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Advertising for students: Schools use radio, TV, billboards to lure 'customers'

Thu., May 24, 2007

Michael Barlow has been told by the professionals that he has a knack for writing radio spots. Like the one that begins "Parents: Discover one of the best-kept secrets in Oakland County. It has lots of new, affordable housing and it’s in a jewel of a district called the Hazel Park Schools."

Both Detroit Public Schools and the Michigan Association for Public School Academies use television advertising to promote their programs. One DPS campaign features student chefs, dancers and mechanics, as well as the student shown here in a science program. More recent DPS ads show district graduate Michael Roberts, above left, now a financial planner. MAPSA television spots include former Detroit Lions wide receiver Freddie Scott, above right, who says, “As parents in Michigan, we all have a right to choose.”

Radio ads like that one, plus Hazel Park Schools’ direct mailings, newspaper advertisements, flyers and brochures, may be among the reasons the district has brought in more students through schools of choice than it has lost, although it’s difficult to assess, Barlow said.

But even though Barlow believes the advertising gets results, he doesn’t particularly like having to do it. Schools-of-choice agreements and competition from charter and independent schools have forced Hazel Park and other districts into advertising campaigns, he said. Barlow would prefer to spend that time in his main role as director of curriculum for the school district.

"It has caused districts to devote a portion of their revenue to competing with each other," Barlow said. "I’m in favor of competition … but schools might be better suited to be focusing on improving academic achievement."

Other administrators in competitive areas like southeast Michigan also have turned to advertising as a way to attract students — and the state aid that follows.

School districts across the state, and nationwide, are using conventional means of advertising to help spread the word and attract students to their services.

"We’re not a monopoly any more. Competition is intense," said Lekan Oguntoyinbo, spokesman for Detroit Public Schools. "There are all kinds of options out there now. To keep our customer base, we have to be out there delivering our message unfiltered."

"Customer base," "market share" and "zone advertising" are not familiar — or comfortable —terms to many school officials, an advertising consultant told Michigan Education Report.

"You’re selling education, and that’s difficult for educators to deal with. It’s not how they’re trained to think," said Robert Kolt, president and CEO of Kolt Communications, an Okemos-based company that has worked on occasion with school districts. Kolt also teaches advertising at Michigan State University. "Colleges have always marketed themselves, but to K-12 it seems uncomfortable."

Radio, television and newspaper ads, plus fliers and brochures, are some of the tools schools are using to promote themselves. Highland Park Schools went a step further in the summer of 2006 when it sponsored a "mobile enrollment" campaign by sending a motor coach sporting a school banner to various parks and playgrounds throughout the Detroit area, offering enrollment information. Earlier this year, the district paid for billboard space one block outside its own boundaries, inside the Detroit Public Schools district.

"It’s an investment. We regard it as that," school spokesman Greg Byndrian said of the district’s $93,000 marketing budget. "You don’t have to attract very many students to recoup that."

Since school districts receive about $7,000 per student in state aid, attracting a dozen students would pay for the advertising in Highland Park. The Hazel Park School District’s annual marketing budget is about $48,000, according to Barlow, while Detroit Public Schools allocates $500,000 a year, Oguntoyinbo said.

"The marketing campaign is all-encompassing," Oguntoyinbo said. "It’s not just advertising. It’s brochures. It’s community outreach. Last year we threw in another component — customer service."

The customer service money was spent on training staff in customer service skills, since the front office workers in any given school are often the ones who make the largest impression on parents, he said.

Kolt said that advertising should be viewed as just one tool in a larger public relations effort.

"Sometimes the most important thing is not to invest in advertising, but just to communicate with parents."

One of the effects of spending money on public relations is that it forces schools to "disclose and defend what they do," Kolt said. "Nothing sells itself, and educational institutions realize they need to promote their own programs."

Promote is the key word. Most school districts say they limit their advertisements to pointing out their own strengths, not other schools’ weaknesses. Portage Public Schools, for example, has more than doubled the amount it spends on "image" advertising in local Chamber of Commerce and realty publications.

The increase, from $1,000 to $2,450, is in response to the Kalamazoo Promise, offered in neighboring Kalamazoo Public Schools, according to Tom Vance, community relations manager for the Portage school district. Funded by anonymous donors, the Promise offers free college tuition to Kalamazoo Public Schools graduates who meet certain criteria. The Portage district supports the Promise as a way of strengthening the community overall, Vance told Michigan Education Report, but at least 50 students have shifted from Portage to Kalamazoo to take advantage of the offer. Most of those students already lived in the Kalamazoo district, but were attending Portage schools, according to Vance.

