Grant Request The Black History Project, Inc.

Hermanowski Family Foundation Initial Request Form


Organization Name: The Black History Project, Inc.
Legal Name (if Different):
Also Known As:
Mailing Address: 424 E Central Blvd Unit 168
City: Orlando
State: Florida
Postal Code: 32801
Main Phone: 407-243-8184
Main Fax:
Organization Website: www.blackhistoryproject.org
Employer ID Number: 81-2451782
Organization Tax Status: 501c3

Proposal Information


Today’s Date: 3/28/24
Requested Amount: 10,000

Project Title: Black History Leadership Program
Project Description:

The Black History Project is dedicated to cultivating the next generation of leaders through interactive Black history education. Our approach is innovative yet effective, as we empower students through education, civic engagement, and career readiness and life skills. By engaging them in the legacy of Black leaders who came before them, our certified educators inspire students to become agents of change in their communities. Our team of experienced and credentialed facilitators utilize interactive lesson plans, activities, and non-traditional educational lectures to equip our youth with the knowledge and tools to ignite social action and become the next generation of leaders.
As a 501c3 non-profit, our organization adheres to the highest standards of excellence. All facilitators are trained educators with the credentials and expertise necessary to deliver our curriculum, and all staff and volunteers undergo a thorough background check to participate.
This 10-month program will be provided in three areas across Orange and Seminole Counties, providing students with leadership development skills through Black history lessons, activities, and discussions. Each month, students will meet once in person and twice virtually to explore a different topic in Black history, followed by a thought-provoking conversation with our trained facilitators. Students will then have the opportunity to showcase what they have learned through group activity and presentation. In-person sessions will be 2 hours long, and virtual sessions will provide additional exploration into the topic, including leadership skills that can be applied to their current and future professional endeavors. Additionally, students will be added to our listserv, where they will receive additional reading material and invitations to our book club and other activities that promote continued learning and growth in their leadership skills.

Total Project Budget: 78,000

Other Funding
Sources For The Project (Committed & Potential): Orange County Government, and donations

Project Duration: 10 months programming – 2 months prepping – 12 months programs
Geographical Area Served: Orange and Seminole Counties in Florida
Age Group To Be Served: 12 – 18

Contact Information


Contact Prefix (Mr,Mrs etc.): Ms.
Contact First Name: Kristin
Contact Last Name: Fulwylie
Contact Title: Founder and Executive Director
Contact Phone: 407-243-8184
Contact Email: info@blackhistoryproject.org

Grant Request Green Arrow Co-Lab

Hermanowski Family Foundation Initial Request Form


Organization Name: Green Arrow Co-Lab
Legal Name (if Different):
Also Known As:
Mailing Address: PO Box 75625
City: Los Angeles
State: California
Postal Code: 90075
Main Phone: 802. 296.1725
Main Fax:
Organization Website: https://www.greenarrowcolab.org/
Employer ID Number: 84-2135390
Organization Tax Status: Non Profit 501(c)(3)

Proposal Information


Today’s Date: 03/28/2024
Requested Amount: 7,500

Project Title: Citizen Farmers and Healers Program
Project Description:

Green Arrow Co-Lab’s mission is to support young people harmed by systemic injustice, structural racism, and a societal disconnect as they reconnect with themselves and their future opportunities for success, by providing community-based and individualized healing services. We design our curriculum, programs, and services to uplift systems-impacted youth’s (ages 6-26) self-efficacy, healing, relationship to their community, and reconnection to the land. Our community-based non-profit organization serving Los Angeles residents primarily offers trauma-informed healing and educational services to Black and Brown youth and young adults living in low-income communities. Our programming focuses on an intersection of health, education, and creative expansive arts including:

Trauma-healing practices and skillbuilding for groups and individuals.
Restorative urban agricultural practices, career exploration, job training, and leadership development.
Cultural practices that include learning from and synthesizing information from the land, science lessons, and community healing awareness into creative arts projects, movement, dance, writing, etc
2-5x/week On-site gardening and mindfulness programs at local CBOs, schools, etc who offer additional support to youth who have been systems-impacted
Pairing youth with work on urban farms, landscaping businesses, or other aligned job placements as they are ready
Regional programming projects at new county and state-funded centers and inside local juvenile halls and camps
Developing revenue stream opportunities for youth and our organization such as: woodworking, corporate plant care, and urban beekeeping to teach entrepreneurial skills and engage with community
Connections and networking with other community-based organizations (CBOs) involved in restorative justice and youth justice reimagined initiatives.

Total Project Budget: 25,000

Other Funding
Sources For The Project (Committed & Potential): California Natural Resources Agency Youth Community Access Grant – committed Arts for Healing and Justice Network – committed Sky Ranch – potential State Farm – potential Additional $100,000+ from various foundations pending

Project Duration: Year over year, this funding will supporting funding for one site for part of the year
Geographical Area Served: Los Angeles
Age Group To Be Served: Ages 14-21

Contact Information


Contact Prefix (Mr,Mrs etc.): Ms
Contact First Name: Carmen
Contact Last Name: Mena
Contact Title: Marketing Assistant
Contact Phone: 8186918569
Contact Email: Carmen@greenarrowcolab.org

