Please help The Sharing Foundation win the $1,000 Daily Giving Challenge prize by donating on Thursday 10/29/09. The organization with the most unique daily donors wins. Please donate $10 minimum beginning 3pm Thursday till 2:59pm Friday.
Meet Seiha, Sarem, Ratha, Darien, Makara, Sokret, Sowat and Naveth!
These are TSF's first college grads! Eight years ago, Seiha, Sarem,
Ratha, Darien, Makara, Sokret, Sowat and Naveth would have said that
graduating from college was impossible. Thanks to TSF scholarships to
Universities in Phnom Penh, on top of their four previous of sponsored
high school, they make a better live for themselves and their families.
These young people are the sons and daughters of farmers, not one of
whom had a parent or relative who had graduated from high school!
The Sharing Foundation supported each of them.... and that's only the beginning. Here's a great video that really helps us to get a really powerful sense of the success of TSF and impact on people's lives!
I've tagged a few people whose contributions last year made this possible. Thanks!
I just read this great post by Beth Dunn, Reflections on the America's Giving Challenge. The winners of the challenge each get $50,000 in addition to what was donated during the challenge. She was writing about the results of the Challenge from Parade Magazine and the Case Foundation, and reflecting on why certain 'organizations' did better then others. Why did Amnesty International fall short? One of her key points:
...I think it points to the difference between
“organizations” trying to mobilize online supporters, and people trying
to mobilize other people.
For some reason this really got me thinking about why I got involved. Maybe this is sort of obvious, but if its not personal I don't think I give. So the question is how does it become personal to me? Then, what motivates me to give, or prevents me from giving?
Here's the process I went through - probably mostly subconsciously:
I like Beth and want to be seen in her eyes as someone worthy. I want to help her if its not too much of a burden on me.
I’d like to do the challenge myself for the cause that is important to me, but it feels overwhelming to me.
Beth’s cause is a good one... and more importantly, she is an intense believer in it. She appears to have absolutely no problem in telling the entire world how great this is. This is something I wish I could do.
Beth is a winner. She won last year, so I know she can win this year. I can be on the winning team. (hmmm I'm thinking of Beth as the winner here.... when its really an organization wide effort... but I only know Beth.)
Why is she a winner?
I am overwhelmed by the amount of requests I get for giving. How does this one get to the top of the pile?
Its been vetted for me already by my friend Beth
I can leverage my $10 into $50,000
Beth will like me.
The more I am asked to give, the more the personal relevance of the cause increases.
The barrier of entry for me is low...
I can afford to give $10.
I trust the mechanism for giving (Global Giving Website)
I have a way to give easily (Credit Card)
It seems that this process is then repeated down the line with my friends and contacts who have their own set of reasons why something is personal to them. I'm not sure what those things are. I started to write down some ideas and felt that I was treading on murky territory. I wish Beth Kanter would do a survey asking people. If only one could get the email list from Global Giving.
So what does that all translate into?
I give because it is easy
Because I get personal satisfaction out of it
Its going to a good cause
Not sure if this adds to the conversation, but it really got me thinking.
Let’s help the Sharing Foundation win the grand prize of $50,000 in the America's Giving Challenge. The Sharing Foundation is an amazing organization that helps educate and support Cambodian children. Beth Kanter and Michele Martin have been spearheading this effort. This is a great cause and...
The contest is over in ten days! The Sharing Foundation is currently in 1st Place! And to win we need to keep the donations coming in- just $10 is all that you need to contribute. And you can do that here.
Today there is a special challenge. Says Beth:
"Global Giving is offering additional incentives to heat up the
competition - over the next five days, the organizations that get the
most donations in a single 24 hour period will receive an additional
$250, plus the largest donation will be matched. So, if you haven't
contributed yet, this would be an excellent time to donate $10!"
I hope you will consider giving if you haven't already, and if you are really inspired to see the effects of this social media experiment, see how many others you can inspire to participate too!
Now, while we here at NTEN in no way believe
that Beth is actually 51, we certainly support her efforts on behalf of
the Sharing Foundation's Roteang Orphanage. NTEN community, you know
what to do:
I just wanted to add my voice to the group. This is a super cause and I know that we can win. The top 4 groups that receive the most donors will get $50,000 from the Case Foundation / Parade Magazine. Currently the group is in 5th place. So this is really possible!
The America's Giving Challenge is a competition sponsored by Parade Magazine and the Case Foundation, challenging non-profits to raise money from as many donors as possible. The minimum gift is just $10. The top winners will receive $50,000 from the America's Giving Challenge.
My dear friend and colleague Beth Kanter with great leadership support from Michele Martin are trying to win this challenge for The Sharing Foundation. I know they can do it, because Beth helped the Sharing Foundation win a similar challenge last year with Yahoo.
PLEASE DONATE I've donated to this campaign and ask you to do so too! Just click on the America's Giving Widget on the left and donate today. You can also help by clicking on the "Share This" button and sharing it with your friends.
ABOUT THE SHARING FOUNDATION The Sharing Foundation is this amazing organization that helps lift Cambodian children out of poverty through programs like its Khmer literacy school. It helps farm children learn their native alphabet and numbers well enough to attend elementary school. The Sharing Foundation's English Language Program offers village students, ages 8-18, the opportunity to learn English, allowing them to obtain jobs in tourism and word processing. These students are so dedicated that some meet on their own to study on weekends. The literacy school runs three sessions a day for 130 children of Roteang village’s poorest families. Ten bilingual Cambodian college graduates teach English to 500 students in 19 sections offered daily after school hours at the village school.
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