Arrow left
Back

Rewards stores, class or school-wide privileges, and special events all make for great options – and some educators are upping the ante when it comes to psyching students up about rewards.

That brings us to today’s topic: raffles. Raffles are an exciting way to generate buzz, and they are simple to run right from LiveSchool’s school-wide point + rewards system. They’re great scenarios where some or all students don’t have easy access to a physical in-school store. And they function seamlessly alongside other traditional rewards, so you can offer any combination of rewards you want!

We spoke with Jan Burgess, the Student Support Specialist at Northgate Middle School in Kansas City, to learn about how her team has made the most of LiveSchool rewards by using raffles. Here are her tips:

Run Your Raffle Through the LiveSchool Store

To simplify their ticket orders, Northgate runs their raffles (along with their other Gator Store orders) through Microsoft Forms – students enter the number of tickets they want to buy, and Burgess fulfills the orders with their LiveSchool points. Once all the entries are submitted, Burgess uses a free website tool called the Wheel of Names to pick the school’s winners. Since assemblies are on hold for COVID safety, she screen records the selection and sends the video to all her students. 

They loved the suspense of it all – we sent the selection video out to all the grades and virtual kids so they could experience that excitement. The turnout for tickets was enormous.

Engage Your Local Community

Burgess and her colleagues know that raffles are only as powerful as the items they feature, so they reached out to their local community for support. They received tons of donations that kept their raffles fresh and full of fun prizes for their middle schoolers. 

I went to social media and I asked everyone I knew to think of items they could donate for raffles. They gave cash like you wouldn’t believe! Hallmark donated giant bears – it became crazy! We received two gently used Microsoft Surface Pros and a Google tablet, which were our biggest items last year. We used the cash donations to buy stuffed animals that were on sale, earring trees, and more – we tried to find a wide variety.

Run Multiple Raffles at Once

Burgess and her colleagues run concurrent raffles featuring different “sized” rewards – they’ve found that this model keeps excitement high and encourages student participation. 

We always have more than one raffle going. If there is an item that might be more appealing to a smaller subsection of kids, it could be a smaller raffle that we run every two weeks. We divide the big items, like the tablets, out into quarterly raffles.  The smaller raffles keep the energy level high and not focused on one big event really far away. It feels nice to win, even if it’s a little thing, and I’m all about helping kids celebrate life.

Survey Your Students 

Burgess knows that student feedback is essential when it comes to running a successful raffle, and the Northgate team relies heavily on surveys, which they conduct multiple times a year. They use these surveys to query students about their favorite rewards and things they would like to see in upcoming raffles.

We survey our students at the beginning of the year and do it again mid-year so we can see if anything’s changed. We also listen to the kids that are filling in the orders in the store -- if they’re saying ‘Ohhh, this is cool!’ -- and we watch our inventory. We also do an end-of-year survey.

Need more help constructing your incentive program? It can be a bit overwhelming, so we created a complete guide to rewarding students so everything you need is in one convenient place.

How have you used LiveSchool raffles as rewards? Share with us @whyliveschool on twitter!

Not working with a big budget? We put together 10 completely free rewards for your classroom that are sure to kickstart the engagement in your lessons.

Let’s take this to your inbox
We’ll send you our monthly newsletter which is fully stocked with free resources like articles, videos, podcasts, reward ideas, and anything else we can think of to help you make your school awesome.
Rewards offer infinite options for creativity, and we see tons of schools implementing unique systems that speak to the needs (and passions!) of their students.

Rewards stores, class or school-wide privileges, and special events all make for great options – and some educators are upping the ante when it comes to psyching students up about rewards.

That brings us to today’s topic: raffles. Raffles are an exciting way to generate buzz, and they are simple to run right from LiveSchool’s school-wide point + rewards system. They’re great scenarios where some or all students don’t have easy access to a physical in-school store. And they function seamlessly alongside other traditional rewards, so you can offer any combination of rewards you want!

