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Archive for the ‘Family Events’ Category


Parent Groups in the News Round-up 11/19/10

Friday, November 19th, 2010 by

Does my heart good to read about so many family nights in the news this week! Here are the highlights:

What family fun nights does your school do? We’d love to hear about them in the comments below, on our message boards (add your ideas to the family night ideas thread) or on Facebook.

If you are new to family nights be sure to check out our School Family Nights page. Hint: our free kits take the hassle out of organizing an event from scratch.

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Video Blog: Get Healthy School Kids Gift Packs

Friday, November 12th, 2010 by

A trend is emerging in schools that is very encouraging: parent groups are advocating for healthier schools. Whether it’s getting kids more active, promoting healthy eating, or sponsoring healthier family events and fundraisers, PTOs and PTAs are making it happen. Our Healthy School Kids program arms parent groups with articles, tools and products to help with these initiatives. In this video Tim talks about our Healthy School Kids program.

Here’s where you can find the articles that Tim references:
http://www.ptotoday.com/healthy-school-kids

Here’s how to sign up for the Healthy School Kids program: http://www.ptotoday.com/healthy-school-kids-samples

Space is limited so be sure to jump on this today.

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Video Blog: The Importance of an International Night

Thursday, November 4th, 2010 by

“We all should know that diversity makes for a rich tapestry, and we must understand that all the threads of the tapestry are equal in value no matter what their color.” ~ Maya Angelou

Wouldn’t it be great if our PTOs, PTAs and school events had equal representation from every ethnic group in our schools? But, it’s harder than you think, isn’t it? Language barriers and cultural differences often prevent many families from connecting to the school community. This week Tim talks about an event that is a great starting point for reaching out to minority groups at your school and forging new connections.

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Parent Group in the News Round-up 10/15/10

Friday, October 15th, 2010 by

No shortage of inspiration in this week’s news.  Here are my take-aways from this collection of articles:

  • Not only is a jog-a-thon a great fundraiser but it’s also a terrific way to encourage families to get moving and make healthy choices.
  • Family Fun days are a excellent way to build community while showing parents how to make learning more fun.
  • Never, ever give up. This parent group’s turn around story offers hope for groups with low involvement.
  • Sometimes some of the most basic things require a parent group’s attention… in this case, a PTO rallied support for a walk-to-school program.
  • Parent groups have an opportunity to influence their community in their green living habits. Kudos to this PTO for challenging families to go “garbage free.”
  • Think beyond fundraising- think pink! This PTA organized a pink day to highlight breast cancer awareness.
  • Always love coming across articles about events that were inspired by our PTO Today Magazine… this giant hay maze sounds like a fun, fall event!

Hope you found something to inspire you. Have a fabulous weekend. Don’t forget to send me a link to any articles about your parent group!

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Trend Watch: Families Sprucing Up Schools

Thursday, October 14th, 2010 by

As school districts have tightened their budgets, PTOs have pitched in to landscape school grounds and make improvements to buildings during family workdays. Borrow ideas from these parent groups that put their own spin on events to work for their school communities.

All-Ages Project
The Gullett Elementary PTA in Austin, Texas, renovated the school courtyard to create a butterfly garden and a picnic area. Students and parents joined in on community workdays to move old fencing and prep the area for construction of a stone walkway in the shape of a snake. Kids too young for that work made birdhouses out of recycled milk cartons. After construction, students painted stripes on the snaking path.

Cutting Costs
To save money on a landscaping project, the Andrew Cooke Magnet School PTO called on home gardeners to bring cuttings from perennials to a workday at the Waukegan, Ill., school. More than 200 students and parents turned out to plant gardens and paint hopscotch squares, planters, and picnic benches.

Online Appeal
To find help for a summer workday, the Chelsea (Ala.) Middle School PTO went to where students are: Facebook. The PTO put up a day-before notice with a particular request for high schoolers needing community service hours.

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Blog Give-Away: Free House Cleaning & Lysol Gift Pack

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010 by

Well, cold and flu season is upon us. In anticipation of the sniffles and coughs we’ve launched a new Healthy School Kids page with lots of practical tips, tools and insight on keeping kids healthy during the school year.

To take the sting out of the season we are running a blog give-away. How would you like to win* a gift certificate good towards a professional house cleaning and a gift pack chock full of Lysol cleaning products? Cool, right?!

