Friday, October 22, 2010

Ads in a public school?

Ads in a public school? Schools in Minnesota are voting in November, whether to place ads on 10 percent of the available surfaces in all of the district's seven schools. That includes lockers, walls and floors. I found this on a  Minnesota newspaper, the Star Tribune. The full article can be found here. I'd like to hear what my followers think about it.

On Nov. 1, the school board is slated to decide whether it will allow the ads on up to 10 percent of the available surfaces in all of the district's seven schools. That includes lockers, walls and floors. The take for the district? $184,000 a year.
In a bleak economy, with dim prospects for any new state school funding, Centennial -- with $3.6 million in cuts this year and more likely on the way next year -- is just the latest school district looking at the ads as an alternative way to generate some cash. Paul Miller, president of Coon Rapids-based School Media's, the company that would install the ads, said he expects to have nine Twin Cities school districts signed up by the end of the year.
Nearby St. Francis schools already made that decision. Ads will start going up on lockers there this week, said district Superintendent Edward Saxton. The district's agreement with School Media's is similar to Centennial's proposed agreement. Its take: $190,000 to $200,000 a year.

12 comments:

  1. I'd be kind of upset if that were to happen to a school that I was attending, but I can surely see the need for more revenue!

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  2. I'd be upset but kids are already the most targeted demographic so it's not like they aren't already exposed to it.

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  3. get ready for mastercard and viagra ads on your lockers kids ... almost makes me wish I was back in high school.

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  4. it's not like any of this is new to kids ha

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  5. What a crock of shit. Soon we will be only letting Mcdonalds make our school lunches and make our kids even more unhealthier and fatter to keep costs with public health.

    fuck this! bah! lol

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  6. That'd be pretty annoying, but at least the kids would want to go buying stuff rather than getting into drugs and gangs and such.

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  7. This is pretty disturbing, but I don't see it unlikely.

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  8. Do what you got to do to survive.

    I can see a lot of schools doing this in the future.

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  9. It looks silly, but anything to improve classes. And money is better classes.

    I hope my school will start with this soon :)

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