We spoke with Jan Burgess, the Student Support Specialist at Northgate Middle School in Kansas City, to learn about how her team has made the most of LiveSchool rewards by using raffles. Here are her tips:

Run Your Raffle Through the LiveSchool Store

To simplify their ticket orders, Northgate runs their raffles (along with their other Gator Store orders) through Microsoft Forms – students enter the number of tickets they want to buy, and Burgess fulfills the orders with their LiveSchool points. Once all the entries are submitted, Burgess uses a free website tool called the Wheel of Names to pick the school’s winners. Since assemblies are on hold for COVID safety, she screen records the selection and sends the video to all her students. 

They loved the suspense of it all – we sent the selection video out to all the grades and virtual kids so they could experience that excitement. The turnout for tickets was enormous.

Engage Your Local Community

Burgess and her colleagues know that raffles are only as powerful as the items they feature, so they reached out to their local community for support. They received tons of donations that kept their raffles fresh and full of fun prizes for their middle schoolers. 

I went to social media and I asked everyone I knew to think of items they could donate for raffles. They gave cash like you wouldn’t believe! Hallmark donated giant bears – it became crazy! We received two gently used Microsoft Surface Pros and a Google tablet, which were our biggest items last year. We used the cash donations to buy stuffed animals that were on sale, earring trees, and more – we tried to find a wide variety.

Run Multiple Raffles at Once

Burgess and her colleagues run concurrent raffles featuring different “sized” rewards – they’ve found that this model keeps excitement high and encourages student participation. 

We always have more than one raffle going. If there is an item that might be more appealing to a smaller subsection of kids, it could be a smaller raffle that we run every two weeks. We divide the big items, like the tablets, out into quarterly raffles.  The smaller raffles keep the energy level high and not focused on one big event really far away. It feels nice to win, even if it’s a little thing, and I’m all about helping kids celebrate life.

Survey Your Students 

Burgess knows that student feedback is essential when it comes to running a successful raffle, and the Northgate team relies heavily on surveys, which they conduct multiple times a year. They use these surveys to query students about their favorite rewards and things they would like to see in upcoming raffles.

We survey our students at the beginning of the year and do it again mid-year so we can see if anything’s changed. We also listen to the kids that are filling in the orders in the store -- if they’re saying ‘Ohhh, this is cool!’ -- and we watch our inventory. We also do an end-of-year survey.

Need more help constructing your incentive program? It can be a bit overwhelming, so we created a complete guide to rewarding students so everything you need is in one convenient place.

How have you used LiveSchool raffles as rewards? Share with us @whyliveschool on twitter!

Not working with a big budget? We put together 10 completely free rewards for your classroom that are sure to kickstart the engagement in your lessons.

Let’s take this to your inbox
We’ll send you our monthly newsletter which is fully stocked with free resources like articles, videos, podcasts, reward ideas, and anything else we can think of to help you make your school awesome.

Rewards stores, class or school-wide privileges, and special events all make for great options – and some educators are upping the ante when it comes to psyching students up about rewards.

That brings us to today’s topic: raffles. Raffles are an exciting way to generate buzz, and they are simple to run right from LiveSchool’s school-wide point + rewards system. They’re great scenarios where some or all students don’t have easy access to a physical in-school store. And they function seamlessly alongside other traditional rewards, so you can offer any combination of rewards you want!

We spoke with Jan Burgess, the Student Support Specialist at Northgate Middle School in Kansas City, to learn about how her team has made the most of LiveSchool rewards by using raffles. Here are her tips:

Run Your Raffle Through the LiveSchool Store

To simplify their ticket orders, Northgate runs their raffles (along with their other Gator Store orders) through Microsoft Forms – students enter the number of tickets they want to buy, and Burgess fulfills the orders with their LiveSchool points. Once all the entries are submitted, Burgess uses a free website tool called the Wheel of Names to pick the school’s winners. Since assemblies are on hold for COVID safety, she screen records the selection and sends the video to all her students. 

