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Faithful Fundraising:

Faithful Fundraising:. Resource Development for Instructional Technology Projects Liberal Arts ITS. Emily Cicchini, Special Projects Manager - June 07. Why go for external funds?. To gain resources for use by you and your students that otherwise might not be available;

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Faithful Fundraising:

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  1. Faithful Fundraising: Resource Development for Instructional Technology Projects Liberal Arts ITS Emily Cicchini, Special Projects Manager - June 07

  2. Why go for external funds? • To gain resources for use by you and your students that otherwise might not be available; • To grow your own personal network of like-minded people, inside and outside of higher ed; • To expand and evaluate your own ideas about the possibilities and limitations of instructional technology.

  3. Old Sage Development Sayings • Fundraising is friend-raising/match-making • Fundraising is sales/isnot sales • Get your ducks in a row • It takes the same effort to ask for $1 as it does for $1 million • Don’t grant-chase • Every day is a good day to fundraise!

  4. Name This Tune You can't always get what you want But if you try sometime, you just might find… You get what you need.

  5. Grant writing equals project planning • Need (fundamental, universal, compelling) • Proposed Solution (innovative, clearly addresses the need, the big idea) • Project Design (logical, sequential, thoughtful) • Overall Goal (long-range, large impact, BHA - Big Hairy Audacious) • Objectives (tasks, ordered by priority, measurable)

  6. Or…the usual ducks, continued. • Timelines with milestones linked to objectives • Budget (total project income/expense) • Qualifications/history of project team • Evaluation plan (how will you measure it?) • Dissemination plan (how will you share what you’ve learned?) • Sustainability

  7. Evaluating a true, pressing need Think about what you are ALREADY DOING. Ask: “What would an IT project that successfully enhanced what we are already doing LOOK LIKE?” 5 minute writing exercise: Describe it in one paragraph. Focus on tangible images. What exactly would people be doing with it?

  8. What would success look like?

  9. Envision how you will use it.

  10. What will make it happen? • Time • Talent • Knowledge • Equipment and Supplies (digital, video, audio) • Software Licenses, Other Fees • All can be expressed in terms of cash value

  11. What do you need to get there? • What do you need first? • What do you need most? • What will be the hardest to obtain?

  12. Research I lack the free time to do my own work I could do it if only I had more money I can’t get the things or people I need from my department chair Instructional The students don’t pay enough attention in class The students aren’t as literate as they were 20 years ago The students spend too much free time playing computer games Bad needs statements

  13. The “so what?” test… • Funders don’t need to know the gory details. • Funders don’t like whiny, negative language. • Funders don’t care what problem it solves for you, but how you are solving a problem that effects others. • Education funders, in general, aren’t often that impressed by personal recognition.

  14. What do funders want? Finally, I know what they want. • To change the world. • To help people, generally, the more people, the better. • To fix a specific problem or issue. • To know what the positive impact will be.

  15. Research To examine and document a previously overlooked topic To study and present knowledge about a new issue or challenge that has developed in your field To test an idea, process or procedure for creating new knowledge Instructional To find better ways of conveying complex information to students To increase evidence of higher order thinking in students To find new ways to measure and improve student performance Better needs statements

  16. Trends in Project Evaluation: The Logic Model

  17. Embracing Dissemination • Publication • Lectures • Presentations • Conferences • Online networking • Motto: NO dissemination really is BAD dissemination. Tell people about your work.

  18. Sustainability equals diversity • Individuals (Annual Funds, Major Gifts) • Corporate Sponsorships (Sports, Ads) • Corporate Foundations (Strategic Giving) • Private Foundations (Families, Legacies) • Public Foundations (Community Efforts) • Special Events (Sports, Parties, Sales) • Local, County, State, Federal Gov’t Agencies

  19. BREAK

  20. Some trends in IT project funding • Open Access Resources: making scholarly literature and knowledge freely available • Gaming, scripted, collaborative and interactive instructional applications (hello, Second Life…) • Extensive, comprehensive searchable databases and digital archives of hard-to-find materials • Analysis tools, synthesis tools, visual motion models, and other applied research projects

