How Kids Can Give Back

Good Housekeeping
November 2009

by Laura Hahn

’Tis the season to give thanks—and give back. Remind your child that donating to a charity doesn’t require writing a check. Sharing what’s in her closet or backpack with people in need can be a more satisfying—and more personal—way to help. Here are four ideas.

  • Sports Equipment
    Encourage her to pass last season’s athletic gear
    to Sports Gift (sportsgift.org), which will distribute it to kids in need.
  • School supplies
    If your child has extra books, markers, or other items,
    you can find teachers who need them at iLoveSchools.com, a nonprofit
    that connects donors with teachers in U.S. classrooms.
  • DVDs
    Suggest she send movies that haven’t been watched in a while to
    troops in Iraq and Afghanistan through AMVETS Task Force DVD
    (amvets.org/taskforcedvd). Children’s titles go to families of soldiers.
  • Cell phones
    When your kid upgrades, check out recyclewireless
    phones.com together to locate programs that recycle or refurbish old
    phones, then donate proceeds to various charities.

Five nickel-less ways to support schools through iLoveSchools.com

Step away from the piggy bank. Supporting schools doesn’t have to break the bank. Here are five simple ways to help a school right now without spending a nickel.

1) Post a message to your blog: Tell your network about the good that iLoveSchools.com is doing to support all schools and teachers, no matter where they teach.

2) Post a DonorOffer for items you already own: Teachers are very resourceful people. They can use everything from kitchen supplies to scrapbook materials.

3) Invite a teacher, school or PTA to sign up: Use the ‘Spread the Word’ email feature on any page of iLoveSchools.com to invite your teacher friends to visit and sign up.

4) Become a fan of iLoveSchools.com on Facebook or follow us on Twitter: Help us spread the word to educators and potential donors. Everyone can get involved when they know about our mission.

5) Volunteer your time: Spend time volunteering with iLoveSchools.com or offer your expertise to a classroom through the DonorOffer board.

So there you have it; five ways to support schools without spending a nickel. Teachers can’t do it alone, but with our combined efforts we can all make a difference in the lives of students.

Do you have other ideas how you can use iLoveSchools.com to help teachers? We welcome your comments.

Obama Campaign Donates Campaign Office Leftovers to Schools

As Offices Close, Nearby Schools Benefit From Campaign Merchandise

By SUNLEN MILLER
ABC News
Nov. 14, 2008

The votes have been tabulated, the acceptance speech has been given – the election is over.

So what happens to all the election offices across the United States that Barack Obama staffers have been working out of day and night for nearly two years?

Left behind — as sleep-deprived campaign workers vacate the buildings – are computers, campaign signs, buttons, file cabinets — all remnants of a campaign done and won.

So what’s a campaign to do with all this … stuff? The Obama campaign, well before the election was over, started putting a plan in place for all its leftovers — one that the Obama campaign says is in alignment with a priority for President-elect Obama: education.
Working in conjunction with the nonprofit corporation, iloveschools.com, the campaign has donated items from 200 campaign offices across the country to school districts in 10 states.

“Tens of thousands of dollars of resources have been put into schools across the United States in less than four days,” said Valarie Swanson, marketing director for iloveschools.com. “The Obama campaign was specific that they wanted all their resources to go to schools.”

Obama transition team spokeswoman Jen Psaki said that the campaign partnered with the organization to “donate extra supplies and equipment in a socially responsible way.” The Obama campaign contacted Swanson’s organization a couple of weeks before the election was over, with one requirement — that 100 percent of the leftover campaign goods from specified offices would be pumped into school districts.

Iloveschools.com found schools across the U.S. that would benefit from this donation based on geography and need. “It was like Christmas in November,” Jean Schmalzried, director of federal programs for the Sto-Rox School District in Pennsylvania, said of getting a phone call the morning after the election by an Obama staffer. “This has never happened before.”

Obama’s Pittsburgh campaign office donated to her school district at least five flatbed trucks of office supplies, including 12 Dell computers, multiple 17-inch LCD monitors and three printers. Much of the equipment was brand new, given to the schools unopened in boxes.

The computers’ files were deleted by the Obama campaign to pass along the machines in data-less condition. Schmalzried said the district was also invited to clear out the office of everything — and the schools took file cabinets, file folders, paper shredders, pens, clipboards, paper, paint and butterfly clips. Much of the haul was bulk ordered by the Obama campaign and never used.

The Sto-Rox school district is in within a community stricken by poverty. There are four housing projects nearby, and 78 percent of the students in the school district rely on federally-funded school lunches. The donation has been about more than just simple utility to the students. They are just as excited about the donor. Old campaign signs have been a hit in the Pennsylvania school district’s high schools — with teenagers lining up by the principal’s office to claim pieces of memorabilia that were donated along with the other supplies.

In the middle school library, a learning center has been set up with the donated computers. Schmalzried said the area may be nicknamed “The Obama Room,” because the kids like to say they are working on Obama’s computers.

The John McCain campaign has also been charitable with campaign office supplies. Because McCain took public financing in the general election, the FEC required the campaign to try to sell anything in the offices first before giving it away. But fter complying with that request, the campaign has given away unsold office furniture and supplies to several churches and schools located nearby.