Grant Request Refugee Women’s Alliance

Hermanowski Family Foundation Initial Request Form


Organization Name: Refugee Women’s Alliance
Legal Name (if Different):
Also Known As: ReWA
Mailing Address: 4008 Martin Luther King Jr. Way S.
City: Seattle
State: Washington
Postal Code: 98108
Main Phone: 206.721.0243
Main Fax: 206.721.0282
Organization Website: https://www.rewa.org/
Employer ID Number: 91-1296964
Organization Tax Status: 501(c)(3)

Proposal Information


Today’s Date: March 28th, 2024
Requested Amount: 10,000

Project Title: ReWA’s Youth Afterschool and Summer STEAM Program
Project Description:

Refugee Women’s Alliance supports low income, BIPOC, refugee and immigrant youth to meet their potential through its afterschool and summer Youth STEAM Program. Offered at two public schools in South Seattle with a high percentage of English Language Learners, this program provides social-emotional support, literacy training, and enrichment throughout the year to 40 students using a culturally responsive STEAM curriculum (science, technology, engineering, art and math). STEAM activities bring together play, exploration, creativity, and relationships, making space for students to build confidence in their English and share similar lived experiences while learning topics such as coding and robotics. Field trips provide opportunities for hands-on, immersive learning that reinforce classroom learnings. Programming is complemented by bilingual advocates (Spanish, Somali, and other East African languages) who help parents navigate the school system and understand how to support their child’s learning. ReWA Youth Steam program has been in operation for four years. 

Low-income immigrant and refugee students face multiple hurdles in their academic journey. Beyond learning a new language, these children and youth must adjust to a new culture and new school system—some having been absent from school for many years. Added to these challenges, their adult guardians most often speak limited English and struggle to assist them in navigating the academic system. Thus, without adequate support in and outside of school, immigrant and refugee students face greater odds in achieving their potential.

Uniquely, ReWA’s Youth STEAM program provides culturally and linguistically appropriate support for the elementary students and families we serve. ReWA has refined our services to thoroughly meet the emerging needs of our immigrant and refugee clients, and as such ReWA pairs its programs with staff that come from these same communities, who can meet their language barrier needs and who are poised to understand the specific challenges they face.

Total Project Budget: $445,886.00

Other Funding
Sources For The Project (Committed & Potential): We have 2024-25 program funding the Kawabe Memorial Fund, the Charlotte Martin Foundation, Silver Family Foundation, the City of Seattle, and the Safeco Insurance Fund Education Initiative. The organization is primarily federally and state funded.

Project Duration: 1 year; The STEAM Afterschool program follows the school-year calendar: September – June, Summer STEAM runs from July – August
Geographical Area Served: South Seattle, WA
Age Group To Be Served: Elementary School Grades 3rd-5th, Ages 8-11

Contact Information


Contact Prefix (Mr,Mrs etc.): Ms.
Contact First Name: Mahnaz
Contact Last Name: Eshetu
Contact Title: Executive Director
Contact Phone: 2067210243
Contact Email: grants@rewa.org

Grant Request Generation Alive

Hermanowski Family Foundation Initial Request Form


Organization Name: Generation Alive
Legal Name (if Different):
Also Known As:
Mailing Address: 418 W. Sharp Ave
City: Spokane
State: WA
Postal Code: 99201
Main Phone: 5097476054
Main Fax:
Organization Website: www.generationalive.org
Employer ID Number: 56-2598004
Organization Tax Status: 501c3

Proposal Information


Today’s Date: 3/28/2024
Requested Amount: $5,000

Project Title: Expanding Generation Alive Action Teams for Community Impact
Project Description:

Generation Alive Action Teams are groups of 15-20 students at a local school who work together to learn about community needs, the meaning of compassion, basic fundraising, and how to mobilize others around a cause. The capstone objective of each Action Team is to lead its peers in a school-wide assembly, fundraising campaign, and community service project that meets a tangible need in the lives of vulnerable populations. This program has been trusted by more than 100 local schools for over a decade. Our goal is to increase our Action Teams by 50 percent during the 2024-2025 academic year, and facilitate 50 teams at schools in Spokane and Kootenai counties. We hope to increase the number of Action Teams in both counties. Each Action Team meets weekly with a Generation Alive staff member on its respective school campus for 3 months, going through our best practice model of 1. learning. 2. presenting, 3. fundraising, and 4. serving. Grant funds will allow us to staff these additional teams with one new full-time staff member and allow for appropriate staff to student ratios (1:10) on Action Teams to ensure quality program facilitation for each group. Staffing is the single most limiting factor in being able to grow 33 school Action Teams that exist in the 2023-2024 year to 50 Action Teams in 2024-2025. We currently have a waiting list of schools who would like to bring the Action Team program to their campuses, but our existing staff is at capacity. By simply adding an additional program coordinator, over 17 more schools will have our program, meaning upwards of 340 new students will be on an Action Team and 8,500 additional students will participate in a service project that makes a difference in our community.

