Title: Fundraising
1Fundraising
- EDIT 6300 Collaborative Problem
- By
- Lauren Anderson, Cliff Garrett,
- Kristen Garner, Lisa Stanton, and Oreta Taylor
2In the coming decades fundraising will literally
make the difference between mediocrity and
excellence for many of our libraries. B.L.
Hazard
3Contents
- Rationale
- Reasons to Fundraise
- History of Funding
- Methods of Fundraising
- Action Plan
- Sources
4Rationale Why is more funding needed?
- Information of every type and sort is now
available to anyone with a computer. School
libraries have always been the place to go when
students had questions that needed to be
answered. However, in the past, that search was
hampered by connectivity, storage space, limited
research materials, time itself. Now,
wondrously, those limits have been taken away and
school libraries are once again the place to go
when you need to know. One negative with all
the new technology available to help our students
complete inquiry-based work and research is that
the equipment and maintenance of such equipment
is very expensive. We must be willing to search
out, locate, and buy whatever is needed for our
students our future. There must be funding
available to respond to our rapidly changing
world and the needs of our students.
5Reasons for Fundraising
- Federal spending on libraries annually is only 54
cents per person - A 2002 poll conducted for the ALA found that 91
of respondents expect libraries to be needed in
the future - Libraries in general are the 1 point of access
to the Internet for Americans without computers
at home or work - Research shows that the highest achieving
students attend schools with good library media
centers
6Reasons for Fundraising(Continued)
- Higher than average student reading scores
correlate with higher funding for school
libraries - Reference librarians answer more than 7,000,000
questions weekly - Students visit school library media centers
almost 1.5 billion times during the school year - Libraries are centers of learning that encourage
new insights and critical thoughts
7Reasons for Fundraising(Continued)
- School library programs
- are close partners with educational programs in
every discipline - promote information literacy an absolute
necessity for successful integration into todays
information-driven society - provide curriculum support for all teachers
- can be centers for after-school remediation
programs - provide free access to important databases that
most students would not be able to utilize
anywhere else - educate students in the use of significant and
vital software tools - provide up-to-date materials aligned with state
and federally-mandated curriculum - encourage a life-long love of reading
8Funds are Available Through Many Sources
9History of Funding Federal Funds
- Elementary and Secondary Education Acts Title VI
(ESEA) - Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA)
- America Reads / Reading Excellence Act
- E-rate
- Improving Literacy Through School Libraries
Program (part of No Child Left Behind Act)
10Federal Funds Elementary and Secondary Education
Acts Title VI (ESEA)
- 1965
- Provides funding for impoverished schools,
districts, communities - Passed in 1965 as part of Lyndon Johnsons War
on Poverty - 1974
- Amended which then combined school resources and
educational materials testing, counseling and
guidance and financial assistance for the
strengthening of instruction - Essentially took funding away from media center
purchases
11Elementary and Secondary Education Acts Title VI
(ESEA) Continued
- 1994
- Reauthorized/amended by the Improving Americas
Schools Act of 1994 - Includes support for library services and
instructional and media materials - Provides for technology needed to implement
programs under this act - Many school systems use these funds for
purchasing library books
12Federal Funds Library Services and Technology
Act (LSTA)
- Administered by the Institute of Museum and
Library Services (IMLS) - Visit http//www.ala.org/ala/washoff/
- WOissues/washfunding/LSTAfact.pdf
- for more information
13Federal Funds Improving Literacy Through School
Libraries Program
- Part of No Child Left Behind Act
- Administered by the U.S. Department of Education
in 2001 - The first program specifically aimed at
upgrading school libraries since the original
school library resources program established in
1965 - The only federal program exclusively for school
libraries - Purpose --- promotes comprehensive local
strategies to improve student reading achievement
by improving school library services and
resources - Eligibility --- only local education agencies
in which at least 20 of students served are from
families with incomes below the poverty line are
eligible to apply
14Other Federal Funding
- America Reads / Reading Excellence Act
- Makes appropriations for childrens literacy
- E-rate
- Common name for the Universal Service Fund for
Schools and Libraries
15Other Programs/ Initiatives
- Library Power
- Sponsored by the DeWitt Wallace-Readers Digest
Fund - 45 million dollars provided to 19 communities in
U.S. - 96 of public schools have library media centers
- 80 of private schools have library media centers
- 68 of schools with library media centers had
state certified media specialists - 50 of these schools only had part-time
librarians
16Other Programs/ Initiatives
- Library Power (continued)
- Program ran for three years
- Program had six goals
- A full-time library media specialist
- Improved library media collections with matching
money from Library Power - Flexible access that encouraged student use of
the library media center whenever needed - Professional development for library media
specialists, faculty, and administrators - Improved library media facilities (to accommodate
multiple uses and to be more inviting to its
users) - Teams at both the building level and the
site/community level that focused on planning and
implementing Library Power goals
17Local Funding Trends
- Local Funds vary by region
- Some schools do not receive local funding while
others receive 1.5 million - The median amount is 6,300
- Urban areas receive more funding than do suburban
schools with rural schools receiving the least
amount - Spending varies by region
- Urban schools spend the least amount per student
followed by suburban schools with rural schools
spending the greatest amount per student - Elementary schools have the highest budget
- Mostly due to greater community/parent support at
this level of education - Interesting Note Families spend an average of
443.77 on back-to-school items while librarians
have a median budget for books per pupil of 8.86
18Fundraising Methods Business Partners PTA
- Business partners
- Access to business partners is usually controlled
by administration - Once again, you need to sell yourself to your
administration - PTA
- If you can persuade your PTA that you are
important, then they will help with bookfairs and
other fundraisers, such as bake sales
19Fundraising MethodsTitle One Funds
Adopt-a-Book
- Title One Funds
- These funds are controlled by the administration
- Ask for a portion of those funds
- You may have to make a presentation it depends
on the dynamics of your school - In my experience, you can usually get smaller
amounts, such as 1000 - Adopt-a-Book
- Create a list of books you would like and ask
individuals, business partners and others to fund
the purchase of these books - Remember to ask for enough money to pay for
processing - You might ask for 25 a book
- Put a bookplate in the books that says donated
by..
