of neices and nephews that are around my kids' ages. We all learned a long time ago that if sister A bought from sister B, and sister B bought from sister A, and sister D bought from sister A....well, you can see where this is going. We would be buying from one another's kids all year long. That's silly. So we decided a long time ago that we would not ask each other to buy anything from each other's kids' fundraisers. I do have to note, however, that Girl Scout cookies are the exception. My DD happens to be the only girl in the entire family right now that is in girl scouts, and GS cookies sell themselves, so I do put a facebook message out to families every year so anyone who wants to buy them can message me with their order. We do not ask individual family members directly. DD sold 112 boxes last year.
On to football and cheer - one of the differences between activity fundraising and school fundraising is that activity FR is MANDATORY. I hate that!!!!!!!!! But, my kids will not get their equipment until we have paid the fundraising fees. This year, we had to sell discount cards. Local businesses participate in giving discounts (like a BOGO deal on pizza, or 10% oil change, get a free sub with purchase of another, etc). We sell each card for $20. The problem I have with the cards, is that the participating businesses are VERY local, and we have no family where we live, so the cards are of absolutely NO value! I cannot sell them to people who won't be able to use the discounts! Ugh. Each one of my kids (all three are in the same league) had to sell a minimum of 4 cards, which was $240 out of my pocket. I was Not Happy At All about paying another $240 on top of the $375/each, and other incidentals that come with football/cheer leagues. And we are stuck with 12 cards that cost $240....we have "tried" to use the deals on purpose, and we are currently a whopping $16 closer to to recouping our money. I have spoken with the league board about my concerns and they are considering a buy-out option for next year - I'd of rather paid the $240 straight to the league instead of paying for the cards and the league only getting 1/2 of the money.
I'm obviously not happy about fundraising in general, and if it is not mandatory, I sometimes do it and sometimes opt out.
What I really hate, however, and I have a reason for where I'm coming from on this, is public school "registration fees". We now live in Illinois, and have to pay $100 registration fees every summer for each child, just to get them registered for school! We are originally from Michigan, where a teacher couldn't even REQUIRE a pencil or sheet of paper (requests only!), but here in Illinois, we pay $300 a year just to get our kids registered for public school, and then have the required school supply list. I understand it, and everyone around here doesn't even question it, much less sympathize with me LOL, but since we came from a state that doesn't allow this, it blew my mind that we have to pay to register our kids for public school!
We even do not do the restaurant night fundraisers. Here the organization usually gets 10% of the receipt. I take look at the menu, estimate the cost of what our bill would be, and write a check for 20% (least amount we normally tip). Organization gets double money and we save $$$.
What I really hate, however, and I have a reason for where I'm coming from on this, is public school "registration fees". We now live in Illinois, and have to pay $100 registration fees every summer for each child, just to get them registered for school!
That's crazy! How is it handled for families who just don't have the money?