Total Project Budget: $290,444

Other Funding
Sources For The Project (Committed & Potential): Innovia Foundation – $15,000; Douglass Properties – $50,000; Washington Trust Bank – $5,000; Thrivent Financial – $6,000; Verizon – $10,000

Project Duration: September 2024 – June 2025
Geographical Area Served: Spokane, WA
Age Group To Be Served: 8-18

Contact Information


Contact Prefix (Mr,Mrs etc.): Mr
Contact First Name: JJ
Contact Last Name: Vancil
Contact Title: Executive Director
Contact Phone: 509-747-6054
Contact Email: jj@generationalive.org

Grant Request Blessed Sacrament Youth Center

Hermanowski Family Foundation Initial Request Form


Organization Name: Blessed Sacrament Youth Center
Legal Name (if Different): Catholic Bishop of Chicago-Blessed Sacrament Youth Center
Also Known As: BSYC
Mailing Address: 3600 W Cermak Road
City: Chicago
State: IL
Postal Code: 60623
Main Phone: 773-770-6001
Main Fax:
Organization Website: www.bsyc.org
Employer ID Number: 93-2160310
Organization Tax Status: 501(c)(3) Public Charity

Proposal Information


Today’s Date: 3/28/24
Requested Amount: $10,000

Project Title: Safe Haven after-school program
Project Description:

Blessed Sacrament Youth Center (BSYC) was founded in 1987 with a mission to provide youth of color in low-income households a safe, healthy, and supportive after-school environment that fosters the essential leadership skills and character that kids ages 7-17 need to improve in school while breaking the cycles of poverty and violence.

Located on the border of North Lawndale and Little Village communities of Chicago’s southwest side, BSYC acknowledges the critical importance of out-of-school time for providing resources, hope, and opportunity to young people who lack positive influences. We minimize the impact of trauma by creating stability and safety nets through high-quality, dynamic, and consistent out-of-school-time programs.

The Safe Haven after-school program, which serves 75 students four days per week, addresses the impact of trauma in youth of color by helping them attain the sense of calm and safety needed to reclaim their ability to study, build relationships, develop leadership skills, and self-determine their life goals. Daily activities include tutoring, featured clubs (skating, dance troop, sports, arts & crafts, theater, etc.), and a hot meal. The goal is to reduce or eliminate as many stressors as possible. In addition to exposing young people to arts and cultural activities they could not otherwise access, our programs provide structure while developing life and leadership skills, self-esteem, and a sense of belonging. Wraparound support for their families includes weekly food distribution, resource fairs, weekend recreation opportunities, and seasonal events that build connection and resilience.

Our mission is not to take kids off the streets. The streets belong to our young people. With your support, Blessed Sacrament Youth Center can continue to expand its reach to opportunity youth and their families so that they can be safely embraced by the love, hope, and faith of a neighborhood community.

Total Project Budget: $220,836.90

Other Funding
Sources For The Project (Committed & Potential): Chicago Sunday Evening Club ($5,000 potential), CPS Safe Haven ($20,000 potential), Franciscan Foundation ($2,500 potential), Claretian Social Development Fund ($3,000 potential), Helen Brach Foundation ($10,000 potential), Individual Donations ($100,000 potential)

Project Duration: July 1, 2024 – June 30, 2025
Geographical Area Served: Chicago, IL
Age Group To Be Served: 7-12 years

Contact Information


Contact Prefix (Mr,Mrs etc.): Ms.
Contact First Name: Elizabeth
Contact Last Name: Young
Contact Title: Grant Consultant
Contact Phone: 872-205-6517
Contact Email: liz@commongoodgrants.com

Grant Request Blessed Sacrament Youth Center

Hermanowski Family Foundation Initial Request Form


Organization Name: Blessed Sacrament Youth Center
Legal Name (if Different): Catholic Bishop of Chicago-Blessed Sacrament Youth Center
Also Known As: BSYC
Mailing Address: 3600 W Cermak Road
City: Chicago
State: il
Postal Code:
Main Phone:
Main Fax:
Organization Website:
Employer ID Number:
Organization Tax Status:

Proposal Information


Today’s Date:
Requested Amount:

Project Title:
Project Description:

Total Project Budget:

Other Funding
Sources For The Project (Committed & Potential):

Project Duration:
Geographical Area Served:
Age Group To Be Served:

Contact Information


Contact Prefix (Mr,Mrs etc.):
Contact First Name:
Contact Last Name:
Contact Title:
Contact Phone:
Contact Email:

Grant Request Girls 4 Science

Hermanowski Family Foundation Initial Request Form


Organization Name: Girls 4 Science
Legal Name (if Different): GIRLS 4 SCIENCE
Also Known As: G4S
Mailing Address: PO Box 288958
City: Chicago
State: IL
Postal Code: 60628
Main Phone: 7734016685
Main Fax:
Organization Website: www.girls4science.org
Employer ID Number: 27-0147595
Organization Tax Status: 501(c)(3) Public Charity

Proposal Information


Today’s Date: 3/28/24
Requested Amount: $10,000

Project Title: Saturday STEM Academy
Project Description:

Girls 4 Science was established in 2009 as a direct response to a lack of accessible and affordable science programs for girls of color in Chicago. Its mission is to enrich the lives of girls through early exposure to the study of STEM and women of color working in STEM, as well as equip them with the knowledge, confidence, and motivation to persist in advanced study or careers.

Our Saturday STEM Academy runs for six weeks, four times per year, at three locations. High school and middle school students learn in blended classrooms at all three locations and each session accommodates 100+ girls. The program provides scientific exploration in state-of-the-art labs, field trips to discover real-world applications, and professional mentorship–all tactics that have been proven to retain girls’ interest in STEM and build confidence in their STEM abilities.

The Program Committee selects a different topic for each quarter. Upcoming topics include: Geology (Spring 2024), Manufacturing (Summer 2024), and Agriculture (Fall 2024). Beginning in 2025, we will cycle through STEM topics annually, covering Science in winter, Technology in spring, Engineering in summer, and Math in fall.

