Tag: philanthropy 2.0
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Web-native social change project # 4: FreeRice.com
Every click counts: this is what they surely think at FreeRice. This project, run be the United Nations' World Food Programme and supported by Harvard's Berkman Centre, could be labelled "click to donate".
The term is by now fairly widely used: the changemakers network Care2 dedicates an entire section to it, named in fact Click2Donate: several websites, search engines and, increasingly, Facebook applications, populate the Web of "clicking for good".
I am not trying to make the case here for the disappearance of any form of activism and collective action in light of a sort of easy-to-click, automated philanthropy. Rather, I am only painting the picture of a sophisticated and at the same time sustainable use of the fundamental element of human-Web interaction as we know it, the click.
FreeRice is one of the most established examples of this particular category, but not simply or its affiliation with UN or Harvard. It is a simple, yet not lame, very nice concept blending quiz gaming, learning outcomes, basic sponsorhip and progressive social change through food donation.
By entering the site, you got instantly faced withthe first question of a quiz game involving wording (English grammar basically), language learning or recently introduced subjects like art, geography of maths. Select your favourite subject and start answering questions.
For every correct answer your score will increase and so your level after a while, but way more importantly 10 grains of rice will be donated through UN's World Food Programme. Yes, 10 grains of rice, for free. Apparently more than 71 billions since 2007. Not bad.
Who funds that? Simply, from the site: "This is made possible by the generosity of the sponsors who advertise on this site".
I find the gaming/learning outcome still rather weak, poorly advertised and a bit clumsy in ots objectives. But I do love the idea.It seems to be much improvable, as mostly focused on the 5-spare-minutes kind of gaming..
Any suggestion is here welcome? How would you enrich this model? Gaming Competitions? Incentives? More visual? Partnership with game-makers? Stronger, branded sponsorships? More explicit in the targets?Simply more grand in its learning or entertaining objective?
Perhaps, these could be a good starting point for other attractive options..
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Web-native social change project # 3: EducationGeneration.org
Here we are, third step in our Web-native social change review series:EducationGeneration.org.
As a project born from Global Agents for Change, a California-based "social change catalyst, driving sustainable solutions to global poverty and inspiring youth to create a better world", EducationGeneration is "dedicated to providing access to education for students around the globe" (from EducationGeneration.org).
Beta launched in fall 2008, EducationGeneration has already funded 130 scholarships and raised over $30,000.
As in several other known platforms across the Web (think about Kiva.org), here we witness the Web enabling a process that closely resembles child adoption: users are asked to make their donation directly to an individual, in this case deciding to invest in that boy or girl's education.
The process is again as simple as it gets: users browse students' profiles on the EducationGeneration website, pick a student to support, click on the donate button (minimum is 20 dollars)...that's it!:money is processed by PayPal and 100% of it (if we exclude PayPal fees) goes directly to the chosen student's personal education. This is possible thanks to fairly advantageous partnerhips with local institutions, one of them for example being the Canadian SEED. There are not many information about this passage on the site and we will further deepen the matter in the next days.
Information about schools and their costs, partnering institutions in loco, the student' educational stage and even some individual notes on her or his favourite topics and skills, are included.
Some of the best assets of EducationGeneration appear to be:
- The idea of working around education (and younger generations), a universally recognized key area of human development
- Again, a simplified target and a narrowed objective, where expertise could be quickly gathered
- Partnership with local institution, that should guarantee lowering of costs and far better selection processes
Web-native social change project # 2: Tree-Nation.com
The goal in its simplest formulation: planting 100,000 trees by the end of 2009. This is Tree-Nation , a multicultural, Barcelona-based venture, in a line..
It will soon sound like a constant tune across our reviews of Web-native projects for social change: I like simple goals of change or, rather, I like the simplification of those to the public eye that the Web is able to encourage.
I am not trying to make the case for every world's most complex problem to be reduced to a bunch of links and clicks: I am rather saying that attaching rich information to social change goals and allowing them to be manipulated online could increase our ability to crumble, repackage and distribute their parts into something more affordable, approachable, flexible and, why not, likeable.