Portage also buys a weekly full-page advertisement in the Portage Gazette during the school year, which it uses to promote news and feature stories about the district. The cost is $21,000 annually, down from $40,000 a few years ago when the district purchased the space year-round.

"Overall our communications spending has gone down over the past few years, although we’ve adjusted some methods and targeting," Vance wrote in an E-mail to MER. "Our main strategy for maintaining and recruiting students is to tell our story of academic excellence, since we’re in the top 6 percent of high-achieving districts in Michigan."

In Hazel Park, Barlow said he focuses the advertising on things like the district’s free all-day kindergarten, free athletic programs and being a "hometown, caring district." He also has made appeals to the area’s ethnic communities by putting up posters written in Chinese, Arabic, Spanish and Korean in area restaurants and churches. To the south, Highland Park capitalizes on its Career Academy, which offers a wide variety of career and technical programs.

"That’s certainly been a very big draw for us," Byndrian said. Enrollment figures show that nearly 1,600 students who are assigned to the Detroit Public Schools district attend schools in Highland Park. "We don’t engage in bashing others," he said. "We stress the positive."

Media buys are not for every school, however. Dr. Stephen Evans, superintendent at the Pontiac Academy for Excellence, a charter public school, says that he believes radio and television advertising would be "a big waste of time." But his school does send fliers and brochures to households within a five-mile radius, prints promotional posters in English and Spanish, and asks every vendor that visits the school to walk away with literature to distribute. Evans also personally visits local Head Start programs to tell them about the charter school. Still, "I think the biggest thing that has brought students here is the quality program."

The Academy is located in the lowest socioeconomic neighborhood in the city. Community resources are limited, he said, so he focuses on "the kind of program that would facilitate inner-city needs," like before- and after-school activities and a Reading Recovery program. Parents are invited to become involved in technology classes.

"Word of mouth has been the biggest thing," Evans said. The Academy’s enrollment has grown from an initial 25 students in the year 2000 to 1,150 this year. According to the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, Pontiac ranks fourth in the country for market share captured by charter schools. While about 5 percent of Michigan students overall attend charter schools, in the Pontiac area the number is 20 percent, based on 2005-2006 enrollment.

Farther north in Michigan, the manager of one outdoor advertising firm says he has not seen an increase in K-12 school advertising on billboards.

"We’ve had it for years around here," said Doug Elchuk, vice president and general manager of the Saginaw office of Lamar Advertising. His office serves 23 counties in the middle of the state. Some school districts in his region do buy billboard space, typically to congratulate students for achievements in sports or extracurricular activities, he said. Lamar itself donates free space to school districts at times as a public service.

"School districts are like anybody else," he said. "If they can do things that make them look good, they will."

Rather than putting advertisements in front of them, parents would be better served if all schools — private, public and charter — focused on providing quality programs and on making it easier for parents to obtain information and compare schools, said Dan Quisenberry, executive director of the Michigan Association of Public School Academies.

"The first step is to put together a good program".

Dan Quisenberry
Michigan Association of Public School Academies

"We as a society need to get better information to parents," he said. "What we have found is that parents want a quality school. They want to know what you are doing and how."

To that end, MAPSA and the charter school community developed a Web site where parents can look up information about charter, private, parochial and conventional public schools, at www.school4me.org. "If parents are well -informed and know how to pick schools, our (charter) schools will do just fine."

Quisenberry also says that not all districts take the positive-only approach to advertising. Detroit Public Schools sponsored radio and television ads in recent years centered on the theme "Come Home to Detroit Public Schools," which, he said, made misleading claims that charter schools do not serve special education students and do not hire certified teachers.

"Charter schools make a lot of promises, but they don’t deliver. Many of their teachers aren’t certified," one television ad said. Developed in 2005-2006, the ad can still be viewed at the Detroit Public Schools Web site. Despite that ad and others, Quisenberry pointed out, DPS enrollment continues to decline while charter enrollment in Wayne County has increased.

"Bashing everybody else is not going to work," he said. "The first step is to put together a good program. Parents, by word of mouth, will find out about it."

The most recent DPS television advertisements do not remark on charter schools. Most feature graduate Michael Roberts, a financial planner who says, "Detroit Public Schools prepared me for everything. Come home to Detroit Public Schools." Radio spots encourage students to stay in school and graduate.

Asked about the change in focus, Oguntoyinbo said, "I don’t know that there was a specific reason. We decided that perhaps it was more important to advertise certain things." The district is trying to sell parents on the wide variety of academic and career programs that Detroit offers, he said, like programs in culinary arts, robotics and aerospace.