The committee also develops a robust syllabus with learning objectives, lesson content, and additional resources; this document is reviewed during a family orientation before each session. Each topic is presented in partnership with a corporation or community organization that facilitates access to STEM professionals and subject matter expertise.

Our Saturday STEM Academy is the only free, non-selective, year-round STEM program for girls ages 10-18 years in the Chicago region. We serve a diverse population of girls from nearly 90 zip codes, especially the south and west sides. The majority of these zip codes represent under-resourced communities of color. To date, we have impacted more than 3,000 girls through this program.

Total Project Budget: $189,375

Other Funding
Sources For The Project (Committed & Potential): Albert Pick Jr. Fund ($15,000 potential), Bristol Myers Squibb ($10,000 potential), The Boeing Company ($25,000 potential), Amgen ($10,000 potential), KSI Foundation ($10,000 potential), McGraw Foundation ($5,000 potential), Belvedere Cares ($75,000 committed), Joseph & Bessie Feinberg Foundation ($40,000 committed)

Project Duration: September 1, 2024 – August 31, 2025
Geographical Area Served: Chicagoland, IL
Age Group To Be Served: 10-18 years

Contact Information


Contact Prefix (Mr,Mrs etc.): Ms.
Contact First Name: Jackie
Contact Last Name: Lomax
Contact Title: Executive Director
Contact Phone: 773-401-6685
Contact Email: jlomax@girls4science.org

Grant Request Act4Me

Hermanowski Family Foundation Initial Request Form


Organization Name: Act4Me
Legal Name (if Different): A Chance for Therapy, Inc.
Also Known As: Act4Me (dba)
Mailing Address: 104 Crandon Boulevard, Suite 413
City: Key Biscayne
State: Florida
Postal Code: 33149
Main Phone: 3058154018
Main Fax:
Organization Website: act4me.org
Employer ID Number: 80-0414175
Organization Tax Status: 501c3

Proposal Information


Today’s Date: March 28, 2024
Requested Amount: 10,000

Project Title: Children’s Therapy Program
Project Description:

Act4Me’s mission is to provide speech, occupational and physical therapies to South Florida children with neurological/genetic disorders, allowing them to reach their highest potential and have a better quality of life.

Developmental disabilities in children are on the rise. According to the CDC, 1 in every 36 children were diagnosed with autism in 2023, a dramatic increase from 1 in 150 in 2002! Act4Me serves South Florida children suffering from developmental delays caused by neurological and/or genetic disorders, such as autism, epilepsy, and cerebral palsy. The proven method of treatment to help these children overcome individual challenges is consistent therapy – physical, speech and occupational. However, external challenges such as expensive/inadequate healthcare coverage and the rising cost of living has created a financial burden on many South Florida working families, making therapy a luxury rather than a necessity.

Act4Me closes the economic gap and ensures equity for all children with disabilities by making life-altering therapies accessible to those who otherwise could not afford it.

Every year, South Florida parents apply to Act4Me for physical, occupational, or speech therapy for a child with special needs. Act4Me reviews applications, interviews applicants, determines award amounts, and provides the therapy needed for an entire year through partnerships with established providers.

Since 2009, Act4Me has made a positive impact in the lives of over 325 children. Basic milestones, such as learning to communicate verbally or learning to feed oneself, are major triumphs for this population, as each success improves day-to-day functions, builds independence, and enhances the quality of life of each child.

On behalf of the board and the families we serve, please consider supporting our efforts. A grant of $10,000 can help provide speech, occupational and physical therapy for an entire year for 45 South Florida children in financial need who suffer from neurological/genetic disorders.

Total Project Budget: 250,000

Other Funding
Sources For The Project (Committed & Potential): Act4Me board members participate in fundraising efforts year-round in order to support therapy for children with disabilities. Our $250,000 annual goal directly correlates to the number of children we are able to serve each year. Please help us meet this goal! A summary of consistent funding sources includes: $130,000 from nonprofit grants; $80,000 from annual Golf Tournament fundraiser; $15,000 from Individual/Recurring Donations; $15,000 from Corporate Donations; $4,000 from Challenge Fundraisers; $5,000 from Special Events; $250 from Facebook Fundraising Donations; $250 from Donation Box, and; $500 from Amazon Smile Donations. Some of our annual recurring grants come from these proud supporters: Ocean Reef Com. Fndn: $35,000 Dr. John T. MacDonald Fndn: $20,000 The Batchelor Fndn: $15,000 Fabene Fndn: $10,000 Watts Fndn: $5,000 Rotary Club, Key Biscayne and Rotary Fndn: $4,000 Key Biscayne Com. Fndn: $2,500

Project Duration: 12 months
Geographical Area Served: Miami-Dade County and Broward County
Age Group To Be Served: open to ages 1 to 18; typically serving ages 4 to10

Contact Information


Contact Prefix (Mr,Mrs etc.): Mrs.
Contact First Name: Maida
Contact Last Name: Berberian-Bignon
Contact Title: Founder and President
Contact Phone: 786.390.1172 / 305.815.4018
Contact Email: maida@act4me.org; caroline@ecostratas.com

Grant Request Kingdom Kids Christian Academy

Hermanowski Family Foundation Initial Request Form


Organization Name: Kingdom Kids Christian Academy
Legal Name (if Different):
Also Known As:
Mailing Address: 1003 S. John Young Pkwy.
City: Kissimmee
State: FL
Postal Code: 34741
Main Phone: 4073469136
Main Fax:
Organization Website: www.KingdomKidsCa.com
Employer ID Number: 82-1325450
Organization Tax Status: 501(c)(3)

