Challenges to PhilanthropyMain MenuChallenges to PhilanthropyFSSO 119 Fall 2020Chapter 1: Challenges to Educational Nonprofit OrganizationsChallenges to Educational Nonprofit OrganizationsChapter 2: Challenges to Healthcare PhilanthropyRead about how the COVID-19 Pandemic is affecting some of the world's leading nonprofit healthcare organizationsChapter 3: Challenges to Arts Nonprofit OrganizationsPage 1 Challenges to Arts Nonprofit OrganizationsChapter 4: Challenges to Social Service OrganizationsChallenges to Social Service OrganizationsChapter 5: Challenges to Faith-Based Nonprofit OrganizationsChallenges to Faith-Based Nonprofit OrganizationsChapter 6: Challenges to Social Justice Nonprofit OrganizationsChallenges to Social Justice Nonprofit OrganizationsBarbara Burgess-Van Akendffa201f9e142dde249b32b2c708a4eebdb9f6daFSSO 119: Philanthropy in America
Geospatial Map of Education Disparity 2
12020-11-16T22:49:44+00:00Aditi Mukkara0491e279d18d06f6564c70318b3eb29abd6da4f7891Geospatial Map of Education Disparity 2plain2020-11-16T22:49:44+00:00Aditi Mukkara0491e279d18d06f6564c70318b3eb29abd6da4f7
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12020-11-16T21:47:51+00:00What is Education Philanthropy?38plain2020-11-30T18:24:21+00:00 Impoverished students face many barriers to education: low quality schooling, lack of resources and support, inadequate nutrition, and more. Meanwhile, middle-upper class students are handed opportunities that put them ahead. These disparities create the achievement gap ("Top Education Nonprofit Organizations Helping Shape Schools, Students & Teachers").
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Map of Education Funding
This geospatial map of the United States clearly illustrates one of the primary issues deep rooted in our inherently flawed education system: funding inequity. On a local, state, and national level, drastic disparities in funding and access to resources deny many students a proper education, leaving millions of students behind annually. On a global scale, as one can imagine, this education inequity is even more prominent. Education philanthropy exists to diminish the wide gap in education funding.
Education nonprofits aim to close the achievement gap between middle-class and poor students. Money collected from grants, the government, and donors allow these organizations to provide children with a variety of programs and resources to support their academic growth:
training volunteers to provide programming that ensures that all children are ready for kindergarten
effective teacher recruitment
training and professional development to teachers and administrators
organize extracurricular programs
provide educational materials and other important resources that may be in short supply ("Top Education Nonprofit Organizations Helping Shape Schools, Students & Teachers").
For reference, the picture below highlights some of the history related to educational philanthropy, that have led into the creation of the field as we know today: Throughout this chapter, we will discuss the challenges that education nonprofits are dealing with as a result of current events and recent movements.