The document summarizes the disaster relief efforts of the YesPinoy Foundation including distributing school supplies and rebuilding a house after disasters. It then focuses on the Foundation's "Oplan Bethlehem" initiative which provided relief goods like food, water, and supplies to thousands of families in Iloilo and Antique affected by Typhoon Yolanda and an oil spill. The initiative was led by the Foundation's chairman and involved donations from entertainment and business partners, local governments, and volunteers.
The document summarizes the Oplan Bethlehem initiative led by YesPinoy Foundation to provide relief efforts to victims impacted by Typhoon Yolanda in Estancia, Iloilo. It details the cash and goods donated through the initiative, including food packs, water, hygiene kits, and other supplies. The document outlines the distribution of these relief items to thousands of families across multiple cities and communities in Iloilo.
The Sweet Nectar Society will host a Pots, Pans, and Pancakes breakfast fundraiser on National Cooking Day, September 25th at the International Agri-Center in Tulare, CA. Attendees are asked to donate used cooking supplies in exchange for a pancake breakfast and chance to meet families receiving the donations. All proceeds will benefit families in the Sweet Eats program who have children with life-threatening illnesses. The event aims to provide supplies to these families dealing with medical costs and time in the hospital while allowing donors photo opportunities with recipients.
On the 100th anniversary of St. Candida's death, Manresa School in Paranaque City, Philippines held a relief operation to help victims of widespread flooding in the National Capital Region. Alumni, parents, and students donated canned goods, rice, water, clothes, and other supplies. Together they sorted, packed, and distributed the donations to affected families. Although planned celebration activities were cancelled due to the floods, the school considered the centennial commemoration the most meaningful for focusing efforts on aiding others in need.
Parishioners and students from several churches and schools in the UK organized various fundraising events like quiz nights, dances, lunches, and car washes to raise money for charitable causes through CAFOD's World Gifts program. Their efforts collectively raised over £6,000, which provided items like water supplies, rice banks, fruit tree nurseries, mother and baby care packs, and other resources to communities in developing countries.
- Happy Birthday wishes were given to students Danika and Victor.
- The Green Team assisted at the recycling depot.
- Tomorrow, Scales Nature Park will present to the school using funds from the Dance-A-Thon. Spring photos will also be taken and Vista order forms are due.
- Students are reminded not to cross-contaminate recycling bins and that today is Pizza Day. There will also be a Maker Faire on Thursday with details in the attached flyer.
- The daily message encourages giving green gifts like locally grown flowers for Mother's Day.
- Students Colby, Kassie, and PJoe received character trait recognitions.
The Amazon Pueblo project help indigenous villages in the Colombian Amazon to improve their standard of living through sustainable business. We are an all-volunteer program. We welcome new volunteers.
The document contains daily announcements for ICPS on Monday April 11th 2016. It announces that there are no birthdays, which green team is assisting at the recycling depot, and details for upcoming events like the Dance-A-Thon and a junior girls basketball game. It also recognizes students for character traits and provides a daily message about reusing and recycling plastic bags to save energy.
The First Reformed Church Vacation Bible School collected 390 pounds of school supplies for the Kaye Prox Food Bank, with pastors and participants getting pies thrown in their faces for every 125 pounds collected. The altar server coordinator at Incarnation Catholic Church had his student altar servers collect and organize enough school supplies to fill 17 backpacks and over two dozen grocery bags for the food bank during their retreat. Last year the food bank provided school supplies for over 120 students but only about a dozen backpacks, but this year they were able to give over 130 students fully stuffed backpacks, including 50 backpacks donated by the Glazer Family Foundation through their Buc-Packs program.
The document summarizes the Oplan Bethlehem initiative led by YesPinoy Foundation to provide relief efforts to victims impacted by Typhoon Yolanda in Estancia, Iloilo. It details the cash and goods donated through the initiative, including food packs, water, hygiene kits, and other supplies. The document outlines the distribution of these relief items to thousands of families across multiple cities and communities in Iloilo.
The Sweet Nectar Society will host a Pots, Pans, and Pancakes breakfast fundraiser on National Cooking Day, September 25th at the International Agri-Center in Tulare, CA. Attendees are asked to donate used cooking supplies in exchange for a pancake breakfast and chance to meet families receiving the donations. All proceeds will benefit families in the Sweet Eats program who have children with life-threatening illnesses. The event aims to provide supplies to these families dealing with medical costs and time in the hospital while allowing donors photo opportunities with recipients.
