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21. The Lightspan Network - Sw
Libraries washington Maps washington Military Schools washington Newspapers/Magazines washington Parochial Schools washington ptas/ptos washington School Media
http://www.lightspan.com/common/studyweb/sw.asp?target=http://www.studyweb.com/t

22. Questionnaire: Chris Simmons, School Board, At-Large - Loudoun Election - Electi
employment Defense Intelligence Agency, Bolling Air Force Base, washington, DC Previous I would look towards the ptas/ptos, HOAs, and elected County officials
http://www.alexandriagazette.com/article.asp?archive=true&article=40695&paper=79

23. Loudoun Endorsements - Loudoun Election - Election Guide 2005 - Connection Newsp
challenger Lori Waters, executive director of Eagle Forum in washington, is an And Radakovich, with her eight years of service on ptasptos, the Loudoun
http://www.alexandriagazette.com/article.asp?archive=true&article=40549&paper=79

24. PTOs Lure Parents Sick Of Split PTA Dues (washingtonpost.com)
ptos Lure Parents Sick of Split PTA Dues. By Amit R. Paley. washington Some communities, such as Montgomery County, also have a county council of ptas,
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A43260-2004Oct18.html
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PTOs Lure Parents Sick of Split PTA Dues
By Amit R. Paley Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, October 19, 2004; Page A09 Michele Foster had a simple recruiting pitch: Pay $6 a year to join the Parent-Teacher Association chapter at Desert Mountain School and thereby help improve the Phoenix elementary school. But the money's path was slightly more complicated and, to Foster, troubling. Last fall, the chapter with 270 members had to pay $1,080, more than half of the dues it collected, to state and national PTA offices.
Cindy Cummins, left, Michele Foster, April Fortner and Lisa Wheeler helped form a Parent-Teacher Organiztaion for Desert Mountain School in Phoenix. (Sherri Buzby For The Washington Post)
Introduction
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"It killed me," said Foster, then secretary of the PTA, whose son attends the school. "We were sending them money and not getting anything in return."

25. PTOs Gain Ground At Expense Of PTA
At Calvin Coolidge High School in washington, DC, Parent Teacher service provider for ptos, estimates that ptos generally outnumber ptas and, in some
http://www.nsba.org/site/view.asp?TRACKID=&VID=55&CID=682&DID=34824

26. New Hampshire (NH) Arts And Cultural Development Organizations
washington Valley Arts Association Pelham eBoosters Plymouth - Friends of the Arts National Conservation and Preservation Resources • ptas, ptos, PTSOs, Etc
http://directorynh.com/NHAssociations-Organizations/NHArtsCulturalDevelopment.ht
New Hampshire (NH) Arts and Cultural Development Organizations Online: An exhaustive list. General
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Search Tips Links NH Foliage Report NH Lottery NH Movie Guide NH Ski Reports ... Wedding Planner New Hampshire Arts or Cultural Development A Guide to NH Arts and Cultural Development Organizations Amherst - Northeast Cultural Coop Concord - NH Business Committee for the Arts (NHBCA) Concord - New Hampshire State Council on the Arts Concord - NH Humanities Council Concord - Strathspey and Reel Society of NH Durham - Durham Art Association Littleton - Arts Alliance of Northern NH Manchester - Art Builds Community! Milford - Keys Art Group Nashua - North Conway - Mt. Washington Valley Arts Association Pelham - eBoosters Plymouth - Friends of the Arts Portsmouth - Folk Horizons - Promoting folk arts Outside Searches: Discount Long Distance Discount Printing Email Services Fund Raising ... Web Site Hosting Page: 37-A NH General Organizations Adult Recreation Adult Service Adult Sports Arts or Cultural Development ... Buildings, Land or Property

27. New Hampshire (NH) Clubs And Associations For Adult Recreation Online: An Exhaus
washington Nordic Ski Club Northwood Granite State Land Rover and Preservation Resources • Patriotism Citizenship • Politics • ptas, ptos, PTSOs, Etc
http://directorynh.com/NHAssociations-Organizations/NHGenAdultRecreation.html
New Hampshire (NH) Adult Sports And Recreation Clubs Online: An exhaustive list. General
About Us

