8 WAYS TO FUND (The Youth Career Coach Inc.)
NATASCHA'S WORKSHOPS
1. Share Natascha with another school in your area on the same
day. Natascha’s fee is cut nearly in HALF for your school if you share
Natascha with another school. Natascha can speak at your school in the
morning, a neighboring school in the afternoon and then catch a flight
home. Natascha speaks to more students, you save money…it's a win for
everyone. Natascha is super easy to promote to other schools and
decision makers…just forward them a link to
www.theyouthcareercoach.com or
www.nataschasaunders.com and share your plan.
2. Check with your school administration for funding from the
Associated Student Body fund. For teacher in-service programs, ask about
Staff Development -- Title VI funding.
3. Plan to integrate and highlight Natascha into a major theme
such as cultural awareness week, Health Day, Anti-Violence Week, Bring
Your Kids to Work Day, Back to School Celebration, Career Development
Day etc. Depending on your theme, federal grant money might be
available. For example, Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Communities Act
(SDFSCA) might approve a funding request for a speaker who addresses
alcohol and drug prevention, sexual abstinence, tobacco use, teen
pregnancy, gangs, crime and violence prevention. Check with your school
district or federal government office to find out who is dispensing
these funds in your state. Request an application form.
4. Apply for other grant monies from your state by contacting
your State Department of Human Services and State Department of
Education. They can direct you to the correct office -- for example, the
Alcohol and Drug Abuse Division. Contact other local agencies in your
county that already have grant monies from state agencies. For example,
the Criminal Justice Department or Department of Public Safety might
have distributed funds into mental health agencies or programs for
mentoring youth, etc.
5. Contact your school's PTO/PTA. Share your plans with them.
They are more likely to contribute funds if your plan is well thought
out.
6. Have student leaders contact local business organizations:
Rotary Club, Kiwanis, Lions Club, Elks, Chamber of Commerce, NCBW,
NAACP, Urban League, YWCA, YMCA, Elks, United Way etc.
(Universities/Colleges, Media-Newspapers, TV, Radio, Corporations in the
area etc. Present your plan and request their sponsorship.
7. The goal is to create a win-win situation for everyone.
Contact several of your larger local businesses, or sports teams
(Celtics, Patriots, Bruins, Red Soc) especially those related to
services for teens and their families. Ask for the owner, CEO or
Community Services Department. If they are willing to help sponsor the
speaker, you can exchange the favor by announcing their support to your
students and parents.
8. Invite multiple clubs on campus (Student Activities
Department) to participate and help in a fund raising project. A
cooperative effort helps students collaborate and learn about the
realities of time and effort in acquiring funding in the real world.