They loved the suspense of it all – we sent the selection video out to all the grades and virtual kids so they could experience that excitement. The turnout for tickets was enormous.

Engage Your Local Community

Burgess and her colleagues know that raffles are only as powerful as the items they feature, so they reached out to their local community for support. They received tons of donations that kept their raffles fresh and full of fun prizes for their middle schoolers. 

I went to social media and I asked everyone I knew to think of items they could donate for raffles. They gave cash like you wouldn’t believe! Hallmark donated giant bears – it became crazy! We received two gently used Microsoft Surface Pros and a Google tablet, which were our biggest items last year. We used the cash donations to buy stuffed animals that were on sale, earring trees, and more – we tried to find a wide variety.

Run Multiple Raffles at Once

Burgess and her colleagues run concurrent raffles featuring different “sized” rewards – they’ve found that this model keeps excitement high and encourages student participation. 

We always have more than one raffle going. If there is an item that might be more appealing to a smaller subsection of kids, it could be a smaller raffle that we run every two weeks. We divide the big items, like the tablets, out into quarterly raffles.  The smaller raffles keep the energy level high and not focused on one big event really far away. It feels nice to win, even if it’s a little thing, and I’m all about helping kids celebrate life.

Survey Your Students 

Burgess knows that student feedback is essential when it comes to running a successful raffle, and the Northgate team relies heavily on surveys, which they conduct multiple times a year. They use these surveys to query students about their favorite rewards and things they would like to see in upcoming raffles.

We survey our students at the beginning of the year and do it again mid-year so we can see if anything’s changed. We also listen to the kids that are filling in the orders in the store -- if they’re saying ‘Ohhh, this is cool!’ -- and we watch our inventory. We also do an end-of-year survey.

Need more help constructing your incentive program? It can be a bit overwhelming, so we created a complete guide to rewarding students so everything you need is in one convenient place.

How have you used LiveSchool raffles as rewards? Share with us @whyliveschool on twitter!

Not working with a big budget? We put together 10 completely free rewards for your classroom that are sure to kickstart the engagement in your lessons.

Let’s take this to your inbox
We’ll send you our monthly newsletter which is fully stocked with free resources like articles, videos, podcasts, reward ideas, and anything else we can think of to help you make your school awesome.

About the Event

Rewards stores, class or school-wide privileges, and special events all make for great options – and some educators are upping the ante when it comes to psyching students up about rewards.

That brings us to today’s topic: raffles. Raffles are an exciting way to generate buzz, and they are simple to run right from LiveSchool’s school-wide point + rewards system. They’re great scenarios where some or all students don’t have easy access to a physical in-school store. And they function seamlessly alongside other traditional rewards, so you can offer any combination of rewards you want!

We spoke with Jan Burgess, the Student Support Specialist at Northgate Middle School in Kansas City, to learn about how her team has made the most of LiveSchool rewards by using raffles. Here are her tips:

Run Your Raffle Through the LiveSchool Store

To simplify their ticket orders, Northgate runs their raffles (along with their other Gator Store orders) through Microsoft Forms – students enter the number of tickets they want to buy, and Burgess fulfills the orders with their LiveSchool points. Once all the entries are submitted, Burgess uses a free website tool called the Wheel of Names to pick the school’s winners. Since assemblies are on hold for COVID safety, she screen records the selection and sends the video to all her students. 

They loved the suspense of it all – we sent the selection video out to all the grades and virtual kids so they could experience that excitement. The turnout for tickets was enormous.

Engage Your Local Community

Burgess and her colleagues know that raffles are only as powerful as the items they feature, so they reached out to their local community for support. They received tons of donations that kept their raffles fresh and full of fun prizes for their middle schoolers. 

I went to social media and I asked everyone I knew to think of items they could donate for raffles. They gave cash like you wouldn’t believe! Hallmark donated giant bears – it became crazy! We received two gently used Microsoft Surface Pros and a Google tablet, which were our biggest items last year. We used the cash donations to buy stuffed animals that were on sale, earring trees, and more – we tried to find a wide variety.