Add Your Site

Advertisers

Apartments for Rent
...
Youth Sports

Search Directory NH
Search The Internet

Use your back button to return! Resources
NH Photo Gallery

Other NH Sites
Search Tips Links NH Foliage Report NH Lottery NH Movie Guide NH Ski Reports ... Wedding Planner Advertising New Hampshire General Adult Recreation A Guide to Adult Recreation Organizations in New Hampshire Amherst - MOMS Club of Amherst Bedford - Bedford Neighbors' Club Bedford - Bedford Womens Club Bedford - NH Ski Club Brookline - New England Dressage Association Concord - Concord Model Railroad Club Derry - Greater Derry Track Club Derry - NH Flying Tigers Durham - Northeast Passage Franconia - Franconia Soaring Association Goffstown - Studio Potter Hanover - Dartmouth Outing Club Keene - Keene Amateur Astronomers Keene - Experimental Aircraft Association Chapter 1314 Keene - Keene Horseshoe Club Keene - NH Amateur Softball Association Londonderry - Aviation Association of NH Lyme - New England Sled Dog Club Manchester - Amoskeag Rugby Football Club Manchester - AOH - Division 1 New Hampshire Manchester - Argentine Tango NH Manchester - Granite State Senior Games Manchester - Manchester Athletic Alliance Manchester - New England Multi-Sport Manchester - NH Table Tennis Club Manchester - Southern NH Skating Club Manchester - Team Assassin Paintball Manchester - United Divers of NH Dive Club Merrimack -

28. The Herald - Local
The band is taking a trip to washington, DC. ptos Are they taxexempt? Some ptos and ptas are raising so much money that they need financial advice.
http://www.heraldonline.com/local/story/4146897p-3911744c.html
Place An Ad Got stuff to sell? Place it in The Herald Classifieds. Subscription Hungry for more than just news. Subscribe today! Early Classifieds Free Archives Coupons Early Ticket ... Member Center Quick Search: Current Archive HOME NEWS SPORTS OPINIONS ... LOCAL Updated: 09/27/05 Groups give district $1M boost
Schools depend on fund raising but seek more accountability

STORY TOOLBAR Email This Article Print This Story Speak Out! Subscribe To Print By Karen Bair The Herald
Parents have become so good at selling sodas, raffling motorcycles and cleaning stadiums that PTAs, PTOs and boosters clubs combined are providing about $1 million a year for Rock Hill's public schools. With cutbacks in state funding, schools have become increasingly dependent on money parents raise for the enrichment tax money can't afford. It also has fostered administrative problems: Fund raising has spiraled so much that district officials are not always certain where and how the money is being spent. Nor, sometimes, are some parents who devote countless hours to fund raising. Parent groups keep their own books on the thousands of dollars they raise, but from there the gifts enter a labyrinth. Some make donations to the school or to the athletic department, and others to the boosters clubs or to the specific activity they are supporting. Some buy items themselves and give it to the school or department, making the gift part of the district inventory. But what if the gift doesn't meet state standards for schools?

29. Parents Abandon PTAs, Form PTOs
Parents abandon ptas, form ptos 10/23/2004 1200 AM. AMIT PALEY, washington POST; Duluth News Tribune Michele Foster had a simple recruiting pitch Pay $6 a
http://www.parentsunitednetwork.org/printview/28Oct20048.html
Parents United Network Home News Archive Print View Parents abandon PTAs, form PTOs
10/23/2004 12:00 AM AMIT PALEY, WASHINGTON POST; Duluth News Tribune
Michele Foster had a simple recruiting pitch: Pay $6 a year to join the Parent-Teacher Association chapter at Desert Mountain School and thereby help improve the Phoenix elementary school. But the money's path was slightly more complicated and, to Foster, troubling. Last fall, the chapter with 270 members had to pay $1,080, more than half of the dues it collected, to state and national PTA offices. "It killed me," said Foster, then secretary of the PTA, whose son attends the school. "We were sending them money and not getting anything in return." So this year, parents at Desert Mountain decided to disband the PTA and form a Parent Teacher Organization, a nearly identical group except that members of PTOs pay no dues to a state or national organization. Desert Mountain is one of thousands of PTA groups that have voted to leave the national association in recent years. The PTA's national membership has declined steadily from a high of 12.1 million in 1963 to 5.9 million last year. Fewer than one in four American schools with grades K-12 has a chapter, according to National PTA spokeswoman Jenni Gaster Sopko.

