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“I
pray that your organization is able to continue helping our young
people
achieve their goals.
Being a single parent has been hard so I just feel blessed and
grateful that I am able to give my child a better education than
I had growing up.”
•••
Mary Huckins

A comprehensive study done by Harvard University
shows that CSF parents are highly satisfied when they have the
ability to choose the schools their children attend. Read the study
by clicking here |

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Leveraged
CSFP is a leveraged investment in the future.
Local donations for scholarships are matched on a fifty cents
to the dollar basis by the national office of the Children’s
Scholarship Fund. Participating families are asked to pay
a portion of tuition. The average family contributes
approximately $1,100 per child, or about 50% of the tuition, thereby
more than
doubling the leverage of the original donation.
Means-tested
Scholarships are awarded on a sliding scale, depending on a family’s
size and income. Poorer and/or larger families pay a smaller percentage
of the tuition, while families with a somewhat higher income pay
a greater portion. The minimum family contribution is $500 per year
or 25% of tuition—whichever is greater.
Early
Research and experience tell us that the earlier a child begins receiving
a solid education, the better. That is why the Children’s Scholarship
Fund Philadelphia focuses on the elementary years, from kindergarten
through eighth grade.
The seeds for aspiring to, and succeeding in, college are sowed during
the formative years in grades K-8, by a sound educational experience
that both challenges and motivates. Unfortunately, children from
low-income families often are not exposed to such an education at
their local public school. Scholarships at the pre-college level
bring help earlier, when it is needed most.
Commitment
The parental contribution is a vital element in the success of the
program. Families who pay tuition treat their child’s
education as a priority and become more involved in their child’s
education.
Empowerment
CSFP makes awards to families, not to schools. If a participating
family moves, or becomes dissatisfied with their chosen school, they
may
take their scholarship with them to a different school.
Satisfaction
In a recently published evaluation of the Children’s Scholarship
Fund by Harvard University, 68% of the 850 recipient families surveyed
indicated that they were “very satisfied” with the private
schools’ academic quality, safety, discipline, and the values
taught in the school. Only 23% of their public school counterparts
felt similarly. (Click
here to view the Harvard study)
Statistical Information
Children’s Scholarship Fund Philadelphia is one of approximately
forty partner programs that comprise the Children’s Scholarship
Fund. CSFP will enter its eighth school year in the fall 2007. The
program is helping approximately 2,300 low-income children attend
the school of their family’s choice. The average school tuition
per child is $2,400 and the average CSFP scholarship is $1,000, with
a maximum award of $1,825. The average family contribution per child
is $1,100/year on an average annual income of $28,400.
Demand
There is a tremendous demand for educational alternatives to public
schools in Philadelphia. CSFP has received over 75,000 applications
over the last seven years for the 4,500 scholarships.
Diversity
Children’s Scholarship Fund Philadelphia is a diverse program.
Participating families come from every ethnic background, and their
choices of schools reveal a similar variety. Of the 205 schools participating
in the program, religious-oriented schools represent the largest
single group: they include Catholic, Baptist, Jewish, Islamic, Lutheran,
and Pentecostal. Also represented are traditional college preparatory
schools, Montessori, Afro-Centric, foreign-language, and other non-sectarian
private schools.
Organizational Background
In 1997, Ted Forstmann and John Walton contributed a total of $6
million to a scholarship program in Washington, D.C. that helps
children in grades K-8 from low-income families attend the
private schools of their choice. In only 16 weeks, the parents
of nearly
8,000 children applied for a scholarship. It was this impressive
demonstration of demand for educational alternatives that compelled
both men to expand their efforts into a nationwide program.
In June 1998, they launched the Children’s Scholarship Fund
(CSF) as a national version of the Washington program. Immediately
after the new program was announced, applications began to pour
in at an astonishing rate. By the end of the application period,
the parents of a 1.25 million children from 20,000 communities
in all 50 states had applied. Their average family income was $22,000.
On April 21, 1999, CSF held its National Lottery Day, at which
Forstmann and Walton announced the awarding of 40,000 scholarships
to families nationwide. A locally based staff has successfully
administered the program for the past four years. In spring, 2001,
through local efforts, a separate CSF Philadelphia was formed with
its own board of directors, 501(c iii ) certification and the appointment
of an Executive Director. The Fund is the largest provider of scholarship
money K-8 in Pennsylvania and has serviced over 4,500 children.
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