Imagine a giant 8 million-trees heart in Niger. A wonderful, utopian challenge..
Now consider the same trees one by one, create packages of them costing from 7 to 200 dollars, allow Web users to choose one or more of them through a seamless Web platform; give them a sophisticated mapping system where they can place their trees as if they were actually planting them, reflecting real land configuration and finally allow users to attach a message or an inscription to every tree planted: what you have is one of Tree-Nation's projects.
Other declared goals involve desertification fighting, water protection, CO2 offsets and poverty alleviation, specifically in Niger.
Tree-Nation is a free internet community dedicated to fighting Climate Change by planting trees
Get involved and help by choosing and supporting one of the Tree-Nation planting projects.
Everyone can join and get involved! www.tree-nation.com
Web-native social change project # 1: DonorsChoose.org
DonorsChoose is surely one of the most successful and intriguing projects out there. Indeed not the latest, but I feel it is good to start with a charitable venture that has been able to become an landmark example for everybody in the philanthropic field.
Like many of the Web-native platforms we will investigate, DonorsChoose is far from being a project that exhausts its impact in online discussions and information spaces.
DonorsChoose is, in fact, producing material change by choosing, buying and delivering goods aimed at educational projects. It does so by connecting American teachers (since 2000, more than 103,000, apparently) with the general public through a simple Web interface where teachers advertise their educational projects and the general public chooses to fund one or more of them on the basis of their innovativeness or any set of personal criteria.
The site itself suggests three interesting keywords in this sense: "get local, get inspired, get choosy". :)
A DonorsChoose user might thus end up funding a project because of its innovativeness and originality or rather its simplicity; because of its cost, high or low, or its need in respect to the "poverty level" (calculated in terms of students free/reduced lunch eligibility and thus associated to the average income level of the class); some other users might instead prefer find special, even personal attachment to a theme (for example a particular literature having impacted their lives) specified in an educational proposal or, ultimately, an objective of a learning project, be it science, sustainable living, peace, understanding of diversity, history or any other goal.
Is the eBay for charity arrived?
Thanks to NetSquared I came across IDonateToCharity.org.
I am generally very interested in every platform or Web 2.0-like site centered on philanthropy, activism and positive social change, as in my research I am trying to map the turbulent emergence of the non-profit Web.
Well, I will surely keep track of this "charitable auction website". NetSquared sees it as the "Next big fundraising idea", allowing anyone (individuals, charities)to raise charity money through donation or online auctions pages.
To me is more another confirmation that auction-based models work and might have different, interesting facets (See the "reverse auction" site BidPlaza, so popular in Italy) and that connecting philanthropy and markets is increasingly possible, if not necessary. (See the Danish MyC4, EBay's Microplace and to some extent Kiva, organisation that I am personally studying)
I will keep this tracked, as at present very little if no reaction from the blogosphere and generally the Web.
Surely, we are in front of a good, potential expression of state-of-the-art approach to fundraising. If they just could improve the look-and-feel of the platform, so NOT catchy at the moment...
Good and bad Web practices...
Surely on the best products of today's Web, as Technorati might confirm, Read/Write Web Blog is not only a source of precious and well-thought contents, but also of good practices.
Unlike the author of the present website,
, the Read/Write Web posts with extreme constancy and with the same consistency adds to the more traditional posts weekly, monthly and yearly summaries of the best bits from the contents of the website.
, the Read/Write Web posts with extreme constancy and with the same consistency adds to the more traditional posts weekly, monthly and yearly summaries of the best bits from the contents of the website. I found this practice, well represented by this article, "Best of 2007 ReadWriteWeb Editor's Picks", an extremely good way of adding quality editorial work to the blog while making our lives way easier in finding the best ideas and spotting where the best debates lie. Conversely, a not-as-good practice is that of noticing it in January and speaking about this in March only...
Ah, at Read/Write Web they have also interesting opinions on which article would best suite January First (2008).
Something like a guide to online giving (or lending), for example. More on Philanthropy 2.0 coming soon.