30. M.O.M. (Mom On A Mission)
They held their first meeting in washington DC, expecting only about 200 people. that as parents we need to give our school ptas and ptos (Parent Teacher
http://www.portlandfamily.com/col4.html
M.O.M.
Mom on a Mission
Melinda Thompson for Portland Family PTA: more than
just milk and cookies
Did you know that kindergarten classes, mandatory immunizations, hot-lunch programs, child labor laws and the juvenile justice system were all created by the National Parents Teachers Association?
For over a century the national PTA has provided information, support and resources to families. Found-
ed by two women as the National Congress of Mothers in 1897 in Washington DC, Alice McLellan Birney and Phoebe Apperson Hearst created the foundation on which modern-day PTAs were built.
Birney and Hearst’s primary focus was the health and education of children. Amazing that two women would initiate a nationwide movement — at a time when WOMEN DID NOT EVEN HAVE THE RIGHT TO VOTE!
Apparently these women cared more about children than the risk of being ostracized for bucking social mores. Clearly they found the job of advocating for children more important than a vote. They believed it was up to moms to take action to eliminate the threats that endangered children. They held their first meeting in Washington DC, expecting only about 200 people. Over 2,000 people showed up, all of whom were committed to children. Educators, laborers, legislators and parents laid the groundwork for identifying problems and devising strategies to solve them.
By the 1920s, PTA was beginning to work with state Legislatures to create reforms in response to PTA initiatives. National PTA introduced member training programs. A PTA in Every School became the national goal in 1922.

31. O: Church Fund Raising
Oberto Sausage Company Beef jerky for fundraising. Kent, washington Operation Bookworm - ptas/ptos can offer Operation Bookworm books as a way of
http://www.fundraisingweb.org/alpha/O.htm
All Fundraising Companies Directory
Return Home Fundraising Ideas Index Free Fundraising Information
Fundraising Companies - O
- Are you tired of the same old fund raiser year after year? Why not try selling authentic Danish kringles? [Racine, Wisconsin] Oberto Sausage Company - Beef jerky for fundraising. [Kent, Washington] Ocean Harvest Seafood Company - Ocean Harvest Seafood provides those who love quality fresh seafood. 50% of membership, 5% of sales. Perfect fund-raiser. [Alpharetta, Georgia] - We sell our fine fundraising candy products to the fund raising community. [Oceanside, California] Odour Free Rooms, Inc. - Support your team, and upset costs with our easy and fun sports fund raiser. We can help your teams raise thousands of dollars. [Toronto, Ontario, Canada] Official Fundraising - Provides Hershey fundraising products to schools and youth leagues across the United States. [Farmers Branch, Texas] Oil for Kids SM - When was the last time you paid $10 for an oil change? Now your group can offer 4 oil changes for $40 … $10 per oil change and $150 in real savings! 50% profit, free sign-up, no cost. Profit $5,000 for selling 250. Profit $10,000 for selling 500! Call toll-free 800-457-7670 or sign-up online. [Bellevue, Washington]