Run Multiple Raffles at Once

Burgess and her colleagues run concurrent raffles featuring different “sized” rewards – they’ve found that this model keeps excitement high and encourages student participation. 

We always have more than one raffle going. If there is an item that might be more appealing to a smaller subsection of kids, it could be a smaller raffle that we run every two weeks. We divide the big items, like the tablets, out into quarterly raffles.  The smaller raffles keep the energy level high and not focused on one big event really far away. It feels nice to win, even if it’s a little thing, and I’m all about helping kids celebrate life.

Survey Your Students 

Burgess knows that student feedback is essential when it comes to running a successful raffle, and the Northgate team relies heavily on surveys, which they conduct multiple times a year. They use these surveys to query students about their favorite rewards and things they would like to see in upcoming raffles.

We survey our students at the beginning of the year and do it again mid-year so we can see if anything’s changed. We also listen to the kids that are filling in the orders in the store -- if they’re saying ‘Ohhh, this is cool!’ -- and we watch our inventory. We also do an end-of-year survey.

Need more help constructing your incentive program? It can be a bit overwhelming, so we created a complete guide to rewarding students so everything you need is in one convenient place.

How have you used LiveSchool raffles as rewards? Share with us @whyliveschool on twitter!

Not working with a big budget? We put together 10 completely free rewards for your classroom that are sure to kickstart the engagement in your lessons.

Register Now

About the Presenter

You know what they teamwork makes the dream work. These articles have been written by the wonderful members of our team.

About the Event

Rewards stores, class or school-wide privileges, and special events all make for great options – and some educators are upping the ante when it comes to psyching students up about rewards.

That brings us to today’s topic: raffles. Raffles are an exciting way to generate buzz, and they are simple to run right from LiveSchool’s school-wide point + rewards system. They’re great scenarios where some or all students don’t have easy access to a physical in-school store. And they function seamlessly alongside other traditional rewards, so you can offer any combination of rewards you want!

We spoke with Jan Burgess, the Student Support Specialist at Northgate Middle School in Kansas City, to learn about how her team has made the most of LiveSchool rewards by using raffles. Here are her tips:

Run Your Raffle Through the LiveSchool Store

To simplify their ticket orders, Northgate runs their raffles (along with their other Gator Store orders) through Microsoft Forms – students enter the number of tickets they want to buy, and Burgess fulfills the orders with their LiveSchool points. Once all the entries are submitted, Burgess uses a free website tool called the Wheel of Names to pick the school’s winners. Since assemblies are on hold for COVID safety, she screen records the selection and sends the video to all her students. 

They loved the suspense of it all – we sent the selection video out to all the grades and virtual kids so they could experience that excitement. The turnout for tickets was enormous.

Engage Your Local Community

Burgess and her colleagues know that raffles are only as powerful as the items they feature, so they reached out to their local community for support. They received tons of donations that kept their raffles fresh and full of fun prizes for their middle schoolers. 

I went to social media and I asked everyone I knew to think of items they could donate for raffles. They gave cash like you wouldn’t believe! Hallmark donated giant bears – it became crazy! We received two gently used Microsoft Surface Pros and a Google tablet, which were our biggest items last year. We used the cash donations to buy stuffed animals that were on sale, earring trees, and more – we tried to find a wide variety.

Run Multiple Raffles at Once

Burgess and her colleagues run concurrent raffles featuring different “sized” rewards – they’ve found that this model keeps excitement high and encourages student participation. 

We always have more than one raffle going. If there is an item that might be more appealing to a smaller subsection of kids, it could be a smaller raffle that we run every two weeks. We divide the big items, like the tablets, out into quarterly raffles.  The smaller raffles keep the energy level high and not focused on one big event really far away. It feels nice to win, even if it’s a little thing, and I’m all about helping kids celebrate life.