On the 100th anniversary of St. Candida's death, Manresa School in Paranaque City, Philippines held a relief operation to help victims of widespread flooding in the National Capital Region. Alumni, parents, and students donated canned goods, rice, water, clothes, and other supplies. Together they sorted, packed, and distributed the donations to affected families. Although planned celebration activities were cancelled due to the floods, the school considered the centennial commemoration the most meaningful for focusing efforts on aiding others in need.
Parishioners and students from several churches and schools in the UK organized various fundraising events like quiz nights, dances, lunches, and car washes to raise money for charitable causes through CAFOD's World Gifts program. Their efforts collectively raised over £6,000, which provided items like water supplies, rice banks, fruit tree nurseries, mother and baby care packs, and other resources to communities in developing countries.
- Happy Birthday wishes were given to students Danika and Victor.
- The Green Team assisted at the recycling depot.
- Tomorrow, Scales Nature Park will present to the school using funds from the Dance-A-Thon. Spring photos will also be taken and Vista order forms are due.
- Students are reminded not to cross-contaminate recycling bins and that today is Pizza Day. There will also be a Maker Faire on Thursday with details in the attached flyer.
- The daily message encourages giving green gifts like locally grown flowers for Mother's Day.
- Students Colby, Kassie, and PJoe received character trait recognitions.
The Amazon Pueblo project help indigenous villages in the Colombian Amazon to improve their standard of living through sustainable business. We are an all-volunteer program. We welcome new volunteers.
The document contains daily announcements for ICPS on Monday April 11th 2016. It announces that there are no birthdays, which green team is assisting at the recycling depot, and details for upcoming events like the Dance-A-Thon and a junior girls basketball game. It also recognizes students for character traits and provides a daily message about reusing and recycling plastic bags to save energy.
The First Reformed Church Vacation Bible School collected 390 pounds of school supplies for the Kaye Prox Food Bank, with pastors and participants getting pies thrown in their faces for every 125 pounds collected. The altar server coordinator at Incarnation Catholic Church had his student altar servers collect and organize enough school supplies to fill 17 backpacks and over two dozen grocery bags for the food bank during their retreat. Last year the food bank provided school supplies for over 120 students but only about a dozen backpacks, but this year they were able to give over 130 students fully stuffed backpacks, including 50 backpacks donated by the Glazer Family Foundation through their Buc-Packs program.
For the fifth year running we’ve decided to skip the small presents and replace them with something that really counts. This Christmas, we are taking part in Oxfam Unwrapped where we make a series of donations on your behalf. Join us as we unwrap some pretty awesome gifts over the next 12 days!
The document summarizes a "From water for water" project run by Italian students Maria B. and Fausto M. The students collect plastic bottle tops and send them to a factory for recycling. The proceeds from recycling the tops will be used to build 8 wells in villages in Tanzania. Collecting the plastic tops helps save the environment while providing villages in Tanzania with access to water, as currently people there must walk long distances to collect water or dig in the ground to find water. A photo shows children in Tanzania carrying large amounts of water from a new well back to their village.
The document discusses several projects and initiatives at a school to promote health, community, and helping those in need. The school holds an annual "Healthy Sandwich" campaign to encourage healthy eating, as well as a family fair where students can perform or sell items. They also have "Safe Breaks" where students monitor the halls to keep other students safe. Younger students receive fruits and vegetables to support healthy development, and the school raises money through "Distance Adoptions" to support boys in Kamerun with school supplies.
EcoFriendly Sask donated $14,500 in small grants in 2014 to support 17 environmental projects across Saskatchewan, including funding for a nature festival, environmental film festival, community gardens, renewable energy education, wildlife rehabilitation, native plant conservation, and stream ecosystem research.
The document summarizes the mission activities of Presbyterian Church of Wilmette Shores (PCWS) in 2013. It highlights that PCWS supported numerous local and global organizations through donations of food, supplies, money and volunteer efforts. Key statistics included donating over $100,000 total to mission, collecting over 5,000 items, and volunteering at 12 monthly community meal events. The document recognizes PCWS members for their generous contributions of time, talents and money that helped many in need.
Sharing & Caring of Crestview, FL coordinates efforts to meet emergency food needs of families in the area. Volunteers divide donated food into bags to provide families with enough food for 3 days. Food provided includes canned fruit, ravioli, and breads to ensure families receive daily servings of protein and fruit. In addition to food, toiletries and baby items are given if requested. Homeless families can receive food every two weeks depending on storage capabilities, while non-homeless families receive food once a month based on family size. Sharing & Caring expects to provide Thanksgiving meals to around 200 families this year.