32. Www.dailyrecord.com - Local News - Back To School
These groups are not ptas, ptos or Home and School Associations. Two other towns, Butler and washington Township, recently formed foundations, as well.
http://www.dailyrecord.com/backtoschool/04/
var gnsSite = "dailyrecord";
OM = "News"; Article Search
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/* You may give each page an identifying name, server, and channel on the next lines. */ var pageName="" var server="" var channel="" var pageType="" var pageValue="" var prop1="local-news" var prop2="" var prop3="" var prop4="" var prop5="" var prop6="news" var prop7="local_news" var prop8="" var prop9="" var prop10="" /************* DO NOT ALTER ANYTHING BELOW THIS LINE! ***************/ var s_code=' ' Published in the Daily Record Sunday, August 8, 2000 Christopher Flores, left, and Andrea Leonard of the Normandy Park School make cookies at Viva the Chef in Morristown. Photo by John Bell/Daily Record
Morris education foundations fund enrichment programs districts can't afford By Laura Bruno
Daily Record
Decked out in chef's hats and aprons, students from the Normandy Park School were doing math and learning about teamwork, but they didn't even realize it. They were having too much fun to notice. They were measuring out ingredients, rolling dough and cutting out cookies as part of a cookie business. One afternoon in May, shortly before schools let out for the summer, the group of fourth- and fifth-graders were on a field trip to Viva the Chef, a Morristown-based cooking school that allowed students to make a mess as they created their product.

33. Www.dailyrecord.com - Local News - Back To School
These groups are not ptas, ptos or Home and School Associations. Two other towns, Butler and washington Township, recently formed foundations, as well.
http://www.dailyrecord.com/backtoschool/index.htm
var gnsSite = "dailyrecord";
OM = "News"; Article Search
Advanced Search

/* You may give each page an identifying name, server, and channel on the next lines. */ var pageName="" var server="" var channel="" var pageType="" var pageValue="" var prop1="local-news" var prop2="" var prop3="" var prop4="" var prop5="" var prop6="news" var prop7="local_news" var prop8="" var prop9="" var prop10="" /************* DO NOT ALTER ANYTHING BELOW THIS LINE! ***************/ var s_code=' ' Published in the Daily Record Sunday, August 8, 2000 Christopher Flores, left, and Andrea Leonard of the Normandy Park School make cookies at Viva the Chef in Morristown. Photo by John Bell/Daily Record
Morris education foundations fund enrichment programs districts can't afford By Laura Bruno
Daily Record
Decked out in chef's hats and aprons, students from the Normandy Park School were doing math and learning about teamwork, but they didn't even realize it. They were having too much fun to notice. They were measuring out ingredients, rolling dough and cutting out cookies as part of a cookie business. One afternoon in May, shortly before schools let out for the summer, the group of fourth- and fifth-graders were on a field trip to Viva the Chef, a Morristown-based cooking school that allowed students to make a mess as they created their product.

34. PTA
ptos Lure Parents Sick of Split PTA Dues By Amit R. Paley washington Post Staff Writer ptas Lose Ground as ptos Gain Saturday, October 16, 2004
http://www.parentdirectededucation.org/PTA-PTO.htm
Parent-Directed Education Florida PTA
Link to Florida PTA.
http://www.floridapta.org/

National PTA
Link to National PTA.
http://www.pta.org/index.stm

PTOs Lure Parents Sick of Split PTA Dues
By Amit R. Paley
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, October 19, 2004; Page A09
Michele Foster had a simple recruiting pitch: Pay $6 a year to join the Parent-Teacher Association chapter at Desert Mountain School and thereby help improve the Phoenix elementary school. But the money's path was slightly more complicated and, to Foster, troubling. Last fall, the chapter with 270 members had to pay $1,080, more than half of the dues it collected, to state and national PTA offices. "It killed me," said Foster, then secretary of the PTA, whose son attends the school. "We were sending them money and not getting anything in return." So this year, parents at Desert Mountain decided to disband the PTA and form a Parent Teacher Organization, a nearly identical group except that members of PTOs pay no dues to a state or national organization. Desert Mountain is one of thousands of PTA groups that have voted to leave the national association in recent years. The PTA's national membership has declined steadily from a high of 12.1 million in 1963 to 5.9 million last year.