Survey Your Students 

Burgess knows that student feedback is essential when it comes to running a successful raffle, and the Northgate team relies heavily on surveys, which they conduct multiple times a year. They use these surveys to query students about their favorite rewards and things they would like to see in upcoming raffles.

We survey our students at the beginning of the year and do it again mid-year so we can see if anything’s changed. We also listen to the kids that are filling in the orders in the store -- if they’re saying ‘Ohhh, this is cool!’ -- and we watch our inventory. We also do an end-of-year survey.

Need more help constructing your incentive program? It can be a bit overwhelming, so we created a complete guide to rewarding students so everything you need is in one convenient place.

How have you used LiveSchool raffles as rewards? Share with us @whyliveschool on twitter!

Not working with a big budget? We put together 10 completely free rewards for your classroom that are sure to kickstart the engagement in your lessons.

Sign up for more ideas
We’ll send you our monthly newsletter which is fully stocked with free resources like articles, videos, podcasts, reward ideas, and anything else we can think of to help you make your school awesome.

Rewards offer infinite options for creativity, and we see tons of schools implementing unique systems that speak to the needs (and passions!) of their students.

Rewards stores, class or school-wide privileges, and special events all make for great options – and some educators are upping the ante when it comes to psyching students up about rewards.

That brings us to today’s topic: raffles. Raffles are an exciting way to generate buzz, and they are simple to run right from LiveSchool’s school-wide point + rewards system. They’re great scenarios where some or all students don’t have easy access to a physical in-school store. And they function seamlessly alongside other traditional rewards, so you can offer any combination of rewards you want!

We spoke with Jan Burgess, the Student Support Specialist at Northgate Middle School in Kansas City, to learn about how her team has made the most of LiveSchool rewards by using raffles. Here are her tips:

Run Your Raffle Through the LiveSchool Store

To simplify their ticket orders, Northgate runs their raffles (along with their other Gator Store orders) through Microsoft Forms – students enter the number of tickets they want to buy, and Burgess fulfills the orders with their LiveSchool points. Once all the entries are submitted, Burgess uses a free website tool called the Wheel of Names to pick the school’s winners. Since assemblies are on hold for COVID safety, she screen records the selection and sends the video to all her students. 

They loved the suspense of it all – we sent the selection video out to all the grades and virtual kids so they could experience that excitement. The turnout for tickets was enormous.

Engage Your Local Community

Burgess and her colleagues know that raffles are only as powerful as the items they feature, so they reached out to their local community for support. They received tons of donations that kept their raffles fresh and full of fun prizes for their middle schoolers. 

I went to social media and I asked everyone I knew to think of items they could donate for raffles. They gave cash like you wouldn’t believe! Hallmark donated giant bears – it became crazy! We received two gently used Microsoft Surface Pros and a Google tablet, which were our biggest items last year. We used the cash donations to buy stuffed animals that were on sale, earring trees, and more – we tried to find a wide variety.

Run Multiple Raffles at Once

Burgess and her colleagues run concurrent raffles featuring different “sized” rewards – they’ve found that this model keeps excitement high and encourages student participation. 

We always have more than one raffle going. If there is an item that might be more appealing to a smaller subsection of kids, it could be a smaller raffle that we run every two weeks. We divide the big items, like the tablets, out into quarterly raffles.  The smaller raffles keep the energy level high and not focused on one big event really far away. It feels nice to win, even if it’s a little thing, and I’m all about helping kids celebrate life.

Survey Your Students 

Burgess knows that student feedback is essential when it comes to running a successful raffle, and the Northgate team relies heavily on surveys, which they conduct multiple times a year. They use these surveys to query students about their favorite rewards and things they would like to see in upcoming raffles.

We survey our students at the beginning of the year and do it again mid-year so we can see if anything’s changed. We also listen to the kids that are filling in the orders in the store -- if they’re saying ‘Ohhh, this is cool!’ -- and we watch our inventory. We also do an end-of-year survey.

