Thursday, March 26, 2009

Pizza place buys paper for high school class in exchange for advertising

Here's an interesting lesson in economics...

The students Jeb Harrison teaches in his economics classes at Pocatello High School in Idaho have learned one thing for sure about these hard times: for $5 you can get a 14-inch pizza with one topping at Molto Caldo Pizzeria, just down the street.

Earlier this month, after residents of
Pocatello rejected a school levy intended to help address a depleted budget and rising costs, Mr. Harrison decided to find a way to help. He approached Dan McIsaac, the pizzeria owner, and brokered a deal.

If Mr. McIsaac paid about $315 for 10,000 sheets of paper for Mr. Harrison’s classes, more than a year’s supply, the pizzeria could run an advertisement across the bottom of every sheet handed out in class.

“Wow,” said Mr. Harrison, echoing the response of some of his students to the $5 pizza offer, “that is a pretty good deal.”

You can read the full story here.

I don't know whether we should applaud Mr. Harrison or criticize him, but honestly if more schools can find inventive ways to get funding - then by all means do so.

What do you think? Should schools have advertising schemes like this one?

2 comments:

  1. It's a good idea, but now all of our kids are going to get fat from the greasy food.

    But who doesn't like pizza?

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  2. If you read the story the parents are using the ads on the bottom to get cheap pizza. Why would they complain?

    ReplyDelete