The End of the Bake
Sale
20 Steps for Major Fund Rasing in
Public Schools
Overview: Parental involvement is the most common form of "giving" at the school level but other contributors can play a significant role in providing support to schools. A majority of schools rely on parents, local businesses, corporations, and community-based organizations for support. Although not as prevalent across schools, students, philanthropic foundations, community members, professional associations, and city governments are givers (and often donate gifts of significant size).
The challenge of building new schools and modernizing existing ones offers the opportunity to enhance teaching and learning, and to strengthen communities at the same time. By initiating a thoughtful, inclusive school facilities planning process, school districts can incorporate diverse points of view, take advantage of the power and creativity of parent and business partnerships, enlist widespread community funding support, and create high performance schools that serve both students and their communities.
There is no precise formula for making this all happen, but the following 19 steps-and the action checklists that accompany them-provide the basics.
The
initial phase of
the planning process requires strong leadership and commitment, which
must come not only from school board members and school district
officials; it must come from concerned and active people and
organizations within the
community.
The best candidate to guide the work should possess a strong background
in planning; a good working knowledge of
current educational research and best practices; effective
communication skills as a listener, speaker, and writer; experience in
facilitating large group meetings; and a demonstrated ability to build
consensus. The candidate also must be skilled in analyzing and using
data.
STEP 4 Assembling the Core Planning Team. A core planning team of about a dozen experienced and respected leaders is needed to serve as the leadership backbone for the project through to its completion. For the team to succeed, it should include credible community members who represent the full breadth of opinion within the school district.
STEP 5 Organizing the Steering Committee.
One of the core planning team's initial tasks will be to organize a
steering committee.While this committee will vary in size according to
the makeup of the community and the school district, it should be large
enough-and broad enough in its thinking-to represent the interests and
resources of the entire community. Many successful steering committees
have been
comprised of a hundred or more educators, parents, students, and
representatives from local civic and business
organizations.
The steering committee ultimately will be responsible to the community
for developing the facilities master plan. Among its members'
most important roles will be to serve as key communicators between the
community and the committee itself.
STEP 6 Involving Students.
Ironically, students-the people with the largest stake in education and
those most directly affected by the learning environment-are the ones
most frequently excluded from decisions regarding its design. Leaving
students out of the planning process is a mistake.
Clearly they have a vested interest in the outcome and deserve a place at the table. Including students is not only the right thing to do, it is the wise thing to do.
STEP 7 Involving Parents. As with students, parents historically have been a greatly underrepresented constituency in the school design process. In fact, parents have perhaps been the most underutilized resource in American education. Three decades of research has established unequivocally that parental engagement has a significant, positive influence on students' academic achievement, behavior in school, and attitudes about school and work.Yet too often parents are not included as essential partners in the education of their children. Clearly, parents have a vested interest in decisions about all aspects of schooling, not the least of which are decisions about where their sons and daughters will spend their days. They deserve a place at the table from the outset of any planning activity.
STEP
8 Involving Educators.
The participation of a large contingent of educators in the facilities
planning process is critical to the success of any school design.
Although the need for participation may seem obvious, it has not been
common. In the 1950s and 1960s, an entire generation of open-plan
schools was designed and constructed with limited input from affected
teachers.
While there may have
been significant educational benefits in these open designs, their
potential never was realized because they were developed apart from
their users. Changing the configuration of the learning environment
without changing the practices of teachers and learners is like
changing one half of an equation without the other: The result is
imbalance.With open-plan schools, balance often was restored at
considerable expense by modifying the facilities rather than changing
instructional practices.
STEP 9 Involving Business. The involvement of corporations, businesses, and organizations representing businesses can enhance and legitimize the school facilities planning process.As primary "customers" for the "products" schools produce, businesses have particular needs and unique perspectives.Having businesses participate in your school's design process tells the community that supporting schools is good business.
STEP 10 Involving Senior Citizens. The design and planning of new schools should reflect two new realities: the need for life-long learning to keep citizens employed, productive, and engaged, and the coming demographic change, as the baby boom generation begins to retire. Beginning in 2011, the first wave of the 80 million Americans born between 1946 and 1964 will retire. The number of citizens over age 65 will more than double from 30 million to 70 million over the next 25 years (Sullivan 2002).
STEP 11 Involving Community Organizations and Government Agencies. Cultural and civic institutions can be important partners in planning school facilities. When organizations such as museums, libraries, zoos, parks, and hospitals join forces with schools, a community can leverage these resources to enhance student learning. The partnerships foster connections that increase institutional support at many levels.
STEP 12 Involving the School Board and
District Administration. The sanction of the school board is
vital to the success of
any school facilities planning process. Board members can use their
power and influence to bring the right players to the table, create the
best possible conditions for action, and leverage the necessary
resources to support the planning
process.
The school board's
involvement will vary from one community to the next. In some cases, a
board member may become
active on the core planning team and participate in all steering
committee sessions. In others, the board may appoint
a liaison to the steering committee or choose to hear only periodic
progress reports and wait to act upon recommendations from the
committee.
