The next day while in the office at 5:30 pm, I saw the light on in my office neighbor’s window across the way. I opened mine and yelled out to him. He opened his with a big smile. Enjoying the connection and conversation, he held up the Starbucks coffee cup, his daily delivery. I prodded him on the front stoop the day before, his Starbucks delivery in hand…"walk out the door and support one of our small businesses; the bagel shop makes the best cappuccino and americano. Just make sure you have Judy do it.” So, from his window he tells me that it’s because of the convenience and time savings. He doesn’t take the time to go the 1/2 block daily, and so misses out on the connection, the neighborly familiarity with local businesses that's easily cultivated just out our door. Read the Tuesday opinion by Brian Broome. You may find yourself pondering and reflecting on choices too. Giving Tuesday, right after Thanksgiving, is upon us
Feel free to give in advance and we’ll honor our Giving Tuesday 1:1 Match and you'll avoid our Giving Tuesday appeals among all the others. Donations replenish the College Access Funds supporting invaluable college prep workshops, and Supplemental Scholarship awards for 2022 high school grads. How Boji manages is quite remarkable…. same with the students we support on their journey toward success in high school, and achieving college scholarships, degrees, and professional dreams. Giving Tuesday, right after Thanksgiving, is upon us
Feel free to give in advance and we’ll honor our Giving Tuesday 1:1 Match and you'll avoid our Giving Tuesday appeals cluttering your inbox. 100% of donations go toward the College Access Funds supporting invaluable college prep workshops, and Supplemental Scholarship awards for 2022 high school grads.
Listen to his engaging interview with Cantate’s Music Director. Learn about Anthony’s life, struggles, hard work and achievements, good fortune he encounters, his aspirations, and how opera and music entered his life. In a Broken Educational System Serendipity & Good Fortune Crush the Cycle of Poverty It's magical and powerful, Anthony's story, as are all of those stories of successful people who overcame systemic obstacles. The page-turners on our eye-opening stories page reveal that high school and college degrees and upward mobility often come down to the serendipitous appearance of pivotal people at critical moments, and the student scholar’s courage, strength, and persistence that emerges to break through road-blocks and faltering hope and belief on a perilous journey that’s far from mundane. "We have overwhelming odds we have to face and get over as a community . . . I was blessed to be able to,” remarks Anthony when interviewing another fortunate full-scholarship student. Listen to interviews conducted by Anthony, filled with insightful illuminating conversation. Hear students and degreed young adults, at different stages of achievement in their pursuit of upward mobility and fulfilling careers, tell it like it is. Their conversations reveal key worries, financial stress, struggles and critical turning points that lead to hard-earned achievements one-step at a time on their families’ unfamiliar unbeaten path. Put on Your Thinking Cap We need to grow All Out for Change® funds to assist more students in bigger ways: provide more availability to College Prep programs, and to reduce their college debt burdens via Supplemental Scholarship awards. If you know of any businesses, individuals, rotary clubs, small grant-making foundations, or grant-writers who’d like to help make a difference for financially disadvantaged student scholars, please email me. To start replenishing the Funds for 2021-2022 11th & 12 grade scholars donate below
The Why Behind What We Do, and How 2021 Charter School Grads Benefited From Donations `“The median weekly pay in 2020 for workers with a bachelor’s degree was $1,305, compared with $938 for those with an associate’s degree and $781 for high school graduates", according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s precisely why we do what we do…we do what we can to get financially disadvantaged students the additional support they need to make achieving that well-deserved degree a little easier. Every school year we assist a different group of 11th & 12 grade students by: ~ channeling College Access funds raised toward College prep, counseling, application and scholarship research assistance, and tutoring. These invaluable programs cultivate dreams and hope. They change the trajectory of students' lives, by allowing them to jump start a journey toward higher education, professional ambitions, and upward mobility. ~ channeling Supplemental Scholarship awards to each year’s 12th grade college scholarship recipients to help with essential expenses (of which there are many) and help reduce their debt burden.
