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Posts tagged education

You’ve never seen a fundraising video like this before.  Check out Mahindra Foundation’s “A Girl Story” campaign and watch the video series following Tarla, an underprivileged Indian girl.  But there’s a catch: donations are required to keep the story going. 
Amazing use of technology and the YouTube API.  Only complaint is that I wish the website were clearer about where a donation would go and how it will be used to make a difference.

You’ve never seen a fundraising video like this before.  Check out Mahindra Foundation’s “A Girl Story” campaign and watch the video series following Tarla, an underprivileged Indian girl.  But there’s a catch: donations are required to keep the story going. 

Amazing use of technology and the YouTube API.  Only complaint is that I wish the website were clearer about where a donation would go and how it will be used to make a difference.

If every charity was run with more of a business focus, the world would be a better place. We’ve created what I consider to be a hybrid organization—the best of charity merged with the best of business.
John Wood, a former senior executive at Microsoft before founding Room to Read in 2000.  Find out more about the organization’s model in Fortune Tech’s “How technology can help spread literacy”.
[Teach for America] is, I’m told by some recent grads, one of the coolest things you can do after college.
What They’re Doing After Harvard” from the Wall Street Journal.  Teach for America founder Wendy Kopp explains why her program beats working on Wall Street. 

Watch GOOD Magazine’s great video profile of City Year

How can we keep our students in school and on track? City Year was founded on the innovative approach that young people are in the best position to help students and improve education in this country. City Year unites young volunteers from all backgrounds for a full year of service as tutors and role models, working to transform schools and communities across the nation. We visit one such school in Queens, New York and observe first-hand the attention and devotion City Year mentors deliver to every single student.

Social Entrepreneurs! What Are Your Favorite Books?

We’re looking for your favorite strategic, motivational, or historical books that help you do good business.  In the comments below, write the title of the book, why you love it, and how it’s useful for other social entrepreneurs and socially responsible business folks. 

Then we’ll take your recommendations and create a Socially Responsible Reading List!

The Teach For All network is still in an early phase of development, but  Nick Canning, its chief operating officer, figures there is no natural  limit to its size. “We are interested in doing as much as we can and  having as much impact as possible,” he says. One future target area is  Africa, “where there is the greatest need and the greatest potential,”  he says. Kopp believes the organization will be able to accelerate  growth and support between 50 and 60 organizations in the network within  five years. “The ultimate vision is to create a network that is  building and fueling an unstoppable movement to ensure educational  opportunities for all,” she says. “If we can reach that point, we will   have created a powerful force for change around the world.”
Read more here. 

The Teach For All network is still in an early phase of development, but Nick Canning, its chief operating officer, figures there is no natural limit to its size. “We are interested in doing as much as we can and having as much impact as possible,” he says. One future target area is Africa, “where there is the greatest need and the greatest potential,” he says. Kopp believes the organization will be able to accelerate growth and support between 50 and 60 organizations in the network within five years. “The ultimate vision is to create a network that is building and fueling an unstoppable movement to ensure educational opportunities for all,” she says. “If we can reach that point, we will have created a powerful force for change around the world.”

Read more here. 

Volkswagen Expands Social Commitment In South Africa

“The Volkswagen Crafter will be traveling round Eastern Cape Province, giving children the chance to engage in sports and combining this with AIDS  prevention. The buses and their specialist teams will travel to over 100 schools, primarily in rural areas, and organize soccer training for boys and girls. These training sessions will also teach the young people through play about how to prevent AIDS, avoid violence and strengthen social skills. The programs will initially run until 2012 and will reach over 30,000 young people during this period.”

Which Nonprofit Will Win the Readers’ Choice Literacy Grant?

The good folks at Better World Books are funding not one, but two $20,000 grants to benefit meaningful literacy projects.  You get to pick one of the winners, and their literacy committee picks the other!

Read the grant proposal summaries and vote for your favorite!

The TFA Report: 5 Questions to Ask Yourself Before Doing Service Work

Yesterday, the New York Times published an article that I’m going to file in the “inconclusive but interesting” folder.  The piece, “Gauging the Dedication of Teacher Corps Grads”, comments on a new report that surveyed every person accepted by Teach for America from 1993 to 1998.

“A new study has found that their dedication to improving society at large does not necessarily extend beyond their Teach for America service.

In areas like voting, charitable giving and civic engagement, graduates of the program lag behind those who were accepted but declined and those who dropped out before completing their two years, according to Doug McAdam, a sociologist at Stanford University, who conducted the study with a colleague, Cynthia Brandt.”

Reactions on Twitter and in the blogosphere seem to go in two directions: either the article confirms people’s doubts the TFA can change the face of education or it remains too flawed and misleading to make a meaningful case.  I certainly have my questions.  What about the advancements TFA has made in the last 10 years since 1998?  What is the control group?  How exactly does the survey define a social citizen?

But as someone who myself served as a teacher for two years following college—in Japan on the JET Program, not through TFA—I feel the piece engages an important conversation around work and service.

In order to avoid the path toward cynicism, here are five questions you can ask yourself before deciding to mix work and service.

1.  Are you doing it for the resume?
Sought-after service programs like TFA are often seen by employers and graduate schools as a noble star on a young person’s resume. When I joined the JET Program, I can’t say I didn’t think about how it would distinguish me in a competitive job market.  But service work should make sense in your broader narrative.  I had participated in education and social services throughout high school and college, and having traveled in Japan I had a dream of moving back there.  Think hard about how a two-year commitment fits within your personal and professional story.

2.  What are your goals?
Service is often thought of as doing things for others, but you have to understand what you want to get out of it for yourself.  Develop your leadership skills?  Experience living abroad or in another state?  Continue your commitment to a particular issue? Write them down.  When the social problems you’re trying to solve become overwhelming, turn to this list to keep yourself focused.

3. Have you done your research?
It’s easy to romanticize service work. Yet in many ways it’s really like any other job, filled with interpersonal challenges, frustrating bureaucracy, and growing responsibilities. Are you aware of your actual daily duties?  Do you know if there are opportunities for professional development?  Have you seen your potential living and work conditions? Actively seek out that kind of information and then set realistic expectations for yourself.

4.  How will you deal with emotional stress?
The daily grind of service is exhausting, especially when you’re stationed far away from your family and friends.  Couple that with minimal compensation and you’ll likely start questioning your choices.  That’s not a desirable position for anyone.  Putting that support system in place beforehand can be the difference between dedication and disillusionment.

5.  What will you do once your service ends?
Of course, this is a trick question.  We all know that service never really ends!  But when burn out hits, you might find yourself saying, “I served for two full years of my life.  I put in my time.” That’s a pretty hopeless response. Figure out what you like about service and find at least three ways to integrate that into your daily routine at work, with your family, or on your own.