I created this brochure to use at various events to publicize the programs and activities that Portage County Farm to School participates in and offers to the community.
The July newsletter from the Kendal Early Learning Center (KELC) provides information about upcoming events and activities for families. It announces walking trips planned for the month to local parks and nature areas. Families are reminded to notify staff of any vacation plans. The newsletter also advertises a sale of old t-shirts and bags, lists swimming and activity dates for July, and provides information on days the KELC will be closed for the month.
Harvest Pointe believes in obeying Jesus. We do this through different mission opportunities, serving our city. These are some of the different ministries Harvest Pointe is involved with. Check us out at harvestpointe.com for more information.
The document discusses the Motherly Care Children's Home (MCCH) in Christiana, DE, which provides shelter, food and education to about 300 orphaned children aged 2 months to 25 years. The home was founded 20 years ago by Mrs. Mary Metobo, who now struggles to manage it with little support. JNN Foundation visits the children and home, and is committed to getting sponsors for renovations and education projects to help accommodate the growing needs of the children as Mrs. Metobo is no longer able to run it alone.
Reimagining Saskatoon: Towards Sustainability 2015EcoFriendly Sask
“overcoming our carbon dependence should be seen as an opportunity to rethink for the better
an institution largely shaped by and for fossil fuel: our cities”
Here are a few of the initiatives undertaken by Saskatoon residents and organizations in 2015 to help make Saskatoon a more sustainable city.
The document provides announcements for ICPS on June 2nd, 2016. It wishes Happy Birthday to Trish in grade 4. The Green Team assisting at the recycling depot today includes Morgan, Brooke, Emily F, Alexandra and Renee. It reminds students that tomorrow is crazy hair day and the area behind the playground equipment is out of bounds. Popcorn and water bottles are for sale. Maya in grade 5 and Malcolm in grade 2 are recognized for good character traits. The daily message encourages reusing objects instead of creating garbage.
Sharing & Caring of Crestview, FL coordinates efforts to meet emergency food needs of families in the area. Volunteers divide donated food into bags to provide families with 3 days' worth of supplies. They stock canned fruit, ravioli, and other items to ensure families receive daily servings of protein and fruit. In addition to food, toiletries and baby items are also provided if requested. Homeless individuals can receive food every two weeks depending on storage capabilities, while families receive food once a month based on size. The organization aims to provide Thanksgiving meals to approximately 200 families this year.
The document summarizes various youth and community food, school supply, Christmas gift, and Easter basket donation drives that benefited the Kaye Prox Food Bank. Several schools and organizations held food drives that collected thousands of cans and hundreds of pounds of food. For other special projects, students and volunteers organized school supplies into backpacks, filled gift tables with toys and personal care items for the homeless, and put together Easter baskets for those in need. The efforts of many youth and community groups helped support the food bank through different donation initiatives.
Ginger Springs, located near Butte Falls, Oregon, is one of the purest natural water resources in the world. When the timber industry declined in Butte Falls, the community decided to bottle the high quality spring water. Bill and Delora Risser helped the community establish Cascade Mountain Spring Water bottling plant. Their son Wyatt later became president, fulfilling the family's dream. Today, Cascade Mountain Spring Water donates products and sponsorships to support local charities and events in Southern Oregon.
The document provides announcements for Wed. Feb. 10th at ICPS. It notes there are no birthdays, which Green Team is assisting at the recycling depot, and that Purple is still in first place for the clothing drive, which ends March 1st. It also announces basketball practice at first recess, books available in the library for $0.25, and a new "Bejeweled Broom" award for clean hallways. Friday is a day to wear red, pink or white. The eco message discusses a 10% drop in farms in Canada from 2006-2011. Paityn, Ben and Allen are recognized for good character traits. The reflective thought is about not needing to apologize for doing the right
This document summarizes a trip to El Salvador in 2014. It describes the geography and history of environmental disasters in El Salvador. It then details each day of the trip, including delivering clean water filters, solar lights, clothes and toys to remote communities negatively impacted by poverty, civil war, and lack of infrastructure. The goal was to help provide basic needs and support local schools and community development projects.
The document summarizes Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service events that took place across Orange County. Nearly 1,000 volunteers of all ages and backgrounds participated in various service projects to honor Dr. King's legacy, including restoring habitat, harvesting produce for food banks, painting and cleaning at community centers, sorting medical supplies and food, renovating homes, packing food boxes, preparing meals, and more. The day's events aimed to address critical community issues through transformational service.
Two years of volunteer- powered disaster response.ppt-2Uro Tahup
This PowerPoint presentation was shown during the 2nd Founding Anniversary Celebration of the Morong Volunteers’ Emergency Response Team on November 2007.