How Fortunate They Are Though their families have very limited income (about 50% of the school’s students receive free and reduced-price lunches), the students are rich with potential, and have the good fortune, via a lottery, to attend a top-notch public charter school where they could cultivate their potential and become competitive college and scholarship candidates with help of a full-time college counselor who we collaborate with. Typically, public schools in less affluent zip codes nationwide aren’t able to provide for students in this way, and not everyone wins the lottery in DC to their school of choice. My heart goes out to those whose potential to soar is stalled due to their misfortune of being in underfunded, understaffed schools, part of our educational system’s inequity. Our 16 inspiring, hard-working student scholars are very fortunate to have had the opportunity to overcome, at least, that disadvantage. Helping them move along on their journey toward a degree, a fulfilling profession and upward mobility with a little more ease is important to me and to our mission. To start replenishing the Funds for 2021-2022 11th & 12 grade scholars donate below Listen to eye-opening interviews with student scholars and successful young professionals. Learn about their financial struggles, achievements, hurdles, and good fortune as they pursue upward mobility.
Thanks again on behalf of Skylar, Luz, Damaris, Erik, Shamaari, Cyndy, David, Victoria, Franchelis, Guadalupe, Juana, Noelvin, Katherine, Henry, Johan, and Lizbeth. Sincerely, MaryAnn, Chief Engagement Officer and Founder AllOutForChange® Remarkable Journeys Toward Independence Listen to a Kaleidoscopic Array of Interviewees Who Tell It Like It Is In Conversations With Anthony, a Thoughtful Interviewer, an All Out for Change® Supplemental Scholarship Recipient, an Aspiring Opera Singer Who’s Studying at Oberlin Conservatory with Scholarships. Their stories are full of good fortune, stumbling blocks & determination to overcome them, financial wizardry from 17-25 year-olds, and pivotal persons and moments when doors open at critical times along the journey. Outstanding achievement surfaces when the financial resources and people appear that cultivate the potential that lies dormant in economically disadvantaged students and their schools. I admire them; I’ve had lengthier conversations with each and heard some powerful, moving stories. “I’m graduating with $40,000 in federal loans,” remarks Rebecca a college scholarship recipient, Anthony replies, “That’s not that bad!” Imagine being a 12th-grader with a scholarship offer, projecting very little money for day to day expenses, about to embark on a perilous journey that leads down a deep hole of debt, to then climb the rickety ladder out toward upward mobility without a safety net. Listen to Rebecca talk with Anthony, another scholarship student in similar shoes, and learn about the remarkable financial gyrations Rebecca spins through, her conundrums and worries, much different concerns than her peers from wealthier families. Now with a degree from George Washington University in hand, Rebecca’s stepping upon the rickety ladder upward with a new job on the horizon, hoping for a stable, bright future, and one day free of her college debt burden. Revealed in Interviews: When Ambition Meets Good Fortune - Dreams Emerge & Their Achievement “Nearly forty years later, I can reflect on what a blessing it has been to encounter so many people who chose to help someone in need — not because they had to but because they simply could…. In whatever form, such acts create their own legacy of hope and inspiration. They pass something on,” remarks Deval Patrick, former Massachusetts Governor and author of A Reason to Believe: Lessons from an Improbable Life. If you’ve contributed during our fundraiser, we thank you for your understanding and generosity. If not, and you’d like to pitch in, you can make an Independence Day 1:1 Match donation for the ambitious hard-working student scholars we support in pursuit of independence for themselves, and their families. Through you and your support we can make a big difference in someone else’s life. And for that, I am very grateful! Cultivate Extraordinary Change Please share our July 3rd Independence Day Fundraiser Post We celebrate the success of these students and college graduates on Independence Day.