  21. LAITS Showcase Solutions • Texas Politics: open access multimedia textbook • Français Interactif: open access multimedia textbook • Danteworlds: mulitimedia supplimental instructional resource • The Daily Intelligencer: unique web-based learning environment

  22. IT Sites We Like • Carnegie Mellon’s Open Learning Initiative, http://www.cmu.edu/oli/ • The Sloan C Consortium http://www.sloan-c.org/ • MIT’s Open Course Ware Project, http://ocw.mit.edu/index.html

  23. 11 yahoo.co.jp 12 microsoft.com 13 megaupload.com 14 sina.com.cn 15 blogger.com 16 hi5.com 17 facebook.com 18 rapidshare.com 19 ebay.com 20 sohu.com 1 yahoo.com 2 msn.com 3 google.com 4 youtube.com 5 live.com 6 myspace.com 7 baidu.com 8 orkut.com 9 wikipedia.org 10 qq.com Top Twenty Web Sites Retrieved from alexa.com June 9, 2007

  24. Inside Class, UT = Fair Use Open Access = Not Fair Use Rights and Permissions

  25. Got Ducks?

  26. Basic 5-step fundraising cycle • Research - 70% of your time (including gossip, internal coordination, and rejection). • Cultivation - 4% of your time. • Solicitation - 15% of your time. • Closure - 1% of your time. • Stewardship - 10% of your time. • Once you start, it is a cycle, it never ends.

  27. How to evaluate a prospect • What do they say they want to accomplish? What is their “self-image?” • Who do they say they’ll give to? Who do they really give to, how often, how many different groups? • What things have they given for in the past? • How much do they give/do they really have? • Who are the people actually in charge? What’s the decision makingprocess? • Are they stable or in flux? What’s the deadline/timeline?

  28. The Usual Suspects • National Endowment for the Arts • National Endowment for the Humanities • Department of Education • National Science Foundation • Moody, Meadows, Brown, Houston, Webber Foundations • Austin’s lack of philanthropic infrastructure

  29. Online Research Tools • Federal Register http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html and grants.gov • Texas Register and grant alert http://www.governor.state.tx.us/divisions/stategrants/grantalert/view • Chronicle of Philanthropy • The Foundation Center/The Grantsmanship Center Guidestar.org, or how to read a 990. • The Internet - The Meadows Foundation • http://www.mfi.org/grants/grant_guidelines_english.asp

  30. Grantees: wikipedia.org openoffice.org pbs.org creativecommons.org thestoryoftexas.org gutenberg.org moma.org artsedge.kennedy-center.org/ Grantors: NEH Digital Start Up NEA Fast Track Humanities Texas NSF Informal Science Education MacArthur Foundation IES Reading and Writing Education Research DOE Star Schools The Meadows Foundation Exercise: Plan a grant for…

  31. Need:An online thesaurus tool Proposed Solution:an application that can search and cross reference words by tags, use and associated meaning Project Design:plug-in to be developed by programmer and linguistic scholar Overall Goal:To create new functionality for the world’s most used multilingual open knowledge base Objectives:to create a functional tool that helps users create digital thesaurus entries Timelines:prototype, year 1, release year 2 Budget: $50,000 per year, 1/2 to scholar, 1/2 to programmer Qualifications: They are both fabulously brilliant, connnected and experienced Evaluation: Wikipedia foundation will conduct usability studies Dissemination: A press conference and full web documentation Sustainability: Wikipedia Foundation will commit to sustaining it Example: Wikipedia to NEH

  32. How to build a prospect list • Don’t take on more than you can manage: on a part time basis, maybe 5 at a time • Meet on a regular basis (monthly) with a team (student, colleagues) and go over the list • Determine next step: more research, internal clearance, crafting a pitch, or (lucky you!) completing a report • When prospects are pretty much dead ends, replace them with new ones

  33. Final Thoughts… Yes, you need to know people… but you can get to know them, particularly through web. If you work your list, the money will come.

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