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"Ads on tests add up for teacher" - USAToday.com

Yankees338

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I saw this article online the other day during school. It might have been on Yahoo's homepage.

Interesting idea. I like the creative thinking.

By Greg Toppo and Janet Kornblum, USA TODAY


Tom Farber gives a lot of tests. He's a calculus teacher, after all.

So when administrators at Rancho Bernardo, his suburban San Diego high school, announced the district was cutting spending on supplies by nearly a third, Farber had a problem. At 3 cents a page, his tests would cost more than $500 a year. His copying budget: $316. But he wanted to give students enough practice for the big tests they'll face in the spring, such as the Advanced Placement exam.


LITERACY: How teacher who couldn't read hopes to help others


"Tough times call for tough actions," he says. So he started selling ads on his test papers: $10 for a quiz, $20 for a chapter test, $30 for a semester final.

San Diego magazine and The San Diego Union-Tribune featured his plan just before Thanksgiving, and Farber came home from a few days out of town to 75 e-mail requests for ads. So far, he has collected $350. His semester final is sold out.

FIND MORE STORIES IN: Thanksgiving | Bronx | Washington-based | National Education Association | CraigsList | San Diego Union-Tribune | Advanced Placement | Commercial Alert | Rancho Bernardo | Farber | Robert Weissman | DonorsChoose.org | Nike.

That worries Robert Weissman, managing director of Commercial Alert, a Washington-based non-profit that fights commercialization in school and elsewhere. If test-papers-as-billboards catches on, he says, schools in the grip of tough economic times could start relying on them to help the bottom line.

"The advertisers are paying for something, and it's access to kids," he says.

About two-thirds of Farber's ads are inspirational messages underwritten by parents.
Others are ads for local businesses, such as two from a structural engineering firm and one from a dentist who urges students, "Brace Yourself for a Great Semester!"

Principal Paul Robinson says reaction has been "mixed," but he notes, "It's not like, 'This test is brought to you by McDonald's or Nike.' "

To Farber, 47, it's a logical solution: "We're expected to do more with less."

The National Education Association says teachers spend about $430 out of their pockets each year for school supplies. This semester, Christine Van Ruiten, a teacher at E.C. Reems, a charter school in East Oakland, has spent $2,000. She scours Craigslist for free supplies and posts requests to DonorsChoose.org, which matches teachers with donors.

Founded in 2000 by Charles Best, then a Bronx teacher, DonorsChoose has funded about 65,000 projects totaling $26 million. Best calls it "a more dignified, substantive alternative for teachers than selling candy door-to-door — and certainly than selling ad space on final exams. That's crazy."
 
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rcardin

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saw that briefly on the news last night. Very ingenious!

The sad part is that as teachers we have to stoop to advertising on a test just to get the supplies we need in the classroom?

Why? Because every child is college bound:mad:

It is sad when teachers cannot get the supplies they need to teach our children.

I could go on and on about wanting to do something in the classroom that might make a difference and not having the 600-700 dollars to initiate a new idea. I had to petition the PTA for 500.00 to buy 15 cheap web cameras to teach stop motion video. The money was approved in October but I am still waiting on a letter saying I can spend it and get reimbursed.

You do what you can do with what little money they give you, to educate the masses who will take care of you in your elder years.

semi-rant
 

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