Proposal Information


Today’s Date: 3-28-24
Requested Amount: 10,000.00

Project Title: Kingdom Kids and Families Support Program
Project Description:

Kingdom Kids Christian Academy wishes to thank you for the opportunity to request grant support for our Community Education, Mental Wellness Support, and Community Programming for homeless and underserved students, which is known as the Kingdom Kids and Families Support Program in Kissimmee, Florida. More students are failing and performing below grade level in the history of education. With a 47% increase in student mental health issues and a 33% increase in depression, along with the lack of affordable housing in Osceola County, which presents a series of challenges within our communities through poverty, homelessness, food insecurities, substance abuse, suicide, an increase in crime shows that our programs are an absolute necessity. Along with educating our school’s students and providing intense, high-quality tutoring for low-income families outside our school family, we holistically provide clothing, feeding, counseling, and community outreach for needy students, as well as providing trauma-informed social-emotional learning (SEL) curriculum, to develop healthy identities, manage emotions, and achieve personal and collective goals for our students. Funding from your foundation will help us overcome our communities’ academic challenges, mental health disorders, and social hurdles with our programmatic categories: Community Education, Mental Wellness Support, and Community Programming.

The Kingdom Kids and Families Support Program has made it our priority to educate, counsel, feed, and clothe students in need while providing services to holistically restore dignity and self-sufficiency to families. Because our school has a partnership with the Vine Church, we believe in SERVING and HELPING everyone we can. Our program is comprised of three programmatic categories: Community Education, Mental Wellness Support, and Community Programming.

Community Education

(County-Wide Academic Acceleration and Tutoring to Combat Learning Loss Due to the Pandemic)

Students from low socioeconomic communities were disproportionately impacted during the pandemic, resulting in further widening achievement gaps. To help struggling students in our community, we provide high-quality tutoring to accelerate student learning, compensate for lost instructional time, and help raise their test scores. Our tutoring ensures that students, especially those who have experienced the most significant learning losses, are consistently instructed with grade-level materials, provided scaffolding, and gain the most critical just-in-time content knowledge and skills needed to access curricula at the appropriate grade level. In addition, our programming offers a blend of computer-delivered and teacher-led instruction to increase students’ vocabulary, listening skills, social-emotional development, independence, and academic and cognitive skills.

Our instructional focus will be on the following:

English
• Foundational skills
• Priority standards
• Standard deficiencies

Reading
• Foundational skills and enrichment
• Grade-level standard deficiencies
• Focus on remedial skills
• Focus on acceleration

Math
• Standard deficiencies that bridge the gap for primary grades.
• Foundational skills
• Priority standards
• Standard deficiencies
• Foundational skills and enrichment
• Grade-level standard deficiencies
• Remedial skills
• Acceleration

Although our programs are year-round, we also offer extensive summer programming. In addition, KKCA provides a comprehensive summer school program to provide support and enrichment to meet the academically struggling student’s needs. Summer programs are available to students in all ESSA Subgroups in grades Pre-K-5.

We provide ALL needy students face-to-face/online tutoring regardless of where they attend school. We also are enhancing our literacy programs by purchasing classroom libraries for intensive reading. Our literacy program supports independent student reading within the rotational model and provides opportunities for students to participate in cohort book studies to enhance fluency, vocabulary, and reading comprehension. Trends have shown the need for increased print materials to promote improved independent reading. Providing classroom libraries gives students the platform to engage in active self-regulation based on Nell Duke’s Active View of Reading, which is the first step in creating skilled readers. We will also help preschoolers build essential skills for emergent writing, handwriting, and letter knowledge. Our purchased materials will help teach young children how to write well-formed letters and increase letter identification skills using a practical, developmentally appropriate multisensory writing approach. When taught explicitly, multisensory instruction will help children who struggle with pencil grip, letter formation, and many other
skills.

Mental Wellness Support

Many students suffer from mental health issues in silence. These students may be experiencing a wide range of challenges, such as anxiety, depression, stress, eating disorders, self-esteem issues, or other conditions that affect their well-being. Several factors contribute to their decision to suffer in silence, such as social stigma, lack of awareness, fear of consequences, or limited access to resources. Providing a Whole School Approach and Holistic Integration of Education and Mental Health support added to our curriculum is a priority and our primary focus this year. Fortunately, mental health disorders can be prevented with Early Identification, Early Intervention, and Trauma-Informed Social-Emotional Learning (SEL).

Early intervention and trauma-informed social-emotional learning (SEL) are integral to education and human development. SEL is the process through which all young people acquire and apply the knowledge, skills, and attitudes to develop healthy identities, manage emotions, and achieve personal and collective goals. Our SEL curriculum also teaches our students to empathize with others, establish and maintain supportive relationships, and make responsible and caring decisions. These skills are developed through evidence-based classroom programs, character education classes, school culture, and ongoing collaboration with families and communities. Our programs empower our students to build skills for success. Providing students with preventative content aligned to their challenges helps them learn and apply skills such as stress management, mindfulness, problem-solving, and self-care in real time. With these tools, students are better equipped to navigate the ups and downs of life, effectively managing stressors and reducing the likelihood of developing more severe mental health conditions down the road.

