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Programs:
Students4Giving
Wheelock College, Boston, MA
Wheelock College in Boston is pleased to submit this application
to become one of the Campus Compact Students4Giving sites. Wheelock
has more than 100 years of experience in focusing on matters related
to children and families. It is a private college with a public
mission -- to improve the quality of life for children and families
-- and is recognized nationally and internationally as a premier
institution preparing early childhood and elementary teachers.
Wheelock College's teacher preparation program is well known for its
focus on child development, research-based pedagogy, and innovative
instruction strategies for preparing teachers to teach pre-school
and elementary children. Its innovative urban teaching program,
begun in 1991, has graduated more than 200 students with specific
background and experience working in urban environments. Wheelock's
involvement in and contribution to the Boston community is
multifaceted: from hosting an Upward Bound program for Boston Public
School students, to placing teaching and social work interns in the
schools, to providing support and expertise to a range of
community-based non-profit organizations, to providing professional
development for Boston elementary science and early childhood
teachers, to convening the early childhood community of
Massachusetts for a series of strategy sessions, to work on juvenile
justice policy and advocacy statewide.
Wheelock offers programs through three schools: the
School of
Arts and Sciences, the
School of Education and Child Life, and
the School of Social Work and Family Studies. Wheelock's
undergraduate arts and sciences majors, excellent professional
preparation programs, graduate degrees, and professional development
programs are all built on the integration of theory and research
with practice and policy; sophisticated problem-solving, critical
reasoning, oral and written communication skills; a strong grounding
in human development; and a commitment to multiculturalism,
diversity, and social justice.
Educational Framework for Students4Giving
On October 29, 2007 Nobel Peace Prize recipient and Archbishop
Emeritus Desmond Tutu was welcomed by the Wheelock College community
along with students from Boston Public Schools and public
officials -- as part of a two-day event focused on reconciliation
and unity. More than 350 middle and high school students from Boston
gathered for this once-in-a-lifetime symposium to discuss the
condition of their communities, what is causing the recent rise in
homicides and how Boston as a community can turn the tide of
violence toward reconciliation and understanding. This Youth
Symposium could not come at a more crucial moment for the city of
Boston.
Boston faces a turbulent time, with the homicide rate at an
11-year high -- an increase of 44 percent from 2006. It is clear
that the city has an escalating problem, yet the answers to solving
these issues are complex and varied. Many members of the Boston
community are sounding a call for action in order to prevent and
reduce this rise in crime. One of the outcomes of this powerful
event was a follow-up summit in November where the youth asked for
help in their work to relieve the conditions that breed violence in
their communities.
In response to the youths' request, Dr. Felicity Crawford, a
faculty member at Wheelock College and Lead Contact for this
proposal, put forth, designed and taught a 4-credit undergraduate
course entitled: Bridges to Hope: Understanding and Changing the
Social and Academic Outcomes of Youths of Boston. During the
course, students ably identified and critically examined eight
problematic issues that impact their daily live: poverty, health
inequities, violence, drug policies, drug use and incarceration,
educational inequity, and the deficit orientation that guides
institutional policies and practices. They approached their work
using a process for naming and analyzing a problem that was put
forth by renowned educational thinker Paulo Freire (1985). The
course culminated in a presentation of the students' work to a
gathering of 100 attendees.
Students4Giving will provide Wheelock College and Dr.
Crawford with the resources to realize the important next step in
the Bridges to Hope initiative: using the work completed during the
initial course, students will have the opportunity and the funds to
begin to forge the positive changes in the social and academic
outcomes they envision for themselves, their peers and their
community.
For the Students4Giving initiative, Dr. Crawford will
create two new courses to be offered in fall 2008 and spring 2009 in
the College of Liberal Arts. These courses will be open to Wheelock
students and also students attending any member of the Colleges of
the Fenway, a collaborative effort of six neighboring Boston-based
colleges in the Fenway area. High school students may also enroll.
During the fall course, Articulating our Values and Commitment
to Positive Community Change students will learn about the
function, sequence, format, regulations, ethics, content and
considerations that govern philanthropy and how to manage a Giving
Account. Students will use the community assessment completed in the
foundational course Bridges to Hope to select one of the
eight issues on which to focus Wheelock's Giving Account for Spring
2009. They will create a philanthropic vision statement for their
Giving Account, and also create a request for proposals (with
accompanying review rubric) to be released in December 2008. A
priority will be to fund community based organizations that can
offer a valuable community service opportunity to the students.
Students will also design and begin to implement a fundraising plan
to ensure that the Giving Account will be replenished and the
Bridges to Hope
course sequence can be repeated in future years.
In the spring course, Engendering Community Change,
students will complete proposal review, conduct site visits, develop
a decision-making process and make grantee selections. It is
anticipated that the students will select two grantee organizations.
Students will also participate in community service activities with
the grantees and continue their fundraising activities with a goal
of raising a minimum of $8,000 over the course of the school year.
Deep engagement with the grantees will give students an appreciation
of how non-profits conduct their development activities, encouraging
student learning about the need for ongoing fundraising to meet
long-term community needs. Students will focus on how the grantees
measure the impact of their work, and how they present those results
to potential funders. At a June 2009 event, the students and
grantees will showcase their work to the Wheelock and Boston
community.
Educational Goals: The educational goals are for the
students to master ideas and knowledge about how philanthropy works
and its potential impact on nonprofit organizations focused on
alleviating pressing community problems. Students will manage a
charitable fund to achieve their stated philanthropic goals and gain
knowledge and experience through reading, writing, and hands-on
philanthropic management and fundraising. The courses will include
specific units on the following topics: defining philanthropy; the
roles of government, business and philanthropy; community needs
assessment; operational characteristics of nonprofit organizations;
philanthropy and civil society; how diverse cultures approach and
experience philanthropy; skills of civic engagement; philanthropy
and the individual; volunteering and service; raising private
resources; and integrating the service experience into learning.
Assessment: Students will illustrate (verbally, visually,
and in writing) their mastery of key concepts and will engage in
consistent self and peer reflections to reinforce what they have
learned.
Support for Students: The logistics of the grantmaking
will be the responsibility of a graduate student paid with a stipend
through the Students4Giving administrative budget. Dr. Crawford will
provide support and leadership guiding the students' work. The
leadership of the grantees will support and guide the students'
community service involvement, in partnership with Dr. Crawford.
Ongoing financial support of the charitable mission through
the Giving Account program: Wheelock College's objective is for
students enrolled in the Bridges to Hope initiative to successfully
create a strong philanthropic agenda and access the resources
necessary to support two organizations in spring 2009 and to repeat
the sequence for a minimum of five years. The students will consider
a variety of fundraising approaches, including securing individual
gifts and corporate sponsorships and holding sponsored walks,
events, auctions, and raffles. The students will also be introduced
to how the Gift Account is invested to maximize its value.
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