20Fundraising MethodsBook Fairs
- Book Fairs
- Scholastic (http//www.scholastic.com/bookfairs/)
and Troll (http//www.trollcarnival.com/) are two
of the main companies that offer book fairs - Both use books from many different publishing
companies to offer a wide selection of choices - Advantages
- You can very easily earn several thousand dollars
during the week of the book fair - The amount of money that you can receive for the
time (usually one week) and money spent (for
promotion) is better than many methods
21Fundraising MethodsBook Fairs
- Book Fairs (Continued)
- Disadvantages
- Requires a lot of organization
- Times must be coordinated with the company
- Volunteers must be found and organized
- A large area for the fair is required
- If the fair is held in the media center, other
services may be hindered - May not make much money without promotion
- May need to work late so parents can shop
- Setting up, maintaining, and packing up displays
may be time consuming
22Fundraising MethodsOnline Business Partners
- Partnering with Online Businesses
- By 2004 it is expected that 50 percent of
Americans will shop online - Several brokers such as for-schools.com and
Schoolcash.com have retailers sign up with their
site and then they register the schools - For every purchase that is linked to the school
(through parents, students or employees who are
registered) the company promises to rebate a
percentage back to the school
23Fundraising MethodsOnline Business Partners
- The percentage of the original purchase that is
received by the school is between 2 and 20
percent but averages 5 percent - The owners of the fundraising sites generally
will give the school 75 percent of the refund and
keep 25 percent - For example, on a 100 purchase from J.C. Penney
the retailer will refund five dollars. The
company running the site will keep 1.25 and give
the school 3.75 - The refund company usually sends a check to the
school four times a year
24Fundraising MethodsOnline Business Partners
- Partnering with Online Businesses (Continued)
- When parents shop online there are usually two
ways to register - They can either just register as the school they
are supporting or they will have to fill out a
form giving lots of personal information - It seems best if schools register with several
sites therefore giving parents a larger shopping
selection - Some examples of the retailers that have linked
up with Internet fundraisers are L.L. Bean, J.C.
Penny, and Toys R Us - The difference between failure and success is in
promotion
25Fundraising MethodsOnline Business Partners
- Partnering with Online Businesses (Continued)
- Disadvantages
- When people buy products over the internet they
are taking away the tax base that pays for many
of the items that the schools need - Many counties have a special one penny sales tax
to build or remodel their schools - You also take money from other types of county
and city projects that rely on the sales tax
26Fundraising MethodsGrants
- Grants
- There are several parts to the grant writing
process - 1 --- Find your grant
- There are a number of sites to look at and
researching them all is time-consuming - In general, funders are more willing to fund
programs than to fund equipment or supplies.
Thus in order to get books for your media center
you may have to invent a whole program, such as a
program to encourage boys to read - Many grants have time-limits. Check this first.
If this years grant deadline is past, you can
always file it away for next time - There are websites that list grants. There are
newsletters that list grants. You can also go to
the corporate website of your favorite business
and see if they have a grant program
27Fundraising MethodsGrants
- Grants (Continued)
- In general there are four different kinds of
grants - Foundations
- State government
- Federal government
- Coporate
- Start small
- 2 --- Fill in the grant
- Depending on the grant, this can take time
- Once you figure out the basics you will be able
to reuse this information - Follow the format the grantor asks for
28Fundraising MethodsGrants
- Grants (Continued)
- The funder will evaluate your proposal based on
- What you are proposing to do
- How you plan to do it
- When you plan to do it
- How much it will cost
29Fundraising MethodsGrants
- Grants (Continued)
- Steps
- Figure out a need and a project that will solve
it - Find out if there are administrative hoops to
jump through, like getting permission from your
principal - Gather support and a team
- Research potential grant sources
- Contact funders for guidelines, or download them.
