PTOs, PTAs: Would You Pay to Volunteer For Another Group? Our week in review
PTOs adapt for working-parents population: Several PTO volunteers from Boyertown, Penn., said leaders are coming up with clever ways to boost involvement because so many families are busier than ever before. One idea: host a Saturday afternoon event (and make it compelling and fun, like a Mad Hatter Tea Party) to get more working parents to attend with their kids. Also, one PTO leader said it’s critical to get the principal to support the PTO’s work and promote its cause to parents, especially new ones who sometimes need coaxing to get involved.
Social media impact: Some PTOs are on the fence about Facebook and Twitter, wondering how these online sites can really help them. One PTA recently gave the lowdown on how Facebook helped it get the word out on a district budget hearing, enabling lots of parents to participate. “We wanted to make sure people got the word out to other schools,” said Kiki Flaig, the PTA president at Ruckersville Elementary School, in the news article. “We just started putting information out there.” Within a week of posting, more than 1,500 people had visited the Facebook page of this PTA from Ruckersville, Va.