I've been running surveys on this blog for a few years now and I've NEVER had one generate near the responses this one did. 2142 people responded. 88.2% said the were Girl Scout leaders and parents (not surprising for a survey promulgated on Girl Scout leader Facebook groups). 8.6% were non-parent volunteers. The remaining 3.2% were mostly parent volunteers who added positions like SU manager or Lifetime Member. In other words, the people who responded are the backbone of the organization when it comes to delivering the program to the girls.
Family Finances
28.8 of those who responded said that their family had plenty of money for needs and reasonable wants. 45.3% said that their needs were easily met, but they sometimes had to say no to reasonable wants due to money. 21.3% Said their family sometimes had trouble with needs and often had to say no to wants. 4.6% said they had trouble with needs on a regular basis.
DEIRJ
Because GSUSA's graphic about the proposed increase listed DEIRJ (Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Racial Justice) training and resources as the top priority I was curious whether people thought that was where additional money should be spent, and whether people's racial/ethnic background made a difference in their responses. About 81% identified themselves as being of European descent, white or Caucasian. 5.6% said they were Hispanic, and 1.4% claimed African heritage.
Regarding GSUSAs plan to spend on DEIRJ, I gave four choices. Those choices and the percent of people who chose each were:
- I'm against it; if people want to be separate from those different from them that's their right and GSUSA should let them be. 62 responses, 2.9%
- If we are obeying the GS Law, we are meeting DEIRJ goals. No need to spend money here. 993 responses, 46.6%
- I am in favor of GSUSA's DEIRJ goals and programming in this area, but I'm not convinced more money needs to be spent here. 902, 42.3%
- GSUSA should absolutely put additional resources toward DEIRJ. 174 or 8.2%
I asked people to identify their racial/ethnic background to see if there was a difference in the way people from different backgrounds saw this question. I separated out a few of the major ethnic groups, and also looked at those who identified as European, White or Caucasian. I looked both at the White/Caucasian group and the group of those identified an ethnic background other than that. Finally, I looked at those who chose not to respond or gave what I considered to be non-responsive answers. Results are below. Boxes show raw numbers and precents.
Ethnic Background | Against | Follow GS Law | In favor of goals, not convinced more money needed | In favor of goals and additional spending |
---|
Asian | 0 0% | 6 40% | 6 40% | 3 20% |
African | 2 6% | 8 26% | 18 60% | 2 6% |
Hispanic | 5 4.1% | 57 47.5% | 43 35.8% | 15 12.5% |
Not European/ White/ Caucasian | 12 4.6% | 114 44.5% | 99 38.67% | 31 12.1% |
No Response | 6 3.7% | 106 65% | 41 25.3% | 10 6.1% |
European/ White/ Caucasian | 45 2.6% | 781 45.27% | 763 44.23% | 136 7.8% |
Overall | 2.9% | 46.6% | 42.3% | 8.2% |
There were comments on Facebook complaining about this question and finding it biased. If you do not believe one of these answers describes your opinion on the topic of whether GSUSA should have DEIRJ at the top of their spending priorities, I'd love to know how you would have worded it.
There were those who objected to me asking for ethnic data, but I thought looking at this information by ethnic group was important.
Experience Boxes
A top goal listed by GSUSA was to provide Experience Boxes for Daisy leaders. I asked what people thought of these:
About First Year Experience Boxes for Brownies, folks said
When asked if they would buy a "Badge in a Box" for older girls, people responded:
Digital Cookie
Improving the digital cookie platform is on the goal list if dues are raised to $45.00. 20% of people said the platform was horrible and needed to be improved. 57% said it was ok, but could use improvement. 15.4% did not see how it could be improved and 7.2% did not use it and did not want to use it.
Older Girl Program
36% of those who responded were not familiar with the older girl program. 25% said it had hits and misses and 21% said that it generally left a lot to be desired. 7% said it was awful and 2.6 % said great. 3.6% said that the recent materials were good.
Regarding the Higher Awards, 45% said that GSUSA needed to ditch the whole TAP concept. 28.3% of those who answered said that the requirements for Gold, Silver and Bronze were spot-on and that the program was successful. 28.3% thought the requirements were spot-on, but that leaders don't properly teach girls to do Take Action Projects.
Here is what people had to say about older girl badges
If GSUSA gets the $85 they want, they say they will develop new handbooks and consolidated badge books with culturally relevant programming. I asked if that should be a goal. 66% said no, the future is digital and the books won't sell. 27.4% said they would buy a handbook, but less than 7% said they would feel comfortable asking the girls to buy a $25 handbook.
Marketing/Outreach
Several of GSUSA's goals have to do with marketing and outreach. While "School Partnerships" was not defined, it is something they want to do. I asked about the relationship between GSUSA and the schools people's children attend. 17% of the schools do not allow outside organizations, including Girl Scouts to recruit or meet on-site. Only 2.5% of schools allowed outside groups, but not Girl Scouts, to recruit or meet. 11% of the schools allow outside groups, but do not currently have Girl Scouts at school. 32% of people say that Girl Scouts recruits at their school and has troops that are mainly girls from the school but that they do not meet at school. 11% have one troop that meets at school and 22% have multiple troops. 4.4% say that council has done outreach activities at school but that there are no volunteer-run troops.
When asked whether they would prefer that a $5.00 increase to put towards outreach to schools or communities lacking Girl Scouts went to national or council, 78% said the money should go to council, kept local; only 10% said that sending it to national would allow us to be sisters to those in areas where Girl Scouts was less well established. 7% said to send it to council as national is horrible with money and 5% wanted it to go to national because their counsel is bad with money. For the record, the $5 figure was mine, as far as I know there is no such figure in GSUSA's budget.
