It's Covered: Doreen Weiss reads to her students on their donated rug.
The hardwood floor in Doreen Weiss's second-grade class was lovely to look at but uncomfortable to sit on during reading time, so Weiss covered part of it with a colorful rug decorated with a world map -- one paid for not by the school, nor by Weiss herself, but by an anonymous donor through the Web site DonorsChoose.org [1]. "My students loved it. And they still love it. They like to sit on certain continents," Weiss notes with a laugh.
If you could use some help providing supplies or experiences for your class, you're not alone. Since 2000, more than 42,000 school projects have received funding through DonorsChoose.org, which now serves public schools in all fifty states. Donors (the site calls them citizen philanthropists) range from charitable organizations to Fortune 500 companies, but the majority of benefactors are simply individuals looking to make a difference. So far, donors have given more than $18 million to fund projects for schools in need. Yours could be next.
To submit a proposal, you'll have to write an essay explaining which items you want and how they'll benefit your class. (Teachers have requested everything from multimedia projectors to art supplies to lab safety aprons.) Potential donors browse through thousands of proposals and may choose to contribute to, or fully pay for, the projects that interest them the most. If your project gets funded, DonorsChoose.org will purchase the items and mail them to you along with a feedback package you complete to thank your donors.
How can you improve the chances of your proposal getting funded? Here are some helpful dos:
And, of course, here are some don'ts:
Contributing Colleague: Teacher Kevan Truman enjoys funding other teachers' projects.
Teachers aren't just on the receiving end of DonorsChoose.org. Kevan Truman, a third-grade teacher at Central School, in Wilmette, Illinois, has donated funds to several projects on the site over the past two years. Would he ever request materials for his own class? The answer is no. "I am blessed with so much," he explains, noting the affluence of his school district.
For those who could use some assistance, DonorsChoose.org is a great resource -- so good, in fact, that some teachers are initially skeptical. "Teachers often tell us that this seems too good to be true, but it isn't," says DonorsChoose.org's Linda Erlinger. "It works."
Links:
[1] http://www.donorschoose.org
[2] http://www.donorschoose.org/donors/proposal.html?id=110185&zone=0
[3] http://www.edutopia.org/pdfs/receipt_history.pdf