We also have a drop-in counseling hour for groups that can significantly enhance accessibility and allow more students to access the support they need without the requirement of scheduling appointments. We also provide before-school and after-school drop-in support to give students more opportunities to seek and receive the help they need. Our school provides violence and bullying prevention training for students, staff, and parents/caregivers, implements a zero-tolerance bullying policy, and provides readily available mental health services for student referrals. These tools offer a scalable community approach to upstream prevention of mental health crises and school-wide violence in any manner.

Community Programming

With homelessness increasing daily in our community, we are helping 5-10 new families weekly to provide hundreds of children and their families with education, food, clothing, shelter, tutoring, and counseling. We have made community outreach and community partnerships an essential part of our programming that bridges all races, socioeconomic statuses, religions, genders, and sexual orientations. We provide an on-site food pantry to help people experiencing homelessness and families with immediate needs. We are very conscious of people needing transportation to our campus for services, so we make it a point to go out and feed hundreds of people in various high-poverty areas. Our partnership with Grace Landing has placed multiple foster children with families within our school and program. We provide extra support for our foster families, such as transportation, respite, babysitting, clothing, and meals. Single mothers who face domestic violence are an area we get behind. Besides feeding, clothing, tutoring, and counseling for abused females, we partner with H.O.M.E, which houses our single mothers and their children. For the past 14 years, the Kingdom Kids and Families Support Program has sent mission teams to Honduras. We provide food distribution, construction, medical and orphanage assistance, and micro-economic aid to the children and families of the most impoverished areas of Honduras. To demonstrate the versatility of our programs, we provide a Pastor for spiritual guidance, a therapist to help families cope with mental health, and a social worker who can help link families to services such as counseling, housing, employment, medical services, and transportation.

Program Goals
 Improving student academic achievement and combating learning loss and lost instructional time.
 Focusing on closing the achievement gaps and identifying students in need of support.
 Implementing foundational literacy aligned with state standards and private school curriculums.
 Purchasing books to promote improved independent reading.
 Delivering high-quality, equitable, standards-based instruction in both digital and print formats.
 Helping every student thrive academically, socially, and emotionally.
 Gathering a full circle of support from the home, school, and through the larger community to reinforce positive behaviors.
 Offering mental health support before and after school to extend the nurturing environment beyond regular classroom hours.
 Creating a safe and supportive environment where students can heal, learn, and thrive.
 Providing students with a calm environment that fosters self-growth.
 Providing low-income/homeless youth and families with food, clothing, shelter, and education.
 Helping homeless and underemployed families gain hope and rise above their current situations by providing a caring place where people can get clothing, meals, groceries, and health care.
 Identifying families’ current needs and empowering them to make a positive change in their lives through our assistance.

Total Project Budget: 317,666.00

Other Funding
Sources For The Project (Committed & Potential): Kingdom Kids Christian Academy has received funding from Microsoft, Google, YouTube, Walmart, Uber, dd Discounts, Costco, Sam’s Club, CVS Health Foundation, Walt Disney World, Publix, Amscot, DiPasqua Enterprises, Subway, Zevia, Medieval Times, Wawa, Sea World, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Universal Studios Orlando, Panera Bread, 4imprint.com, Covelli Enterprises, Cirque du Soleil Entertainment Group, USF Athletics, Pizza Hut, Orlando Solar Bears, Crayola Experience, Ross Dress for Less, Orlando Science Center, Red Robin, Wonder Works, AED Grants, Kennedy Space Center, Andretti Indoor Karting & Games, Central Florida Zoo & Botanical Gardens, Lowes, Aquatica, RDV Sportsplex, Dr. Phillips Performing Center, Uber Eats, 4Rivers Smokehouse, Forever Florida, Jeremiah’s Italian Ice, American Girl Brands LLC, Dollar General, Chuy’s Fine Tex-Mex, Best Choice Products, Toho Water Authority, Picaboo Yearbooks, Best Choice Products, Masana Portrait Artwork NYC, Cirque du Soleil Entertainment Group, Top Golf Orlando, Z 88.3 FM, Central Florida Educational Foundation, Z Ministries, Puff ‘n Stuff Catering, Travel Set Go, The Florida Aquarium, Oriental Trading, Road Runners Club of America, Merlin Entertainments, Madame Tussauds, Sea Life Orlando, Celebration Restaurant Group, A Yum Brands Franchise, Cobb Theatres, Tampa Bay Lightning, Chipotle, Southeastern Grocers, Winn-Dixie, Foxtail Coffee Orlando, Rubio’s Coastal Grill, Fogo De Chao, Central Florida Pizza Hut, International Paper Company, Insight Credit Union, C&S Wholesale, City of Kissimmee, Five Below, Kissimmee Parks and Recreation, AdventHealth, First Book Marketplace, TD Charitable Foundation, Kissimmee Utility Authority, City of St. Cloud, Osceola County Government, and the American Online Giving Foundation.