Although it does not cover the MVERT’s history and accomplishments from 2008 up to the present, it is an important resource material in understanding the early years of the Morong Volunteers when we jokingly described ourselves as “firefighters without a fire truck, medical responders without an ambulance and rescuers without a rescue van; volunteers who relied on our own resources to respond to emergencies, employing every available mode of transport from owner-type jeeps, pedicabs, bicycles and our own two feet”.
This document provides summaries of various iPad apps that can be used for educational purposes. Some of the apps highlighted include Puppet Pals and Sock Puppets for creating puppet movies, Photocard for creating postcards, Corkulous for virtual brainstorming boards, StoryKit and Book Creator for making storybooks, Smartnote as an electronic notebook, and Bamboo Paper for digital note taking. The apps allow students to be creative, organize their thoughts, explain concepts, and share their work.
For the fifth year running we’ve decided to skip the small presents and replace them with something that really counts. This Christmas, we are taking part in Oxfam Unwrapped where we make a series of donations on your behalf. Join us as we unwrap some pretty awesome gifts over the next 12 days!
The document summarizes a "From water for water" project run by Italian students Maria B. and Fausto M. The students collect plastic bottle tops and send them to a factory for recycling. The proceeds from recycling the tops will be used to build 8 wells in villages in Tanzania. Collecting the plastic tops helps save the environment while providing villages in Tanzania with access to water, as currently people there must walk long distances to collect water or dig in the ground to find water. A photo shows children in Tanzania carrying large amounts of water from a new well back to their village.
The document discusses several projects and initiatives at a school to promote health, community, and helping those in need. The school holds an annual "Healthy Sandwich" campaign to encourage healthy eating, as well as a family fair where students can perform or sell items. They also have "Safe Breaks" where students monitor the halls to keep other students safe. Younger students receive fruits and vegetables to support healthy development, and the school raises money through "Distance Adoptions" to support boys in Kamerun with school supplies.
EcoFriendly Sask donated $14,500 in small grants in 2014 to support 17 environmental projects across Saskatchewan, including funding for a nature festival, environmental film festival, community gardens, renewable energy education, wildlife rehabilitation, native plant conservation, and stream ecosystem research.
The document summarizes the mission activities of Presbyterian Church of Wilmette Shores (PCWS) in 2013. It highlights that PCWS supported numerous local and global organizations through donations of food, supplies, money and volunteer efforts. Key statistics included donating over $100,000 total to mission, collecting over 5,000 items, and volunteering at 12 monthly community meal events. The document recognizes PCWS members for their generous contributions of time, talents and money that helped many in need.
Sharing & Caring of Crestview, FL coordinates efforts to meet emergency food needs of families in the area. Volunteers divide donated food into bags to provide families with enough food for 3 days. Food provided includes canned fruit, ravioli, and breads to ensure families receive daily servings of protein and fruit. In addition to food, toiletries and baby items are given if requested. Homeless families can receive food every two weeks depending on storage capabilities, while non-homeless families receive food once a month based on family size. Sharing & Caring expects to provide Thanksgiving meals to around 200 families this year.
I created this brochure to use at various events to publicize the programs and activities that Portage County Farm to School participates in and offers to the community.
The July newsletter from the Kendal Early Learning Center (KELC) provides information about upcoming events and activities for families. It announces walking trips planned for the month to local parks and nature areas. Families are reminded to notify staff of any vacation plans. The newsletter also advertises a sale of old t-shirts and bags, lists swimming and activity dates for July, and provides information on days the KELC will be closed for the month.
Harvest Pointe believes in obeying Jesus. We do this through different mission opportunities, serving our city. These are some of the different ministries Harvest Pointe is involved with. Check us out at harvestpointe.com for more information.
The document discusses the Motherly Care Children's Home (MCCH) in Christiana, DE, which provides shelter, food and education to about 300 orphaned children aged 2 months to 25 years. The home was founded 20 years ago by Mrs. Mary Metobo, who now struggles to manage it with little support. JNN Foundation visits the children and home, and is committed to getting sponsors for renovations and education projects to help accommodate the growing needs of the children as Mrs. Metobo is no longer able to run it alone.
Reimagining Saskatoon: Towards Sustainability 2015EcoFriendly Sask
“overcoming our carbon dependence should be seen as an opportunity to rethink for the better
an institution largely shaped by and for fossil fuel: our cities”
Here are a few of the initiatives undertaken by Saskatoon residents and organizations in 2015 to help make Saskatoon a more sustainable city.
