As I previewed last week, today is Blog Action Day. What's neat is that there's no guarantee blogs can really deliver on a philanthropic/civic-minded project. There are many isolated examples of success, but nothing systemic. But this is an advantage. Free of the shackles of what's worked in the past, each blogger can try something different in the hopes of supporting this year's theme, the environment.
My method is to promote DonorsChoose.com. DonorsChoose let's lets teachers create proposals for projects that need funding. Potential donors visit the site, browse through potential projects, and can choose to fund all or part of a project.
DonorsChoose . . .
- Rewards teachers for creative ideas and articulate proposals.
- Provides a forum for donors who are searching for something out of the ordinary.
- Combines the ease of online money transfer with the spontaneity of donating to a good cause.
I selected this project because
- It helps a teacher in a district where 84% of the students, due to povery, are on a free lunch program. By comparison, my high school, High Point, is at about 5%.
- It helps a Los Angeles teacher who is in the Teach for America Corps. Teach for America is a noble effort to increase the number of highly-qualified teachers in classrooms and hopefully keep them there for good.
- The project is already partially funded. This is important to me because it emphasizes that if everybody chips in a little bit, even if they're complete strangers, great things can be accomplished.
- It aims to put some actual objects in the hands of science students. As a visual learner myself, I can appreciate this.
- The teacher's proposal uses the word "realia." Therefore, it helped me learn a new word.
Now I know some of you are saying, "Curtis, if I give enough money to fully fund the project, then nobody else will have the opportunity to donate to it. Therefore, I probably shouldn't give any money at all." That's hogwash. Stop saying that.
The project is
Help Public School Kids by Funding my Challenge at DonorsChoose
3 comments:
Curtis,
Please correct your misuse of let's and it's. I can't keep sending people to your blog and bragging about being your English teacher if you're going to make mistakes like that.
-2.
But DO keep supporting cool projects that teachers are doing!
Fair enough. Until I have a chance to edit them, I'm switching my resume to "English Teacher: Mr. Bauer" for your protection.
Now, as for prepositional phrases ending sentences in the comments section . . . well, I can't help you there.
I'm with Churchill on that one: put your prepositions wherever you want!
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