Here’s how the blog give-away works:

  • Tell us what steps your group is taking to help keep kids at your school healthy this year and you could win* this cool blog give-away! Just post your comment on our PTO Today Facebook page for a chance to win.
  • If you’re not sure how to begin, just start with an old fashioned fill in the blank: Our parent group is keeping kids healthy this school year by ____________.
  • Get posting, because this is the perfect giveaway package for your group to offer to busy parents at an upcoming auction or health and wellness event!

* The Healthy School Kids blog drawing runs from October 6th through October 20th, at 11pm EST. At the end of that time period all Facebook fans who wrote a healthy kids idea on our wall will be entered into a drawing to win a professional house cleaning gift certificate, and a gift pack full of Lysol cleaning products. One entry per person and one name will be drawn randomly from all the comments.

Disclosure: Lysol is a sponsor of the Healthy School Kids program.

UPDATE: October 21, 2010- The winner of the Healthy School Kids give-away is Jamie Anderson. Congrats Jamie! Thank you to everyone who participated and shared their tips. Be sure to visit our Healthy School Kids page to sign up to get in on FREE healthy school kids samples for you to share with your parents at school events, and to pick up some great tips.

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Date Book: Halloween

Friday, October 1st, 2010 by

Not sure what your parent group should do for the Halloween holiday? Consider these activities for a scary good time:

Costume swap
A few weeks before Halloween, plan a time when families can trade their old princess and superhero outfits for something new to their kids.

Pumpkin carving contest
During any October event, invite families to carve (or simply decorate) pumpkins together. Then display the spooky creations at school.

Trunk or treat
It’s trick-or-treating right in the school parking lot. Families pop open their trunks, which are decorated according to a theme. Costumed kids collect goodies at each car.

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Parent Groups in the News Round-up — 9/24/10

Friday, September 24th, 2010 by

applesWell it’s officially autumn now! Happy Friday to all our hard-working friends. Just did a scan of the news this week and a few headlines caught my eye. Perhaps these parent group stories will inspire new events or ideas for your group.

Walk-a-thon raises $12,179

2,500 volunteers get things done on Day of Caring

PTO car show growing in popularity

Fun fest brings families together

Kamp-out in Redlands offered stars, tents and s’mores

Have a fabulous first weekend of fall! As always, if your PTO or PTA is in the news let us know.

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Video Blog: Top 3 Tips for Growing Parent Involvement

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010 by

If you asked me what one question we get asked the most by parent group leaders, I would say without hesitation: “How do I get more parents involved in our parent group and school?”  This is the topic of our video blog this week. Tim talks about his top 3 things PTO or PTA leaders can do to encourage more parents to volunteer and get involved this school year.

As Tim mentions in the video, we have tons of information about these tips on our site. Here are some links to get you started:

http://www.ptotoday.com/pto-today-articles/article/120-make-your-family-night-a-winner

http://www.ptotoday.com/sfn/SFN_homepage_parent.php

http://www.ptotoday.com/pto-today-articles/article/816-what-i-know-about-fundraising

http://www.ptotoday.com/pto-today-articles/article/1004-9-tips-to-increase-fundraising-sales

http://www.ptotoday.com/pto-today-articles/article/1009-is-your-pto-fun-enough

http://www.ptotoday.com/boards/25-involvement-ideas-and-challenges/151885-volunteer-fun-factor-do-you-have-it

We wish you the best of luck this new school year. Hope it’s the best year yet for parent involvement!

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PTO Today Rock Stars: Barb R & Rachel

Thursday, September 9th, 2010 by

Woot!  Excited to be putting up our very first “Rock Star” blog post. I will doing these periodically to feature the best content from PTO Today Rock Stars in our message boards. Here are two incredibly helpful posts from two terrific community members.

In the Fundraising Forum Rachel offered details that add up to one marvelous math-a-thon:

We ran a Math Challenge this year rather than a math-a-thon. The idea was that it’s hard to get kids excited about doing pages upon pages of problems and the idea was first to get kids excited about math (this school’s math scores are not to be envied and the attitude of the teachers, parents, and students about math in general was pretty poor). We had three levels: 4K-5K, 1-3, and 4-6. In hind sight we should have had a different level for each grade because skills are so different at these ages. Students worked in groups of 4-5 students. It lasted for one hour. At the start time, the principal made an announcement that it was to begin. Each team received their packet.

There were the 1 point questions – simple, quick, varied between math facts and trivia like what is Pi and there were between 75-150 depending on the level.