Need more help constructing your incentive program? It can be a bit overwhelming, so we created a complete guide to rewarding students so everything you need is in one convenient place.

How have you used LiveSchool raffles as rewards? Share with us @whyliveschool on twitter!

Not working with a big budget? We put together 10 completely free rewards for your classroom that are sure to kickstart the engagement in your lessons.

Learn more about the author, 
The Liveschool Team
 
Let’s take this to your inbox
We’ll send you our monthly newsletter which is fully stocked with free resources like articles, videos, podcasts, reward ideas, and anything else we can think of to help you make your school awesome.

Rewards offer infinite options for creativity, and we see tons of schools implementing unique systems that speak to the needs (and passions!) of their students.

Rewards stores, class or school-wide privileges, and special events all make for great options – and some educators are upping the ante when it comes to psyching students up about rewards.

That brings us to today’s topic: raffles. Raffles are an exciting way to generate buzz, and they are simple to run right from LiveSchool’s school-wide point + rewards system. They’re great scenarios where some or all students don’t have easy access to a physical in-school store. And they function seamlessly alongside other traditional rewards, so you can offer any combination of rewards you want!

We spoke with Jan Burgess, the Student Support Specialist at Northgate Middle School in Kansas City, to learn about how her team has made the most of LiveSchool rewards by using raffles. Here are her tips:

Run Your Raffle Through the LiveSchool Store

To simplify their ticket orders, Northgate runs their raffles (along with their other Gator Store orders) through Microsoft Forms – students enter the number of tickets they want to buy, and Burgess fulfills the orders with their LiveSchool points. Once all the entries are submitted, Burgess uses a free website tool called the Wheel of Names to pick the school’s winners. Since assemblies are on hold for COVID safety, she screen records the selection and sends the video to all her students. 

They loved the suspense of it all – we sent the selection video out to all the grades and virtual kids so they could experience that excitement. The turnout for tickets was enormous.

Engage Your Local Community

Burgess and her colleagues know that raffles are only as powerful as the items they feature, so they reached out to their local community for support. They received tons of donations that kept their raffles fresh and full of fun prizes for their middle schoolers. 

I went to social media and I asked everyone I knew to think of items they could donate for raffles. They gave cash like you wouldn’t believe! Hallmark donated giant bears – it became crazy! We received two gently used Microsoft Surface Pros and a Google tablet, which were our biggest items last year. We used the cash donations to buy stuffed animals that were on sale, earring trees, and more – we tried to find a wide variety.

Run Multiple Raffles at Once

Burgess and her colleagues run concurrent raffles featuring different “sized” rewards – they’ve found that this model keeps excitement high and encourages student participation. 

We always have more than one raffle going. If there is an item that might be more appealing to a smaller subsection of kids, it could be a smaller raffle that we run every two weeks. We divide the big items, like the tablets, out into quarterly raffles.  The smaller raffles keep the energy level high and not focused on one big event really far away. It feels nice to win, even if it’s a little thing, and I’m all about helping kids celebrate life.

Survey Your Students 

Burgess knows that student feedback is essential when it comes to running a successful raffle, and the Northgate team relies heavily on surveys, which they conduct multiple times a year. They use these surveys to query students about their favorite rewards and things they would like to see in upcoming raffles.

We survey our students at the beginning of the year and do it again mid-year so we can see if anything’s changed. We also listen to the kids that are filling in the orders in the store -- if they’re saying ‘Ohhh, this is cool!’ -- and we watch our inventory. We also do an end-of-year survey.

Need more help constructing your incentive program? It can be a bit overwhelming, so we created a complete guide to rewarding students so everything you need is in one convenient place.

How have you used LiveSchool raffles as rewards? Share with us @whyliveschool on twitter!

Not working with a big budget? We put together 10 completely free rewards for your classroom that are sure to kickstart the engagement in your lessons.

Learn more about the author, 
The Liveschool Team
 

Bring a positive culture to life with school-wide points

Schedule a Demo