MaryAnn, Chief Engagement Officer and Founder AllOutForChange® I wish I could convey the powerful, moving experience I had at a student scholars’ award ceremony . . . their accomplishments, much more noteworthy than your everyday award ceremony. What potential and outstanding achievement surfaces when the financial resources and people appear to cultivate that potential that lies dormant in under-resourced schools. To witness their accomplishments and awards, and meet them is a great honor: the 12th grade grads, honor-roll students, and college scholarship recipients; and college grads, summa cum laude, and cum laude. I admire their courage and achievements under the most difficult of circumstances throughout their youth. How Your College Access Funds Paid Off
With High School Achievement & Scholarships, There’s Much Immediate Need Supplemental Scholarship Funds - 1:1 Match up to $7,000 Through JuneWhether donating funds, computers, used & unused gift cards, they all fulfill the college-bound students’ needs for essentials like housing, meals, transportation to and from school, dorm & school supplies, books, laptops, mobile phone plans, and more. Upward mobility is costly and these students and others we support will end up with debt burdens. For example, a student received a half-tuition scholarship to Yale, that’s $25k of $50k tuition; she needs to find additional scholarship funds and loans to cover the additional $22k for housing, meals, books, and fees; and still, school & dorm supplies, transportation to and from school, possibly a laptop, and basic living expenses. Supplemental Scholarship fund donations and gift cards can help. A gift of $25=$50; $200=$400; $500=$1000. Donations make their uphill climb less burdensome. Every little bit helps! "The Proof is in the Pudding" First Generation College Grads & Their Awards Others who came before this year’s college-bound class, made great strides:
I’m excited for these ambitious student scholars, their futures in college, and their post-college futures. Braswell, Fabricio, Rebecca, all with careers in place, are reasons to believe in those following in their footsteps. Through contributions we can facilitate their challenging journeys with College Access Funds for invaluable college prep support, and Supplemental Scholarship Funds for college-bound high school grads. Summer Reading Like No Other Visit our Eye-Opening Stories page to find summer reading, remarkable success stories that will blow you away, and affirm the necessity of going to bat for students whose families and schools have limited financial resources. Another Way to Help Student Scholars is by Starting Your Own Facebook Fundraiser for All Out for Change®For simple instructions to start your FaceBook Fundraiser visit our FaceBook Fundraiser page. A gift of $25=$50; $200=$400; $500=$1000 Your donation in its entirety is invested in our student scholars Spread the Word via Instagram & Facebook Through you and your support we can make a big difference in someone else’s life. And for that, I am very grateful! Many Many Thanks, MaryAnn, Chief Engagement Officer and Founder AllOutForChange® “I’m graduating with $40,000 in federal loans,” remarks Rebecca. Anthony replies, “That’s not that bad!” LISTEN HERE Imagine being a 12th-grader with a scholarship offer, projecting very little money for day to day expenses, about to embark on a perilous journey that leads down a deep hole of debt, to then climb the rickety ladder out toward upward mobility without a safety net. Listen to her talk with Anthony, another scholarship student in similar shoes, and learn about the remarkable financial gyrations Rebecca spins through, her conundrums and worries, much different concerns than her peers from wealthier families. Now a George Washington University senior, she steps upon the rickety ladder with a new job on the horizon, hoping for a stable, bright future, and one day free of her college debt burden. Hard to imagine… with a high school degree, a college scholarship and financial aid in hand you pass “GO” with all kinds of challenges and financial stress through college and beyond. It’s either that direction as a first generation college student or life with a low-wage job. Today’s climb for ambitious students from poor and working class families, in under-resourced schools, is fraught with hurdles. That journey upward now typically requires major debt and more than a high school degree. It becomes possible and less perilous when others, like All Out for Change® and contributors, go All Out to help students through high school and college Change their and their families' lives for good. "Student debt can be the difference between a financial future of hope or one of despair," writes tax law professor Dorothy A. Brown, in The Washington Post. Our spring fundraiser for 2021 high school grads starts early May. We're estimating we’ll need $7,500 for laptops for 15 grads to get them through their college years; that's on top of the other Supplemental Scholarship Fund needs. Feel free to pitch in now, with your used laptop, used or unused gift cards, or via a donation; fifty - 12th grade recipients of free and reduced price lunches will greatly appreciate the assistance with college expenses. Help Build Awareness - If you haven’t already “liked” us on Facebook and you do like us, please take a second to “like” our FB Page Thanks for listening to Rebecca’s story, and for your support.