Some grants want you to send in an RFP, or
request for proposal and then they send you the
application information - Draft a proposal
- Get someone else to proof it
- Break up the monotony of words with appropriate
graphs, charts and pictures
30Fundraising MethodsGrants
- Grants (Continued)
- 3 --- Send it off
- Certified is good if it goes thru snail-mail
- 4 --- Wait
- Remember that only one in three grants gets
funded - 5 --- Rejoice at getting the grant or decide to
do better next time - Have a party for stakeholders
- Thank everyone involved
31Fundraising MethodsGrants
- Grants (Continued)
- 6 --- Implement the grant
- Keep records
- Take pictures
- Publicize it
- 7 --- Report on your implementation
- Most grantors want a report at the end of the
funding period. Make it a nice report, and you
might be able to get more money - Find out what the reporting requirements are and
follow them. Find this out at the beginning of
the project not a month before the end
32Fundraising MethodsGrants
- Grants (Continued)
- Here are some sources of grants for media centers
- http//www.ala.org/ala/aasl/aaslproftools/resource
guides/libraryfunding.htm --- This is the ALA
website. It lists places to get grants, and has
some articles on writing grants. - www.laurabushfoundation.org --- This foundation
gives money to schools with high numbers of lower
income children. The money can only be spent on
books, not AV materials and not AR tests. You
can buy processing with it - www.nwas.org/solhirsch.html --- 500 grants to
improve the education of students in meteorology.
The teachers selected will be able to use the
funds to take an accredited course in atmospheric
sciences, attend a relevant workshop or
conference, or purchase scientific materials or
equipment for the classroom - http//www.ezra-jack-keats.org/programs/minigrants
.htm --- 350 grants for reading promotion
events - www.f3program.org --- Foundations for the Future
has held two summer grant-writing workshops. Cost
30. Well worth the money. They also do monthly
technology workshops that can be used for PLUs - www.grants.gov --- Site that lists grants
- www.techlearning.com/resources/grants.html ---
Another site that lists grants - http//eschoolnews.org/erc/funding/ --- Another
site that lists grants
33Fundraising Methods Other
- Other in-school funding
- Sometimes there are other budget lines that can
be tapped - For instance, if there is literacy money you may
be able to get money to order books - If there is professional development money, you
may be able to use that to order teacher
magazines and books, which will free up money for
books for students.
34Action Plan
- Write down a list of goals that you wish to
accomplish through fundraising - How much money do you want to raise?
- How much time are you willing to invest in the
project? - Choose the fundraising method that seems to best
suit your needs, abilities, and goals - Research the method thoroughly
- Compare the advantages and disadvantages
- Develop a plan
- Organize
- Plan ahead
- Have a back-up plan if something goes wrong
35Action Plan (Continued)
- Implement the fundraiser
- Evaluate your results
- Was it a success or failure?
- Was it worth the time and effort?
- What can you do better next time? (Consider
getting input from outside sources such as
teachers and parents) - Determine whether another fundraiser is needed
- Do you have the time and resources to try a
different fundraiser? - Was enough money raised?
36Sources
- Brewer, S. Milam, P. (2005). SLJS tech survey
part two. School Library Journal, 51(10), 48-49. -
- Colorado researchers will repeat landmark study
showing benefits of school libraries. (1998).
School Library Journal, 44(11), 15. -
- Elementary and Secondary Education Acts Title VI
(ESEA). Retrieved November 12, 2005 from
http//cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/burns3/m
edialib/docs/esea1965.htm -
- Glick, A. Olsen, R. (1998). School libraries
may lose funds. School Library Journal, 44(3),
92. -
- Harris, T. (2004, August). School funding
opportunities. School Executive Magazine, p.19. -
- Hazard, B.L. (2003). Online fundraising at ARL
Libraries. The Journal of Academic
Librarianship, 29(1), 8-15. -
37Sources
- Institute of Museum and Library Services. (2000).
Museums and libraries an investment in learning.
Retrieved November 16, 2005, from ERIC database. -
- Library Power Information. Retrieved November 12,
2005 from http//www.ala.org/ala/hrdrbucket/1stcon
gresspro/1stcongressissueseducation.htm -
- Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA).
Retrieved November 12, 2005 from
http//www.ala.org/ala/washoff/WOissues/washfundin
g/LSTAfact.pdf -
- Lowe, K. (2003). Providing curriculum support in
the school library media center. Knowledge Quest,
32(1), 46. -
- Miller, M.L. Shontz, M.L. (2003). The SLJ
spending survey. School Library Journal, 49(10),
52-59. -
38Sources
- Nutt, Pam. (2005). Free cash giveaway! A cant
miss guide to writing winning grants. School
Library Journal, 51(2), 42-44. -
- Olsen, R. Glick, A. (1998). U.S. reps push for
school library funds. School Library Journal,
44(9), 95. -
- Quotable facts about Americas libraries. (2002).
Retrieved November 16, 2005 from the American
Library Association Web site http//www.ala.org/
Source/quotablefact.pdf. -
-
- Seydel, A. (2000). Fund-raising while you shop a
look at fundraising sites on the Internet.
Multimedia Schools, 7(4), 26-31. -
- Wilson, R. (2004). Finding funding for a quality
video collection. Teacher Librarian, 32(1),
50-51.