ABC’s Bret Hovell contributed to this report

Election windfall – Gift of office equipment from the Obama campaign thrills Sto-Rox schools

Wednesday, November 12, 2008
by Daniel Malloy
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

PittsburghPostGazette11-12-08Gary Drexler, of McKees Rocks, who is with the Sto-Rox School District, arrives at the empty
Obama campaign headquarters on Smithfield Street, Downtown, to pick up donated office
equipment.

Word spread quickly last week through Sto-Rox High School when students learned that the
administrative offices were filled with Barack Obama paraphernalia.

Students snapped up posters and stickers for their lockers, backpacks and bedroom walls, eager
to commemorate the victory of the first African American to ascend to the nation’s highest
office.

The enthusiasm excited administrators, but it’s not what brought tears to the eyes of Jean
Schmalzreid, the district’s director of federal programs and special projects. That happened when
she saw school facilities workers bring in dolly after dolly piled high with thousands of dollars
worth of supplies donated from Obama campaign offices in Pittsburgh.

Six computers will be dedicated to creating learning centers for struggling middle school
students. An all-in-one printer, copier and fax machine will hum all day in the middle school
library. And the art department received piles of markers, paint and poster board.

They were part of a program Mr. Obama’s campaign, funded better than any in the history of
American politics, devised in partnership with iloveschools.com, a Web site that helps connect
teachers with organizations that donate school supplies.

“[President-elect Obama's] outreach just means the world to us,” Ms. Schmalzreid said. “The
man had the foresight to plan this. In the middle of a huge national campaign, he’s thinking about
poor children.”

Valarie Swanson, marketing director for San Diego-based iloveschools.com, said the Obama
campaign contacted the Web site a few weeks ago to organize donations.

Nearly 200 campaign offices in 10 states pledged to participate, she said, in what has easily been
the Web site’s largest single donation effort.

In places with high concentrations of campaign offices, including Western Pennsylvania, a key
campaign battleground, organizers reached out to poorer school districts. Local districts were
assigned three offices each from which they could take whatever they liked, provided they
retrieved the materials themselves.

In the Pittsburgh area, that included Clairton School District, where 85 percent of students were
eligible for free or reduced-price lunches last year, and Sto-Rox, where the figure was 65
percent.

“It’s so beautiful to see these things being disseminated over here because our kids have
nothing,” Ms. Schmalzreid said. “Some of our families struggle to put food on the table and
struggle to get their kids warm coats for winter.”

She added that the office supplies — including reams of unused printer paper and other items still
in boxes — will put a considerable dent in next year’s budget to allow spending on other needs.

Aside from the monetary value, there’s a civics lesson here. Students who have followed the race
in class now can touch a piece of history, or put it on their walls.

“For the first time in a long time, there’s a real sense of possibility here,” Ms. Schmalzreid said.
“A lot of our kids are thinking, ‘Hey, if he can do it, I can do it.’ ”

Daniel Malloy can be reached at dmalloy@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1731.

Obama campaign donates office supplies to schools

[picture] MICHAEL BRYANT / Staff Photographer
At the Obama campaign office on Sansom Street, Philadelphia School District workers (from left) Mike Bowens, John
Brown and Jonathan Walker move office supplies given to local schools.

by Brittany Talarico
Inquirer Staff Writer
Philadelphia Enquirer

Six stock clerks from the School District of Philadelphia picked up four donated couches, three desks, a bookshelf, a microwave and boxes of office supplies from an Obama campaign office at 1500 Sansom St. this morning.

Mike Bowens and his co-workers said they would transport the leftover infrastructure from Sen. Barack Obama’s historic victory drive to a district warehouse, where the furniture and supplies would be doled out to schools across the city.

“It’s great,” Bowens said. “The schools here can really use this stuff.”

This was the fourth Obama office in Philadelphia to donate to the city schools.

The donations began after the Obama campaign contacted iLoveSchools.com, a national nonprofit organization based in San Diego that helps teachers find equipment, materials and supplies that their districts may not be able to afford.

Valerie Swanson, marketing director for iLoveSchools.com, said a specific focus of the national Obama campaign was to give back and donate office supplies and other materials to schools.

“Tens of thousands of supplies have been donated in two days to various schools across the country,”

Swanson said. “We were very excited to reach out and give such a large number of supplies to schools in need.”

A total of 14 Obama campaign offices in Philadelphia have pledged to donate supplies, she said. About 200 campaign offices across the country have pledged donations in 12 states, including Texas, Indiana and Oregon.

“We received a really great response from the schools in Philadelphia and across Pennsylvania,” Swanson said. “When schools receive supplies from us, the most common response I get is, ‘It was like Christmas.’ ”

She said iLoveSchools.com provides new and used supplies to teachers in need of school equipment. “The Obama campaign is just an example of the kind of things we do,” Swanson said. “We also work with Fortune 500 companies and individuals on a personal level who want to donate to their children’s school.”

On average, she said, teachers in America “spend about $500 out of their own pocket every year just for school supplies for the classroom.”

November 8, 2008