AZ City or ZIP
Movies
Dining
TV
NewsSportsMoneyEntertainmentStyleTravelMomsPetsWeatherTrafficPhotoVideo

Contact us
Media in Education Blog



Teacher resources

Go to Teachers area for more updates

Lessons & Classroom Activities

Resources by grade level

Blogs

Student resources

Go to Students area for more updates

Interactive features

Online Reference Guides

Parent resources

Go to Parents area for more updates

Online Extras geared toward younger children

Front Page Talking Points
FOR THE WEEK OF AUG. 18, 2008

Need vs. want: First test of school year is what to buy

frontpageactionpoints.gif

1.gifFeature articles and ads are a shopping resource. Find school supply or clothing trends, ideas and deals in recent issues -- including store insert sections.

2.gifLook for news that affects schools, such as reports on teacher contracts, fuel costs and cafeteria food prices.

3.gifIn addition to reading what adults say, check out comments from students on any topic in reader forums, article quotes and a weekly teen page or section if the paper has one.

At a time when rising food and gas prices pinch many families' finances, shopping for school wardrobes and supplies can be a challenge. Seventy-one percent of Americans with school-age children plan to spend less on back-to-school gear this season, according to a survey by the Deloitte consulting firm. Cost-cutting strategies include hitting sales, shopping online, setting a budget and avoiding optional luxuries.

Still, the tab can climb for students who want fresh fashions and electronics. Just in time for the second-biggest shopping season after Christmas, several major mobile phone companies introduced sleek, youth-oriented devices with cameras, music players and expanded memory. A market research firm called Nielsen Mobile says 46 percent of U.S. "tweens" (age 8-12) and 80 percent of teens (13-17) use a mobile phone. It predicts this will be the biggest back-to-school season yet for cellular sales.

In households with spending concerns, school shopping is a learning opportunity as parents talk about budgeting, credit and the difference between wants and needs. "You look for rebates. You look for coupons. You look for discounts. You look for sales," says Mary Frances McLoryd, a suburban New York mom.
To give parents a hand, New York, Texas, Massachusetts, Vermont, West Virginia and 11 other states have sales-tax "holidays" for school-related items - a few days in August when consumers can buy clothes, shoes, supplies and computers without state tax.

Financial adviser says: "The most important strategy for back-to-school shopping is to set a budget and stick to it. With proper planning, you can prepare for another school year without breaking the bank." -- Cate Williams, vice president of Money Management International, a credit counseling agency

Retail researcher says: "For kids today, mobile phones have become just as much a part of their daily school life as pens and pencils. Going back to school without a phone is unthinkable for many young people, who consider it their lifeline." - James Russo, vice president of Nielsen Mobile

Parent says: "Like my children, I watch the weeks of leisure dwindle with regret. Shopping trips are full of reminders -- the back-to-school sales signs and supply displays can plunge the kids into depression, and I'm not immune." -- Sara Pagones, New Orleans Times-Picayune editorial page editor

Front Page Talking Points is written by Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2010
We welcome comments or suggestions for future topics: Click here to Comment

Archive

Winter Olympics showcase skills, speed on snow and ice

Super Bowl swells 'fan' ranks this Sunday -- and not just for football

Apple presents next must-have device: hand-held tablet

Digital outreach and social media help Haiti earthquake survivors

Electronics event unveils next-gen TVs, games, phones, ear buds, other tech updates

Air terrorism close call spurs urgent U.S. security reviews

Media and news consumers pick most important events of 2009

E-reader choices widen appeal of magazines, books, school texts in new format

World leaders meet in Denmark to focus on global warming responses

In-store sales inch up as Internet sales surge