Project Duration: Year-Round (12 months)
Geographical Area Served: Osceola County (Florida)
Age Group To Be Served: 2-12

Contact Information


Contact Prefix (Mr,Mrs etc.): Mrs.
Contact First Name: Liz
Contact Last Name: Foster
Contact Title: President
Contact Phone: 4073469136
Contact Email: lizkkca@gmail.com

Grant Request Kingdom Kids Christian Academy

Hermanowski Family Foundation Initial Request Form


Organization Name: Kingdom Kids Christian Academy
Legal Name (if Different):
Also Known As:
Mailing Address: 1003 S. John Young Pkwy.
City: Kissimmee
State: FL
Postal Code: 34741
Main Phone: 4073469136
Main Fax:
Organization Website: www.KingdomKidsCa.com
Employer ID Number: 82-1325450
Organization Tax Status: 501(c)(3)

Proposal Information


Today’s Date: 3-28-24
Requested Amount: 10,000.00

Project Title: Kingdom Kids and Families Support Program
Project Description:

Kingdom Kids Christian Academy wishes to thank you for the opportunity to request grant support for our Community Education, Mental Wellness Support, and Community Programming for homeless and underserved students, which is known as the Kingdom Kids and Families Support Program in Kissimmee, Florida. More students are failing and performing below grade level in the history of education. With a 47% increase in student mental health issues and a 33% increase in depression, along with the lack of affordable housing in Osceola County, which presents a series of challenges within our communities through poverty, homelessness, food insecurities, substance abuse, suicide, an increase in crime shows that our programs are an absolute necessity. Along with educating our school’s students and providing intense, high-quality tutoring for low-income families outside our school family, we holistically provide clothing, feeding, counseling, and community outreach for needy students, as well as providing trauma-informed social-emotional learning (SEL) curriculum, to develop healthy identities, manage emotions, and achieve personal and collective goals for our students. Funding from your foundation will help us overcome our communities’ academic challenges, mental health disorders, and social hurdles with our programmatic categories: Community Education, Mental Wellness Support, and Community Programming.

The Kingdom Kids and Families Support Program has made it our priority to educate, counsel, feed, and clothe students in need while providing services to holistically restore dignity and self-sufficiency to families. Because our school has a partnership with the Vine Church, we believe in SERVING and HELPING everyone we can. Our program is comprised of three programmatic categories: Community Education, Mental Wellness Support, and Community Programming.

Community Education

(County-Wide Academic Acceleration and Tutoring to Combat Learning Loss Due to the Pandemic)

Students from low socioeconomic communities were disproportionately impacted during the pandemic, resulting in further widening achievement gaps. To help struggling students in our community, we provide high-quality tutoring to accelerate student learning, compensate for lost instructional time, and help raise their test scores. Our tutoring ensures that students, especially those who have experienced the most significant learning losses, are consistently instructed with grade-level materials, provided scaffolding, and gain the most critical just-in-time content knowledge and skills needed to access curricula at the appropriate grade level. In addition, our programming offers a blend of computer-delivered and teacher-led instruction to increase students’ vocabulary, listening skills, social-emotional development, independence, and academic and cognitive skills.

Our instructional focus will be on the following:

English
• Foundational skills
• Priority standards
• Standard deficiencies

Reading
• Foundational skills and enrichment
• Grade-level standard deficiencies
• Focus on remedial skills
• Focus on acceleration

Math
• Standard deficiencies that bridge the gap for primary grades.
• Foundational skills
• Priority standards
• Standard deficiencies
• Foundational skills and enrichment
• Grade-level standard deficiencies
• Remedial skills
• Acceleration

Although our programs are year-round, we also offer extensive summer programming. In addition, KKCA provides a comprehensive summer school program to provide support and enrichment to meet the academically struggling student’s needs. Summer programs are available to students in all ESSA Subgroups in grades Pre-K-5.

We provide ALL needy students face-to-face/online tutoring regardless of where they attend school. We also are enhancing our literacy programs by purchasing classroom libraries for intensive reading. Our literacy program supports independent student reading within the rotational model and provides opportunities for students to participate in cohort book studies to enhance fluency, vocabulary, and reading comprehension. Trends have shown the need for increased print materials to promote improved independent reading. Providing classroom libraries gives students the platform to engage in active self-regulation based on Nell Duke’s Active View of Reading, which is the first step in creating skilled readers. We will also help preschoolers build essential skills for emergent writing, handwriting, and letter knowledge. Our purchased materials will help teach young children how to write well-formed letters and increase letter identification skills using a practical, developmentally appropriate multisensory writing approach. When taught explicitly, multisensory instruction will help children who struggle with pencil grip, letter formation, and many other
skills.

Mental Wellness Support

Many students suffer from mental health issues in silence. These students may be experiencing a wide range of challenges, such as anxiety, depression, stress, eating disorders, self-esteem issues, or other conditions that affect their well-being. Several factors contribute to their decision to suffer in silence, such as social stigma, lack of awareness, fear of consequences, or limited access to resources. Providing a Whole School Approach and Holistic Integration of Education and Mental Health support added to our curriculum is a priority and our primary focus this year. Fortunately, mental health disorders can be prevented with Early Identification, Early Intervention, and Trauma-Informed Social-Emotional Learning (SEL).

Early intervention and trauma-informed social-emotional learning (SEL) are integral to education and human development. SEL is the process through which all young people acquire and apply the knowledge, skills, and attitudes to develop healthy identities, manage emotions, and achieve personal and collective goals. Our SEL curriculum also teaches our students to empathize with others, establish and maintain supportive relationships, and make responsible and caring decisions. These skills are developed through evidence-based classroom programs, character education classes, school culture, and ongoing collaboration with families and communities. Our programs empower our students to build skills for success. Providing students with preventative content aligned to their challenges helps them learn and apply skills such as stress management, mindfulness, problem-solving, and self-care in real time. With these tools, students are better equipped to navigate the ups and downs of life, effectively managing stressors and reducing the likelihood of developing more severe mental health conditions down the road.