When he gets complaints about the money spent on marketing, Oguntoyinbo said he responds, "Look. Everyone’s advertising. Inkster. Highland Park. Oak Park has a lot of our kids. We don’t have the luxury to sit on our hands."

In Hazel Park, Barlow agreed. "We are a cash-strapped district. … Our finances are tied directly to the number of students we have. We would be derelict if we didn’t get in there and compete."

(To view the Michigan Association of Public School Academies’ television advertisements about school choice, go to www.school4me.org/pages/spot1.cfm. To view a variety of Detroit Public Schools radio and television advertisements, go to www.detroit.k12.mi.us/comehome.html.)

Michigan Education Daily
"An aviation school in Michigan is one example of a new generation of public charter schools designed to serve niche audiences." >>
"A 10-year-old Windsor boy who completed part of his education in Michigan is being denied entry to public high school in Windsor even though he's completed the eighth-grade curriculum." >>
"Principal John Hoving is using Facebook as a way to promote Bay City All Saints Central School as well as to head off possible cyber bullying." >>
"Royal Oak Public Schools students will be featured in an Oct. 12 episode of MTV's "If You Really Knew Me," a cable television program that the producer describes as "students trying to be accepted for who they are."" >>
"Public schools in Michigan were offered an automatic "A" on part of their annual state report card this year, a one-time arrangement that may have spared some from being unaccredited." >>
"More than 1,000 teacher retirements will allow Detroit Public Schools to recall all teachers from layoff and hire up to 300 more to fill staffing gaps." >>
"Inland Lakes Schools is considering hiring a private firm to provide custodial services as a way to save money, but a union representative says that new federal funding makes such a move unnecessary." >>
User Comments
education is an all around development for a child
he should be mentally and physically strong


<a href="http://rescueyoursavings.com" rel="dofollow">Savings</a> >>
education is an all around development for a child
he should be mentally and physically strong >>
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Public servants like Presidents, Vice-Presidents, Senators, Congressmen, Judges, Secretaries of Various Departments and the like should be first to be compensated for performance.
The idea that the playing field for students is level everywhere is as Quixotic as thinking all politicians are honest and competent.
There are neighborhoods where only Portugese or gang sign language is spoken, where the parents both work two jobs to pay rent, where getting to school and back is more dangerous than Iraq and Afghanastan.
This Secretary of Education has to remove the silver spoon, roll up his sleeves and take his superior intellect attitude into the trenches and show the poor slobs that are taking their teachers jobs for granted how he would do it. Just because his mommy used to help out in Chicago doesn't give him the Congression Medal of Honor. Actually he's a stuffed shirt pretending to know it all.
How much do you want to bet that he wouldn't attempt entering these neighborhoods let alone these schools without security. >>
This article is tucked away yet is profoundly correct. Parents are pseudo parenting little objects of consumption. Teens, professionals, working moms like the "idea" of a child but are not in for the long haul and everyone loses.

Schools are enabling parents to do precious little. The time parents spend with their children is the only thing that matters. Bussing needs to be cut, school breakfast, lunch, and afterschool care needs to be stopped. Parents will grow that bond by sacrificing the nails, hair, parties, drugs, quads, vacations, etc. and making a lunch for their child and arrangements to be home when the child is out of school. No one is that poor that they can't provide a boloney sandwich, a baggie of pretzels, an apple, 50 cents for a milk, and two cookies each day.

Please respond!

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Is it true that young ones today are losing interest on these subjects? Obviously, the White House is promoting programs that will help students on coping up with math and science subjects. But, The federal government thinks that the quality of math and science education can repair credit with the scientific community and improve US education with a few <a rev="vote for" title="U.S. Government Spends $250 Million on Science and Math" href="http://personalmoneystore.com/Payday-Loans/ ">payday loans</a> of sorts. In reality, it will take far longer to accomplish than they might think – US educators can't even get students to accept that "irregardless" isn't a word, and the difference between their, they're, and there – our students can't even learn their own language! It's a noble aim, to be sure, but throwing money at it may not work in the long run. >>
I am a teacher in the same county who is presently trying to quit the union. Like Caldwell, I strongly disagree with the MEA.

This article was timely.

Rob Olson
Pittsford Area Schools

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I agree this is a change worth making. I describe some of the uneven effects of the idea on my blog at http://rickolson.blogspot.com/2009/08/statewide-health-insurance-plan-for.html which you may also wish to read.

The devil will be in the details, so this is one we will need to monitor closely.

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I AGREE >>