35. Region 10
ptas in washington have a Legislative Program and carry out the Legislative program within washington State PTA sets us apart from booster clubs and ptos, by the
http://w3.wastatepta.org/regions/region10/re10.htm

Region 1
Region 2 Region 3 Region 4 ... Region 15
Region 10
WSPTA's Region 10 covers a portion of Pierce County. It consists of the Clover Park, Peninsula, Steilacoom Historical, Tacoma and University Place School Districts. Region Meetings Saturday, October 29, 2005
9:00 AM-Noon
Tacoma Elks Club
1965 S Union Ave, Tacoma
Download details and registration form
Region Newsletters
September/October 2005
June 2005

March/April 2005

January/February 2005
...
April 2002
Director's Message Welcome to returning and new officers, and all the PTA members in Region 10! I am so happy you found this page and will be able to utilize the many wonderful resources of WSPTA's website during the school year. Whatever you need to know, this is a great place to get answers. Over 100 years old, PTA is the nation's original parent group in schools, supporting and encouraging millions of parents to get involved in their children's education We are the nation's premier resource for parent involvement. It is a national, grassroots, not-for-profit organization. PTA is run by volunteers, and led by volunteers, and we are accountable to our members, parents and schools. We give parents what they want a way to help their children succeed Your role in PTA is so important! You directly impact the lives of children and your community. As a PTA leader, you will be given information and opportunities, support and training. Take advantage! Get off to a great start by making Best Practices your goal. We want you to be successful!

36. Washington State PTA - Every Child. One Voice.
ptas have membership fees and a portion of those fees are sent to the washington State PTA ptos often do not have formal memberships or membership fees
http://w3.wastatepta.org/structure/organization.htm
Home WA State PTA About WA State PTA Contact Us Frequently Asked Questions Legislation Meetings Membership Enrollment People Programs Regions Resources Scholarship Foundation
Board of Directors
Organization
State Office

Office Directions
...
Non-Traditional FAQs
Organization
Local PTA Unit: A PTA (or PTSA) unit is a local, self-governing membership association whose main purpose is to serve the needs and desires of its members in promoting the health, welfare, safety and education of children and youth in home, school, community, and place of worship. A local PTA unit is the basis of the grassroots involvement of PTA, because all members of PTA belong to a local unit. The real strength of PTA lies in the 146,000 local unit members working within the various school communities of the state for children and youth. A local PTA unit is chartered by and affiliated with the Washington State PTA. PTA Council: A PTA council is a group of local PTA units working together to coordinate the efforts of those units. The role of a PTA council is to provide advocacy training, support, coordinate, facilitate, and serve the needs of the local PTA units which are members of that PTA council.

37. Your Child Nutrition ESource: Members Only - School Foodservice & Nutrition Arch
can work to build relations with parents through their ptas and ptos. president to ASFSA’s annual Legislative Action Conference in washington, DC “It
http://member.asfsa.org/sfnarchives/0208/partners.asp

Contact ASFSA

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Site Map
Log in to ASFSA.ORG ... Members Only
August 2002 Partners Together Always Putting parent-teacher organizations to work for you. By Mark Ward, Sr. Studies confirm that parental involvement is a vital key to a child’s education. Yet even moms and dads who keep up with activities in the classroom are often less informed about what’s happening in the lunchroom. “And if that’s true, it’s a shame,” believes Nancy Carter, SFNS, director of food and nutrition services for Kingsport (Tenn.) City Schools. “Good nutrition is also integral to the education process. The more that we can turn parents into partners, the better for the kids.” In finding ways to make parents more aware of the school foodservice program, directors and managers are limited only by their imaginations. But high on any list would be working through existing channels for parental involvement—and in most districts that means the local parent-teacher association (PTA) or organization (PTO). PTAs are the official state, district and local affiliates of the National PTA, while PTOs are the common designation for local organizations that choose not to be affiliated with any national group. In either case, “If you want to tap into parental involvement through your PTA or PTO, then you yourself have to get involved,” advises Cheryl Sturgeon, director of school and community nutrition services for Jefferson County (Ky.) Public Schools. “I’m a life member of our district PTA, and a lot of my onsite staff are members of their schools’ local PTAs. So we attend the monthly meetings and, as the foodservice department, often offer to host them. And that’s helped us build a productive relationship.” Sturgeon says the time commitment required is not an undue burden. “It’s mostly going to once-a-month meetings,” she explains, “and I see that as part of my job. Besides, it’s not any more than what the parents themselves are being to asked to do.”