We also have a drop-in counseling hour for groups that can significantly enhance accessibility and allow more students to access the support they need without the requirement of scheduling appointments. We also provide before-school and after-school drop-in support to give students more opportunities to seek and receive the help they need. Our school provides violence and bullying prevention training for students, staff, and parents/caregivers, implements a zero-tolerance bullying policy, and provides readily available mental health services for student referrals. These tools offer a scalable community approach to upstream prevention of mental health crises and school-wide violence in any manner.

Community Programming

With homelessness increasing daily in our community, we are helping 5-10 new families weekly to provide hundreds of children and their families with education, food, clothing, shelter, tutoring, and counseling. We have made community outreach and community partnerships an essential part of our programming that bridges all races, socioeconomic statuses, religions, genders, and sexual orientations. We provide an on-site food pantry to help people experiencing homelessness and families with immediate needs. We are very conscious of people needing transportation to our campus for services, so we make it a point to go out and feed hundreds of people in various high-poverty areas. Our partnership with Grace Landing has placed multiple foster children with families within our school and program. We provide extra support for our foster families, such as transportation, respite, babysitting, clothing, and meals. Single mothers who face domestic violence are an area we get behind. Besides feeding, clothing, tutoring, and counseling for abused females, we partner with H.O.M.E, which houses our single mothers and their children. For the past 14 years, the Kingdom Kids and Families Support Program has sent mission teams to Honduras. We provide food distribution, construction, medical and orphanage assistance, and micro-economic aid to the children and families of the most impoverished areas of Honduras. To demonstrate the versatility of our programs, we provide a Pastor for spiritual guidance, a therapist to help families cope with mental health, and a social worker who can help link families to services such as counseling, housing, employment, medical services, and transportation.

Program Goals
 Improving student academic achievement and combating learning loss and lost instructional time.
 Focusing on closing the achievement gaps and identifying students in need of support.
 Implementing foundational literacy aligned with state standards and private school curriculums.
 Purchasing books to promote improved independent reading.
 Delivering high-quality, equitable, standards-based instruction in both digital and print formats.
 Helping every student thrive academically, socially, and emotionally.
 Gathering a full circle of support from the home, school, and through the larger community to reinforce positive behaviors.
 Offering mental health support before and after school to extend the nurturing environment beyond regular classroom hours.
 Creating a safe and supportive environment where students can heal, learn, and thrive.
 Providing students with a calm environment that fosters self-growth.
 Providing low-income/homeless youth and families with food, clothing, shelter, and education.
 Helping homeless and underemployed families gain hope and rise above their current situations by providing a caring place where people can get clothing, meals, groceries, and health care.
 Identifying families’ current needs and empowering them to make a positive change in their lives through our assistance.

Total Project Budget: 317,666.00

Other Funding
Sources For The Project (Committed & Potential): Kingdom Kids Christian Academy has received funding from Microsoft, Google, YouTube, Walmart, Uber, dd Discounts, Costco, Sam’s Club, CVS Health Foundation, Walt Disney World, Publix, Amscot, DiPasqua Enterprises, Subway, Zevia, Medieval Times, Wawa, Sea World, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Universal Studios Orlando, Panera Bread, 4imprint.com, Covelli Enterprises, Cirque du Soleil Entertainment Group, USF Athletics, Pizza Hut, Orlando Solar Bears, Crayola Experience, Ross Dress for Less, Orlando Science Center, Red Robin, Wonder Works, AED Grants, Kennedy Space Center, Andretti Indoor Karting & Games, Central Florida Zoo & Botanical Gardens, Lowes, Aquatica, RDV Sportsplex, Dr. Phillips Performing Center, Uber Eats, 4Rivers Smokehouse, Forever Florida, Jeremiah’s Italian Ice, American Girl Brands LLC, Dollar General, Chuy’s Fine Tex-Mex, Best Choice Products, Toho Water Authority, Picaboo Yearbooks, Best Choice Products, Masana Portrait Artwork NYC, Cirque du Soleil Entertainment Group, Top Golf Orlando, Z 88.3 FM, Central Florida Educational Foundation, Z Ministries, Puff ‘n Stuff Catering, Travel Set Go, The Florida Aquarium, Oriental Trading, Road Runners Club of America, Merlin Entertainments, Madame Tussauds, Sea Life Orlando, Celebration Restaurant Group, A Yum Brands Franchise, Cobb Theatres, Tampa Bay Lightning, Chipotle, Southeastern Grocers, Winn-Dixie, Foxtail Coffee Orlando, Rubio’s Coastal Grill, Fogo De Chao, Central Florida Pizza Hut, International Paper Company, Insight Credit Union, C&S Wholesale, City of Kissimmee, Five Below, Kissimmee Parks and Recreation, AdventHealth, First Book Marketplace, TD Charitable Foundation, Kissimmee Utility Authority, City of St. Cloud, Osceola County Government, and the American Online Giving Foundation.

Project Duration: Year-Round (12 months)
Geographical Area Served: Osceola County (Florida)
Age Group To Be Served: 2-12

Contact Information


Contact Prefix (Mr,Mrs etc.): Mrs.
Contact First Name: Liz
Contact Last Name: Foster
Contact Title: President
Contact Phone: 4073469136
Contact Email: lizkkca@gmail.com

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