Then there were the ‘challenge’ questions. These took longer and there were about 10 (worth 5pts each) – word problems, logic based, needed more thinking and generally had multiple answers required.

Every 10 minutes (there were 5), the principal came over the loud speaker and gave a different ‘movement’ question. They varied in difficultly based on grade level and the student needed to go to one part of the building to obtain information and then perform a math funtion (one example was go to the front of the building and find the year the building was built and the number address of the school – for 1-3 they had to add the numbers together, for 4-6 they had to multiply them). These were also worth 5pts each and every team member had to have a chance to do one.

All the volunteers got a t-shirt, all the students got a smart smencil (although we had trouble with ours so I would necessarily recommend unless you have plenty of times (many weeks) to deal with smencils if they are incorrect). It was a fundraiser but this school it terrible with fundraisers so it didn’t do very well as a whole school. However, the students that did participate in the fundraising portion did VERY well collecting pledges.

We set it up like any catalog fund-raiser – a certain dollar amount raised gets a certain incentive so it was a pledge drive for the donor but the students got more than just ‘knowing they helped their school.’

$25 t-shirt like the volunteers (kids loved them because they were different, a great color rather than grey, and the logo was professionally designed – donated).

$50 a math drill calculator

$100 Equate math board game

$125 extra Equate tiles

$250 electronic handheld math game (either stand alone or a cartridge for a handheld system like DS – they choose)

$500 either zoo pass or family four pack to a local water park (both about $100 value)

Prizes were cummulative so you could get some serious stuff if you tried. Some did! Next time I would have smaller prizes for the inbetween amounts but that is based on your school (this one is very much ‘what do I get’ and fewer-better doesn’t resonate, they want more more more).

Teachers were excited about it but didn’t help. Some of the lower grades did because they needed an adult for each team but the upper levels used it as a planning period and offered no help with the organization of the event. It was a lot of work but the school buzzed with excitment the whole hour and the kids loved it. They were very excited to hear their scores and results as well, announced over the course of a week to build excitment since there were classroom prizes as well.

Good luck – math is a great thing and I wish fewer people were scared of it!!

In the School Family Events Forum Barb R offered some excellent advice to a community member thinking about organizing an art show:

Our PTO pays for the entire art program at our school. As part of that one of the fundraisers is focused on art and we ALWAYS do an art show at the end of the year to highlight the kids accomplishments.

We normally chose one week night, normally a Tuesday or Thursday, in April or May. The show runs for about 2 hours or less. We post the art work in the hallway by the child’s classroom, normally 3 to 4 pieces, depending on how/what was done. The easiest way is to put the child’s name on a card at the top and all of the art work under it so it is easy to identify per student. The kids normally do 6 or so projects but normally only the best 3 or 4 are posted. There are signs put up with each grade level telling what the art is or why it was done. Last year was the first year that we gave ribbons for 1st, 2nd, 3rd place per classroom. A grand prize and a 1st, 2nd, and 3rd (I think) were then chosen from those pieces and highlighted at the front of the entrance on a special table. (They were later framed and hung in the school lobby. The ribbons are just paper clipped to the edge of the picture for simplicity sake. We normally offer some light refreshments. (Last year were pretzels, m&m’s and lemonade… some years have been cakes and fruit, it varies.) And we have also started involving different musical (instrumental) artists in the community and have them come in and provide atmosphere music for the event. One year it was the kids for the talent show, another year a few kids from the high school orchestra. It varies, depending on timing, etc.

One year we also had an “exhibition guide” which shared information about the type of art, classes, etc. So that can always be another option.

Congrats Barb R & Rachel and thanks for being team players.  We appreciate each and every one of the questions and comments posted in our community. It’s a lot of fun connecting with all of you and even more fun keeping an eye out for “rocking” posts!

NOTE: If their posts have inspired you to take on an art or math program at your school, check out these links:

http://www.ptotoday.com/pto-today-articles/article/88-how-ptos-foster-math-skills

http://www.ptotoday.com/answers/question/12414-sunshine-math-club

http://www.ptotoday.com/answers/question/11263-family-math-night

http://www.ptotoday.com/pto-today-articles/article/1018-pto-program-puts-art-into-action

http://www.ptotoday.com/pto-today-articles/article/147-bringing-art-appreciation-to-students

http://www.ptotoday.com/pto-today-articles/article/853-make-it-an-a-plus-year

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