STEP 13 Building Common Understanding, Shared Beliefs, and a Collective Vision. The steering committee's first task is to develop a common knowledge base. Participants can begin by studying community demographic studies, summaries of student achievement data, and districtwide strategic plans. They can review base documents that govern the education of their young people, including learning goals, graduation requirements and state and national standards. This is also a good opportunity to survey the attitudes and perspectives of the community.Using such data, the committee will be able to create a school and community profile that includes general characteristics, strengths, limitations, and emerging issues.
STEP
14 Determining Educational Needs.
Once the collective vision has been successfully written, steering
committee members will be ready-and probably eager-to draft a wish
list. For such a list to advance the planning process, it must be
framed in terms of facilities needs. The list should be thoughtful,
strategic, and focused on the future.
STEP 15 Identifying Resources. At the same time the steering committee is analyzing facility needs, it should also be considering resources available to meet those needs. Many such resources will already be on hand at existing schools. Others may be located within the larger community. It is important that the steering committee consider both internal and external resources as potential solutions.
STEP 16 Developing Recommendations. After the steering committee has identified facilities needs and identified available resources, its next task is to prepare written facilities recommendations that match available resources to identified needs. Guiding questions for this phase of the work include: How can the school district and community work together most effectively to realize their collective vision for schools? In what ways can the school district and community combine forces to build on their strengths?
STEP 17 Communicating with the Larger
Community. The steering committee should have maintained
open
communications about the facilities planning process throughout its
duration.
Once the recommendations report has been issued,however, the steering committee will need to embark upon a deliberate and strategic effort to publicize the report's contents and rationale. The goal of this publicity is to foster community understanding of the recommendations, solicit feedback about them, and build community consensus.
STEP
18 Creating a Master Plan
The facilities master plan is the culmination of all the steps that
have come before. Before compiling the work products
generated by Steps 13 through 17, however, the steering committee must
carefully assess community feedback
received during Step 17 and make any adjustments to
the plan that it deems appropriate. That done, the committee
should
define action steps, determine timelines, and assign responsibilities
for achieving its recommendations. It should then prioritize the
recommendations, if this was not done during Step 16.
STEP 19 Implementing the Master Plan.
Completing a master plan is a cause for celebration because the
steering committee has accomplished its primary mission. But
implementing the plan-moving from vision to action-will be its true
test. Exciting plans are not enough. The hard work of the master plan
will not be beneficial unless the plan is implemented.
Step 20 Be Patient. Everyone
involved in the
planning process must understand that implementation requires time,
commitment, and oversight. Recognizing that it will take months or
years before construction work is completed, many steering committees
choose to stay in place throughout the process. When they do, their
focus will naturally shift to the new and equally critical tasks of
tracking progress and assisting the school board in its implementation
tasks.
Overall, school districts tend to attract resources from larger and more-organized groups, such as corporations, local businesses, and colleges and universities, as opposed to obtaining resources from individuals and smaller groups and associations, which was typical at the school level.
According to a Rand Corporation study - Private Giving to Public Schools and Districts in Los Angeles County: A Pilot Study, Rand Corporation 2001 - the nation's public schools have been under attack over much of the past three decades. A commonly heard criticism is that school performance, as measured by students' standardized test scores, has stagnated or declined over the years. At the same time, schools have failed to close the gap in achievement between the lowest-performing and highest-performing students. This situation exists despite increased resources for public schools and attempts to allocate resources more equitably.
Dependence on state support has created a number of concerns for the nation's schools and school districts. School finance reforms have led to increased decisionmaking at the state level regarding education at a time when governance reforms call for more local control. State decisionmaking, in turn, imposes constraints on local decisionmaking. Schools have become dependent on the state economy and must compete with other demands on state resources. In addition, state education funding over time has shifted toward a greater reliance on categorical (that is, restricted) funds and a lesser reliance on general-purpose (that is, flexible) funds.
Taken together, reforms in school finance and education governance have made securing private support for public education an important activity of many public schools and districts. While public schools and districts have always attracted private support, anecdotal reports and a limited body of documented research suggest they are now pursuing private support with increased sophistication and aggressiveness.
Major
gift fund
raising for capital projects at K12 public schools is spreading
throughout the United States and will become the norm in the 21st
century. Fund raising
in public schools is usually associated with projects that provide new
band uniforms or bleachers. In the past Americans, as individual
donors, expected their taxes to cover costs related to public school
buildings. They are unaccustomed to being asked for charitable
financial support, because some form of local elected or appointed
government, rather than a nonprofit board of directors, holds fiduciary
responsibility for the school.
Focus On Individual Giving. If your school's alumni have the same dynamics in place that a university usually has, such as a sense of allegiance, a pride in having gone there, a sense of gratification for the good education they received, then it doesn't matter if it is a junior high, high school or a university because the major gifts and planned giving process will work and your school could be sitting on millions of dollars in contributed income.
Project Appleseed recognizes that today's philanthropists are demanding a more active role in shaping the outcomes of their gifts, a result both of their entrepreneurial wealth and an emerging belief that institutions need to be scrutinized more closely. To fund the rebuilding and renovation of America's public schools, parents and schools must harness alumni - but how?
Project Appleseed
The National Campaign for Public School Improvement

Capacity Building for Your Schools
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administrators, school board members, parents, alumni and community
leaders with the information, planning and leadership on key activities
involving feasibility, capacity building, approval, and implementation.
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