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What would you do? |
Taking Action, Toolkits
Whether you're just getting started in your hometown or are part of a group already at work on behalf of kids and families, you can make a differencebut not without adequate funding. Here are some ideas Connect for Kids has compiled, with help from our online community, to get you started.
Posted on April 17, 2007
The Innovation Center offers excellent, free guides to mapping community strengths and needs, engaging youth and adults together, planning civic and local action—and creating lasting change in communities and for participants. You’ll want to bookmark this library! For lessons learned and strategies to engage youth and create effective community programs, visit the Research Pages. Posted on March 22, 2005
If you have ever worked with a teacher to improve your child's education or you have been an advocatesomeone who looks out for the interests of another, someone who speaks up on behalf of another. Advocates identify a problem, an unrecognized need, a service gap in a caring community, an injustice, possibly a mistake or unintended consequence in a policy or procedure that hurts those who cannot speak up for themselves. And then they go to work to find solutions. Posted on February 3, 2005
Posted on August 25, 2004
This Northwest Finance Circle Toolkit gives child care centers an accounting outline to calculate the true cost of quality budgets. Even if the budget is beyond the reach of what parents can pay, it can be used to demonstrate the gap between the true cost of high quality programs and the actual price parents are charged for services. Posted on August 24, 2004
If your nonprofit organization works with low-wage families, you can help make sure they don't miss out on important federal tax benefits that can add up to as much as $4,200. This toolkit from the National Assembly's Family Strengthening Policy Center explains the Earned Income Tax Credit and offers ways to inform your clients and employees. For multiple hard copies, contact or call 202-347-2080, Ext. 25. Posted on July 28, 2004
With April 15th fast approaching, families are wrestling with their tax forms and hoping for refunds. A key tool for easing the tax burden on low-income working families is the Earned Income Tax Credit. Fortunately, there's lots of help available online to assist taxpayers in taking advantage of the EITC. |