38. The Cranky Professor: Bowling Alone Or Bureaucracy?
This washington Post story takes the considerably more interesting approach that it Many ptas have tranformed into Booster Clubs for ptos so they did
http://crankyprofessor.com/archives/000733.html
The Cranky Professor
You type, and I tell you why 4,500 years of written history shows you're wrong. Main
October 19, 2004
Bowling Alone or Bureaucracy?
I've read stories (not that I'm going to bother to google any) that cite the decline in PTA memberships nationwide as a symptom of American disengagement. This Washington Post story takes the considerably more interesting approach that it signifies disgust with sending more than 50% of local dues to state and national organizations, in the first example given. In other words, the decline in PTA memberships isn't parent-by-parent decline, but school-by-school withdrawal into local activism that is less interested in whatever national advantage the PTA promises. Posted by crankyprofessor at October 19, 2004 05:17 PM
Comments You are correct. Many PTAs have tranformed into Booster Clubs for PTOs so they did not have to send as much money to National PTA. At out local public elementary school the fundraising is run through the Booster Board, even though we have retained a PTA (for now). Many of the moms and dads volunteer a lot of time and money to our school to replace everything that the School Board took away (art, music and a sports coach) Interestingly, we found out that you can negogtiate the percentage fee local PTAs must send to national. Maybe if the PTA had made this better known they could have stopped or slowed the number of PTAs transforming themselves into PTOs

39. US Freedom Foundation - PTA's Lose Ground As PTO's Gain
ptas Lose Ground as ptos Gain The ParentTeacher-Association traces its history back head of the Education Policy Institute (EPI) in washington , DC An
http://www.freedomfoundation.us/pta_s_lose_ground_as_pto_s_gain
PTA's Lose Ground As PTO's Gain
David W. Kirkpatrick Senior Education Fellow
PTAs Lose Ground as PTOs Gain
The Parent-Teacher-Association traces its history back to 1897. Its membership peaked at a bit more than 12 million in 1962. Today it is about half that but that, and other information about the PTA is largely unknown because the media virtually ignore it except for occasional coverage of a meeting.
An exception is Charlene Haar, head of the Education Policy Institute (EPI) in Washington D.C. An Institute survey found that, fortunately for the PTA, 80% of parents with kids in school were unaware of national PTA positions. More than half said they would be less likely to join the PTA if they knew it opposes parental choice through school vouchers which it does. Further, when a state or national PTA convention adopts a position local chapters must endorse it or remain silent.
The PTA itself shows no independence. It is arguably an arm of the major teacher union, the National Education Association (NEA), and of the Democratic Party. Some say that on education positions, the Democratic Party is an extension of the teacher unions.
Even without the unions, PTA independence would be difficult, at least in large public schools. The relatively few parents who become PTA members do so for only a few years. Career teachers may be active for 30 years or more. If necessary to defend their, or their union's, interests, teachers easily outnumber parents at meetings.

40. TSPR Dallas Independent School District - Chapter 3
Booker T. washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts Advisory, that a higher percentage of district schools may have ptas or ptos that are not
http://tgtp.org/tspr/dallas/ch03c3.htm
Texas School Performance Review Dallas Independent School District
June 2001 Chapter 3
COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT This chapter reviews Dallas Independent School District's (DISD) communications and community relations efforts in four sections:
A. Organization and Management B. Internal and External Communications C. Community Relations
Part 1 Part 2 Part 3
D. Broadcast Services
C. COMMUNITY RELATIONS (PART 3) In addition to DISD's 16 Community Network advisory groups and task forces monitored by the Community Relations Division, the district has 41 districtwide advisory committees ( Exhibit 3-22 ) that are loosely monitored by several different departments. Some of the advisory groups include district employees, some include community members and others include a combination of both. They cover a wide variety of topics and interest areas. Exhibit 3-22 presents a listing of DISD's districtwide advisory committees. Exhibit 3-22
DISD Districtwide Advisory Committees
Name Type Purpose Meeting Schedule Number of Members Expiration of Term District Community 75/25 Waiver District To review and approve requests for campuses to deviate from the staffing ratios of the Desegregation Court Order.

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