79% of people do not believe GSUSA or their council need to spend additional money on marketing. 21% believe they should.
Here are the marketing types people have seen recently
Now for the Finances
11.6% of those who responded supported GSUSA's request for $85 Registration Fee. 88.4% did not.
37.3% would keep dues at $25 next year. 44.2% would raise them to $35. 14.2% would give them $45 and 4.2% would make them more than $45.00
As we all know, the registration fee is only the beginning of what Girl Scouts costs. We pay troop dues, buy insignia, uniforms and other materials and we pay for troop events and activities. I asked how much people thought it was reasonable to ask parents to pay per year for non-activity expenses of Girl Scouts. Here are the responses
One thing GSUSA is proposing is giving some of the increased revenue back to the councils to pay for increased financial assistance to girls whose families cannot afford the registration fee. 145 of the people who responded said they currently get financial assistance; 1825 do not. 649 said they would need financial assistance if the fee was increased to $65; 1260 would not.
I also asked who had girls on financial assistance. 855 said they do, 640 said they do not, 203 did not know, but would be surprised if girls were and 369 did not know but would not be surprised if some were.
It did not surprise me to learn that those with more family financial security were more apt to give GSUSA the requested increase
Financial Status | In favor of $85 increase | Not in favor of $85 increase |
Have plenty for needs and wants | 100 16.6% | 501 83.3% |
Plenty for needs, limited wants | 105 10.97% | 852 89.03% |
Sometimes have trouble with needs | 31 6.9% | 416 93.1% |
Often have trouble with needs | 5 4.1% | 92 95.9% |
I also looked at the amount people thought it was reasonable to ask parents to pay for the miscellaneous costs of Girl Scouting, not counting events and activities by family financial status.
Financial Status | Under $25 | $25-50 | $50-75 | $75-100 | Over $100 |
Have plenty for needs and wants | 39
6.4% | 193
32% | 124
20.56% | 174
28.85% | 73
12.1% |
Plenty for needs, limited wants | 73
7.62% | 347
36.25% | 198
20.68% | 262
27.37% | 77
8.04% |
Sometimes have trouble with needs | 63
14.28% | 181
40.40% | 94
20. 98% | 81
18% | 22
4.9% |
Often have trouble with needs | 25
27.47 | 43
47.2% | 15
16.4% | 7
7.6% | 1
1.09% |
I also looked at what people proposed as dues for next year. Not surprisingly, those with more disposable income were willing to pay more.
Financial Status | $25 | $35 | $45 | More than $45 |
Have plenty for needs and wants | 184
30.51% | 267
44.27% | 122
20.23% | 30
4.97% |
Plenty for needs, limited wants | 364
37.99% | 431
44.98% | 127
13.25% | 36
3.75% |
Sometimes have trouble with needs | 183
41.30 | 203
45.82% | 43
9.7% | 14
3.16% |
Often have trouble with needs | 53
79.1% | 30
$44.77% | 7
10.44% | 4
4.25% |
One question in my mind when it comes to financial assistance, is how many people would use it vs how many would just say Girl Scouts is too expensive. Of the 97 people who said they regularly have trouble with needs, 42 (43%) are on financial assistance. Of those who said they sometimes have trouble with needs, 68 of 453 (15.01%) use financial assistance. Of the 965 who said they sometimes have to say no to wants, 29 (3%) use financial assistance. 4 of the 613 (0.65%)who said they had plenty for needs and wants said they were on financial assistance.
My Comments
Financially, I'm in the group that doesn't have to worry. I realize that makes it easy for me to say that it is ok to increase the registration fee to some extent. I do think the registration fee should be raised some, but not to $85.
I have two almost opposite concerns about raising the registration fee too much.
The first is that it will keep people from signing up for Girl Scouts. As I said, money isn't a problem at my house and I wouldn't think twice about paying $25 to sign my kids up for something. At $85 I would think twice, and would give serious consideration to whether the activity was worth it and whether my child would stick with it.
I wrote a post a few years about about how that might be a good thing but if the goal is to increase numbers, I think too much of an increase will be counter productive.
The second concern I have is that we are going to end up with too many girls on financial assistance, thus basically costing councils more money. Financial assistance money comes from the council budgets and most of that money comes from cookies. If councils need more money, are they going to take a bigger piece of the cookie pie? Or are they going to charge/raise council dues?
That puts you in a position where troops need to sell more cookies to get the same profits, but then need to spend more of those profits on registration fees. Also, in our council, financial assistance only pays your first registration fee. Girls on financial assistance are expected to sell cookies and the first use of cookie money is supposed to be re-registration.
Also, as I stated in a
prior post, I don't trust GSUSA to be good stewards of the money. As I noted in that post, I don't think putting bad program material in a box and mailing it to leaders is going to solve leaders' problems with planning and so far I haven't seen any evidence from GSUSA that programming is going to improve.
I understand that girls in GSUSA's traditional audience are not joining in the numbers they once did, and it makes sense to reach out to other audiences, but I question whether the lack of diversity resources/training is why we have trouble recruiting in some communities. I read through GSUSA's latest annual report that devoted more print to DEIRJ than to any other single topic and they never mentioned what I believe to be the biggest obstacle to forming troops in low-income communities, namely lack of volunteers. I didn't commission a huge study, so maybe I'm wrong about that, but my community has a lot of Girl Scout troops in the private schools used by the middle class (and those troops are as diverse as the schools are) and very few in the public schools used by the poor.
Other People's thoughts
If you go to
my general url and scroll past this post you will find a number of posts with other people's comments on this.