MaryAnn, Chief Engagement Officer and Founder AllOutForChange® Animation: Thomas Thorspecken, former Disney Animator, now an independent artist and illustrative journalist; check him out at analogartistdigitalworld.com. Our courageous Sam in the video is a neighbor I’m very fortunate to know. His social equity awareness at the age of 12, as displayed in his memoir, set the foundation for the rest of his life. These days he takes action by supporting All Out for Change® and other charities. “I’m donating my next stimulus check to charities and organizations that aid children and promote social equity. I’ve already earmarked $900 for righteous causes, including $100 to All Out for Change,” wrote Sam in a recent note. Financially disadvantaged, hard-working 2021 high school grads with college scholarships will need assistance with other essential expenses such as, laptops, books, small tuition gaps, meal plans, dorm and school supplies, transportation to college, etc; all basics that their wealthier peers’ families can afford. Investments like Sam’s in the ambitious students we support will cover their shortfall and provide supplemental assistance where needed. Defining Social Equity “PolicyLink defines equity as “just and fair inclusion into a society in which all can participate, prosper, and reach their full potential. Unlocking the promise of the nation by unleashing the promise in us all.” The American Planning Association “It Takes a Village” to Open Doors to Opportunity and Upward Mobility from an inequitable educational system that does a serious disservice to our youth from working poor families (security guards, food prep and waitstaff, childcare and healthcare workers). Neither extra-curricular enrichment programs, nor essentials can be covered with the famiilies' low-wage, yet invaluable jobs they perform. Nor do they have the privilege of living in an affluent zip code where higher property taxes fund exceptional public schools. So, unlike their wealthier peers, ambitious first generation college freshman face many systemic challenges in high school and college. To better grasp today’s systemic hurdles toward upward mobility read this personal eye-opening account, “I Was a Low-Income College Student. Classes Weren’t the Hard Part.” Anthony Abraham Jack, New York Times. His book, The Privileged Poor,captures the inequity and the struggles students face to change their lives for good, and presents ways the system can better support them. Find numerous riveting personal accounts on our Eye-Opening Stories page, including, A Most Beautiful Thing: The True Story of America's First All-Black High School Rowing Team by Arshay Cooper; or choose from among numerous revealing, compelling books. All Out for Change®, through understanding & thoughtful supporters, serves as one of numerous essential players facilitating ambitious students’ rise above the systemic hurdles.
Spread the Word via Instagram & Facebook These fortunate, grateful, wise student scholars and professionals are familiar with that gift of belief: “People believe in us and they want the best for us,” remarked Anthony Anderson in a recent conversation. “Believe in us,” asserted Braswell when we recently spoke. And when returning to speak to youth at the juvenile facility where he was in solitary confinement at the age of 12, Ryan Speedo Green, now a professional opera singer, said, “I believe in you, I believe in you, I believe in you.” Profiles Illustrating The Power Of That Belief Braswell: Junior year, at a public high school in SE Washington, through friends in a non-profit Mathletes program Braswell learned of a college-readiness program that attracted him. This took his life on the road less traveled, unfamiliar to students in southeast DC. Says Braswell, “in a cargo van packed with students visiting colleges in North Carolina and Florida, I learned there’s more than Alabama Avenue.” He hadn’t traveled before or been outside the neighborhood.“Mr. Penniman helped me to open my eyes.” After completing his graduate degree in Education at the University of Arizona, Braswell now works as the school’s first Black Student Recruitment Coordinator. Fabricio: What he has accomplished at only 24, arriving in this country as a kid from El Salvador who lived in poverty, and attended a DC charter school, is admirable and remarkable. When I asked him, would you be where you are today if your 10th grade teacher hadn’t noticed your “love for math” and directed you to Mr. P. (Mathletes) and Ms. Barbara (a tutor)? “Absolutely not!” He overcame one hurdle upon another. If these individuals hadn’t appeared he wouldn’t be a successful IT professional who purchased a home in the DC suburbs “for his parents”, where he and his sister also live. “I told my Mom I was going to be the last in the family to live in poverty.” Anthony: He had the good fortune of ending up in a DC public school that ranks in the top 7% of US schools, the Duke Ellington School of the Arts. Someone from his middle school urged Anthony to audition. Though he never sang or acted, Anthony says, " A reading teacher who saw how much I acted out thought to direct me toward acting, and auditioning for the Duke Ellington School to redirect that energy toward a positive outcome". And Anthony, “winged it” at his audition; accepted to the school, “at 14 I knew I was destined to go that path”. Later, as a high school Junior he and opera clicked. A teacher took interest in him, and Anthony connected with his church pianist, who became a mentor. Little did he know then, he’d be headed into opera, and receive a full scholarship to the Oberlin Conservatory of Music. Learn of roadblocks he faced; watch a short Today Show segment. Keanu: As a basketball player on the Navajo Reservation’s Chinle High School Basketball team the basketball coach served as a pivotal