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would you be happy paying £25 for this?

38 replies

city1984 · 24/01/2013 23:24

Ds aged 9 has been invited to attend a morning writing workshop at a local school. They also get to meet an author. (Can't remember name)
Would yo ber happy to pay this?

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MyHeadWasInTheSandNowNot · 24/01/2013 23:27

Come on - on what can we base that decision, with how little information you have given us?

Shallishanti · 24/01/2013 23:28

in school time? no
out of school time- maybe, if it was a particular favourite author- bit would be expecting something v special for £25!

piprabbit · 24/01/2013 23:33

Sounds ridiculously expensive for half a day's activity on school premises - I'd like to earn £750 for half a days work.

DD recently had a half day ballet workshop at school (a member of the ballet company came to the school), followed the next day by a trip to see the ballet (tickets and coach travel to central london) for less than the cost of your DS's activity.

PhyllisDoris · 24/01/2013 23:38

It does seem a lot if there is no transport involved. Can you ask the school for a breakdown of the costs?

LindyHemming · 24/01/2013 23:45

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

city1984 · 24/01/2013 23:54

Will need to check with school. Definately not anyone really famous.

OP posts:
BackforGood · 24/01/2013 23:54

When dd1 was in Yr6, they got invited to a local Grammar School to hear an author speak, meet him, etc., but it was free (did ask parents to help transport them).

So, no!

ihearsounds · 24/01/2013 23:56

For a writing workshop. In school. Absolutely not. The author should be ashamed of themselves charging for this. My dc's schools have the workshops and couple of times a year, author donates their time for free.

Pancakeflipper · 24/01/2013 23:59

No.

Our school did a writing workshop with an author and illustrator and it was £2.00 contribution. School did put in money making it £4.00 a child. It was held in school.

GW297 · 25/01/2013 09:25

Yes if they love or have an affinity for writing (and reading.) No otherwise. Agree 25 pounds each seems steep for one morning.

DrSeuss · 25/01/2013 09:28

It is a lot of money but please don't blame the school. They are charging only what is necessary, I am sure.

3birthdaybunnies · 25/01/2013 09:36

No, dd1 did one at another school for free. Are they getting a coach? Even so seems steep. For less than that we got return travel to London, tour of Globe and a drama workshop, I would also be asking for a breakdown of costs. Maybe they got the '.' in the wrong place! What do the other parents say?

SilasGreenback · 25/01/2013 10:11

Is it a G&T type thing? Ds2 did one in maths and the details sheet we were given had a £20 per pupil charge, but we were told that the school covered that and were just asked to help with transport by lift sharing with the other patents.

I don't think £25 for half a day for a small number of children is excessive, since presumably there will also be a teacher present, and a supply may need to be used to cover their normal teaching but don't think you should pay.

OmgATalkingOnion · 25/01/2013 10:20

No I wouldn't be up for that at all. But then I'm somewhat cynical about the visiting author thing.

It usually means someone self published that you've never heard of coming round the school flogging their hugely £ book to a schoolful of children who have been hyped up to believe the must have the book at any cost.

Now a writing course?? What an English lesson?Hmm Well they come free as part of the curriculum don't they?

Hobbitation · 25/01/2013 10:23

That sort of thing should be done in lesson time and be subsidised by school funds/ PTA fund IMO. We've had visiting authors but parents have never been asked to pay.

bruffin · 25/01/2013 10:25

My dcs have got to meet Anne Digby and Malcolm Rose through school and neither cost anything.
We have never been charged anything for g&t stuff other than travel costs.

middlesqueezed · 25/01/2013 11:00

In school time we've never been asked to pay for a visiting author. I always assumed they did it for the publicity in most cases anyway. If it's a weekend or holiday event then maybe - depends how good it looks (and it would have to look pretty good Grin).

learnandsay · 25/01/2013 11:07

If she got a boxed set of books, a hot meal and a taxi home all included, then fine.

mrssmooth · 25/01/2013 11:09

No way! Even if travel to/from the local school was involved, it shouldn't cost that much!

WowOoo · 25/01/2013 11:10

No.

But if the school was seriously short of funds and I had quite enough spare money I wouldn't. But, the chances of most parents having plenty of spare cash are pretty slim!

Beehatch · 25/01/2013 11:16

Sounds steep. We've had two author visits at school both free, but they do flog signed copies of their books at school pickup - and make a small fortune going by the size of the queues.

sausagesandwich34 · 25/01/2013 12:33

our primary had a whole school visit from an author last week -free but you could buy a signed copy of the latest book if you were badgered enough by your children wanted too

Tony Robinson aka baldrick is doing a Time Team workshop at the local high school this afternoon -again free

£25 would be staying firmly in my purse!

katje · 25/01/2013 12:36

I'm an author, I do school visits. Yes, we charge. We're working like anyone else and we rely on these payments to bolster our meagre incomes. If I'm visiting a school I charge £350 for a full day of talks and workshops - at one recent visit I did two assemblies, two workshops and a session with a smaller group of Y8s. BUT I have never heard of children being asked to pay. Usually the school will have a budget for author visits, and this cost is not passed on to parents. Some authors do free promotional visits, but they won't include workshops.

katje · 25/01/2013 12:40

Oh and the 'small fortune' from selling books. Very small indeed. About 50p a book. So if I did it all for free and relied on book sales to cover my expenses and time I'd have to sell about 800 books per school. At many schools the kids can't afford to buy books, but I see them lining up in the library to borrow my books.

meditrina · 25/01/2013 12:46

Our school has authors in to visit sometimes. I've never been asked to pay, so it must be covered by the school budget somehow.