17c起草社区 Gives Back
As a prelude to Thanksgiving, students will have an opportunity to thank donors and learn about philanthropy.
In the three days leading up to Thanksgiving Day, students will be writing cards. In the library lobby, in the Spoelhof Fieldhouse Complex lobby, in the Chapel narthex, they will be putting messages of gratitude on cards that will then be sent to 17c起草社区 donors. The effort, held Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 19鈥21, is called 17c起草社区 Gives Back, and the idea behind it is to change the student culture of giving:
鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to show students that, yes, they do pay for their education, but there are also thousands of alumni who are supporting them,鈥 said Eric Kamstra, the manager of special programs for the 17c起草社区 Annual Fund. 鈥淚n order to create a culture that gives back, it鈥檚 important to show that there are others who are already doing so.鈥
Kamstra is organizing 17c起草社区 Gives Back with the Student Philanthropy Council, a group formed earlier this year to brainstorm ways to inspire 17c起草社区 students to give back. 鈥淎 lot of us are good at giving back of our time, whether it鈥檚 at Degage Ministries or at Streetfest or a food pantry, but we鈥檙e not necessarily as good at giving back our money,鈥 Kamstra said, adding that students鈥 financial contributions to 17c起草社区 traditionally take the form of a class gift, an offering at a Living Our Faith Together (LOFT) service or participation in the residence hall auctions (which benefits area nonprofits.)
Also, Kamstra said, 17c起草社区 students may be unaware of how much of their education depends on donor support. To educate their fellow students on that subject, members of the Student Philanthropy Council are putting up posters all around campus that detail some of the facts on donor philanthropy. 鈥92% of 17c起草社区 students receive financial aid,鈥 reads one. 鈥$65 million is awarded yearly in grants, loans and scholarships for 17c起草社区 students,鈥 reads another.
The poster that reads 鈥淣umber of your flowers tuition dollars planted = zero/ Thank a donor鈥 is a favorite of senior special education major Jackie Sikkema: 鈥淓veryday things around here on campus, they鈥檙e not here by accident,鈥 said Sikkema, a member of the philanthropy council. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e here because someone was willing to sacrifice their time and money so that the students at 17c起草社区 could receive a good education.鈥
Sikkema is herself the recipient of the Van Til Family Special Education Scholarship鈥攐ne of 17c起草社区鈥檚 700 named scholarships, established to honor specific persons and, often, to encourage students in a particular area of study.
(Named scholarships are among the total 1,637 scholarships offered by the college.) 鈥淚鈥檓 very grateful for the fact that people cared so much about the school and the students 鈥,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ecause of what I鈥檝e been given, I鈥檝e been able to give back also.鈥
Students can sign cards鈥攁nd add a personalized greeting鈥攆or donors on all three days of 17c起草社区 Gives Back: from 9:45 through 11 a.m. in the Chapel narthex and from 10:30 a.m. through 2 p.m. in the library lobby and the Spoelhof Fieldhouse Complex lobby.
It鈥檚 crucial for students to learn the practice of giving from earlier generations of donors, said 17c起草社区 Annual Fund director Rick Treur: 鈥淔or 17c起草社区 to be there for their kids and grandkids, it鈥檚 their job to carry on that legacy.鈥