person in his and his teammates’ lives. For Keanu, his English teacher did as well. Writes Michael Powell in Canyon Dreams, “Keanu typed his college essays on his cell phone and transcribed them when he got to school… As Keanu’s trailer lacked anything like an internet connection, he lugged his laptop to the Burger King in Chinle where he worked as a cashier…logged on and closed his eyes and asked God and the Holy People for help… He was knocking at a door to an unknown world…. He got into Swarthmore. And Dartmouth. And Brown, Columbia, Case Western, and Harvard… Five months later he would board a plane and land in Boston and matriculate at Harvard.” Arshay Cooper: Says Arshay Cooper in his book, A Most Beautiful Thing; The True Story of America’s All-Black Rowing Team, “Ken and Victory Outreach have taught me to have vision and to see where I want to be and what to do to get there.” And in the Epilogue, he writes, “I can never thank Ken enough for throwing me into the water because the sport of crew changed my life." Purchase this book to read his gripping story that begins in the 90's on the rough streets of Chicago's west side. Ryan Speedo Green (an accomplished opera star whose remarkable story is told in Sing for Your Life), Wes Moore (author of the NYT bestseller, The Other Wes Moore; One Name, Two Fates), Arshay Cooper (author of A Most Beautiful Thing; The True Story of America’s First All-Black High School Rowing Team; now a documentary) have published books (available on our Eye-Opening Stories page) about their riveting and remarkable journeys, filled with ups and downs. While these are heartwarming stories, there’s heartbreak on the other side knowing that way too many students caught in our inequitable education system will never be blessed with the serendipitous good fortune of pivotal people who set the stage for achievement and upward mobility. Often Just One Individual Serves As A Platform For Change, The Skateboard With Which To Soar Facilitate Belief And Achievement - Mentor A Student, Or Help With Literacy. You can be a pivotal person for youth attending our many underperforming, under-resourced schools, who live in working-hard-to-get-by families that can’t afford to live in the zip codes with high-performing schools. Often both the student and the parent work minimum wage jobs. And that’s where we and you and others come in to break that cycle and watch a student soar: high school degree, scholarships, college degrees, and fulfilling professions! Many 9th graders read well below their grade-level. Volunteer a couple hours a week to elevate essential skills for success. Choose your city and do as I did for results: searching literacy programs in Washington, DC. And this link has volunteer opportunities throughout the US. YOUR DONATION IN ITS ENTIRETY IS INVESTED IN OUR STUDENT SCHOLARS Spread the Word via Instagram & Facebook Stay Well and Cultivate Belief and Achievement in 2021!
MaryAnn, Chief Engagement Officer and Founder AllOutForChange® 2020 College Access & Supplemental Scholarship Fundraising Grand Finale By now you know post-high school education is the ticket to upward mobility. And you know about the need low-income student scholars have for essential financial support to excel in high school, and pursue college degrees and fruitful careers. As wealthier parents know, an exorbitant amount can be spent on cultivating a competitive candidate for college acceptance; then there’s ongoing day-to-day need for essentials besides housing and tuition for 4 years. Full scholarship recipients have these needs as well in high school and college and the All Out for Change® College Access Fund & Supplemental Scholarship Awards pitch in via supporters in the way of cash donations, gift cards, and computers. YOUR DONATION IN ITS ENTIRETY IS INVESTED IN OUR STUDENT SCHOLARS The Match: your donation will result in my personal gift of $25 to address college student food insecurity. The Return on Your Investment Their Success, Achievements, Hope for Their Future; And The Smile You Get When You See This Photo Why the Gigantic Smile? Zoom in to read, from George Mason University Office of Admissions to James: Anthony’s Fall Semester Solo Opera Produced With the New i-Pad Thanks to supporters who contributed to this Supplemental Scholarship Award, we continue to support Anthony in his pursuit of his career in opera. Watch his short solo-opera exploring homelessness, and don’t miss the credits at the end: A House Is Not A Home. Did You Know? Food Insecurity Exists on Campuses Regarding the day-to-day help, food is among the essentials for students from first generation working-class and low-income families! I will personally gift $25 to the George Washington University student-run food pantry, The Store, providing: food, basic hygiene products, and school supplies, and more. I’ll be donating a couple of my coats and kitchen supplies as well. According to The Store’s faculty advisor I’ve met, students they serve include undergrads, graduate, law and medical school students. They noted an increased “very high demand” among this semester’s 500 residential students. The demand will likely double or triple during spring semester with the arrival of 1000 more residential students. I Was a Low-Income College Student. Classes Weren’t the Hard Part. Anthony Abraham Jack, New York Times My hope Is we’re shedding some light on a dark corner of our educational system, cultivating awareness and support for students who deserve a chance to pursue their potential. To help do so, share this enews, and our facebook and instagram posts. Spread the Word via Instagram & Facebook Stay Well and Help Make Independence & Achievement Happen in 2021!
MaryAnn, Chief Engagement Officer and Founder AllOutForChange® |
MaryAnn PuglisiChief Engagement Officer, AllOutForChange.org Categories |