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Grants and Donations for a Summer Computer Camp?

Camp CAEN asks: "I work for a computer camp at the local university and I was wondering: how one goes about getting grants? We currently are funded by attendees but I thought it would be ideal to offer scholarships or assistance to those in need. Students who come to camp are middle school and high school students, we teach programming (C++, Java, DirectX), web technologies (HTML, PHP, MySQL), and other technology related topics (system administration, digital video production). The camp lasts two weeks and it can be quite pricey. I know there are plenty of people who would like to attend but can't afford it. Does anyone know of state (in Michigan) or Federal programs that give out money for technology instruction? Or any companies willing to donate equipment/software/books to our camp? Finally, are there any people in education or social work who have done grant writing before and have any good resources (either online or paper)? Anyone else have good ideas or suggestions? Thanks!"

4 of 14 comments (clear)

  1. Local knowledge will help you better than /. by EnlightenmentFan · · Score: 4, Insightful
    There are people who really know how to do this--the university you're connected to will have a "development office" of people who work full-time raising money. Talk to them first because 1) they know how to do it, 2) you will need to coordinate with them so you don't step on each others' toes, and 3) you might be able to convince them that a camp-scholarship program will give them good publicity too.

    My amateur experience: many little local groups (Rotary or whatever) will give you $100 for a good cause if you ask them nicely and thank them publicly--more if you get somebody who is in the group to ask them for you. We had a local women's college club that liked to interview high school seniors each year and give a $500 scholarship to the most creative and entrepreneurial. HTH--Good luck!

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    Making trouble today for a better tomorrow...
  2. Re:UK/ British / England Courses by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 2, Informative

    Jeez. You're online, so why not try looking at www.open.gov.uk/?

    The government might have gone a bit quiet about life-long learning recently (they seem to be distracted by the prospect of bombing oil-rich states, firemen striking, university fees, immigration, etc at the moment) but there should be something on the official government portal that should help you.

    If nothing else, it'll have links to your local education authority, the Department of Education (or whatever they're calling it today), your local Job Centre, etc who will all be able to help you out.

    (I'll let you find the links - you're a big boy now, so let's call it your first lesson.)

    Also, contact local further education colleges and perhaps even local universities. The colleges will run night classes, the universities may run residential courses. And let's not forget the Open University.

    And if all those don't help (in which case, you might be shit out of luck) then look in your local Yellow Pages/Thomson Local/whatever.

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    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  3. Go to the companies. by ArsonPerBuilding · · Score: 2, Informative

    Be it a large software company or a local PC shop/chain; businesses will be willing to help if what you are doing could benefit them. If it is donated equipment or software licsences[SP], businesses often will donate something. At my highschool, our IT department is run by a commitee of local businessmen/women who help finance programs out of their personal/buisness's pockets.

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    1 tequila 2 tequila 3 tequila floor
  4. Not the same, is it? by sharkey · · Score: 2, Funny

    "And this one time, at computer camp, I stuck a degaussing wand in my pussy!"

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    "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.