The document provides announcements for ICPS on June 2nd, 2016. It wishes Happy Birthday to Trish in grade 4. The Green Team assisting at the recycling depot today includes Morgan, Brooke, Emily F, Alexandra and Renee. It reminds students that tomorrow is crazy hair day and the area behind the playground equipment is out of bounds. Popcorn and water bottles are for sale. Maya in grade 5 and Malcolm in grade 2 are recognized for good character traits. The daily message encourages reusing objects instead of creating garbage.
Sharing & Caring of Crestview, FL coordinates efforts to meet emergency food needs of families in the area. Volunteers divide donated food into bags to provide families with 3 days' worth of supplies. They stock canned fruit, ravioli, and other items to ensure families receive daily servings of protein and fruit. In addition to food, toiletries and baby items are also provided if requested. Homeless individuals can receive food every two weeks depending on storage capabilities, while families receive food once a month based on size. The organization aims to provide Thanksgiving meals to approximately 200 families this year.
The document summarizes various youth and community food, school supply, Christmas gift, and Easter basket donation drives that benefited the Kaye Prox Food Bank. Several schools and organizations held food drives that collected thousands of cans and hundreds of pounds of food. For other special projects, students and volunteers organized school supplies into backpacks, filled gift tables with toys and personal care items for the homeless, and put together Easter baskets for those in need. The efforts of many youth and community groups helped support the food bank through different donation initiatives.
Ginger Springs, located near Butte Falls, Oregon, is one of the purest natural water resources in the world. When the timber industry declined in Butte Falls, the community decided to bottle the high quality spring water. Bill and Delora Risser helped the community establish Cascade Mountain Spring Water bottling plant. Their son Wyatt later became president, fulfilling the family's dream. Today, Cascade Mountain Spring Water donates products and sponsorships to support local charities and events in Southern Oregon.
The document provides announcements for Wed. Feb. 10th at ICPS. It notes there are no birthdays, which Green Team is assisting at the recycling depot, and that Purple is still in first place for the clothing drive, which ends March 1st. It also announces basketball practice at first recess, books available in the library for $0.25, and a new "Bejeweled Broom" award for clean hallways. Friday is a day to wear red, pink or white. The eco message discusses a 10% drop in farms in Canada from 2006-2011. Paityn, Ben and Allen are recognized for good character traits. The reflective thought is about not needing to apologize for doing the right
This document summarizes a trip to El Salvador in 2014. It describes the geography and history of environmental disasters in El Salvador. It then details each day of the trip, including delivering clean water filters, solar lights, clothes and toys to remote communities negatively impacted by poverty, civil war, and lack of infrastructure. The goal was to help provide basic needs and support local schools and community development projects.
The document summarizes Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service events that took place across Orange County. Nearly 1,000 volunteers of all ages and backgrounds participated in various service projects to honor Dr. King's legacy, including restoring habitat, harvesting produce for food banks, painting and cleaning at community centers, sorting medical supplies and food, renovating homes, packing food boxes, preparing meals, and more. The day's events aimed to address critical community issues through transformational service.
Two years of volunteer- powered disaster response.ppt-2Uro Tahup
This PowerPoint presentation was shown during the 2nd Founding Anniversary Celebration of the Morong Volunteers’ Emergency Response Team on November 2007.
Although it does not cover the MVERT’s history and accomplishments from 2008 up to the present, it is an important resource material in understanding the early years of the Morong Volunteers when we jokingly described ourselves as “firefighters without a fire truck, medical responders without an ambulance and rescuers without a rescue van; volunteers who relied on our own resources to respond to emergencies, employing every available mode of transport from owner-type jeeps, pedicabs, bicycles and our own two feet”.
This document provides summaries of various iPad apps that can be used for educational purposes. Some of the apps highlighted include Puppet Pals and Sock Puppets for creating puppet movies, Photocard for creating postcards, Corkulous for virtual brainstorming boards, StoryKit and Book Creator for making storybooks, Smartnote as an electronic notebook, and Bamboo Paper for digital note taking. The apps allow students to be creative, organize their thoughts, explain concepts, and share their work.
This document provides a list of apps categorized into different functions that can be used from an iPad including apps for creation, functionality, writing books, augmented reality, screen recording, making comics/cartoons, video, drawing, animation, reference, recording, mind mapping, stories, photography, voice recording, teachers, and browser alternatives. The apps listed under each category provide options for specific uses or tasks related to that category function.
This is the presentation delivered by Ruel Lopez, head of the St. Jerome Parish's Social Service and Human Development Ministry and MVERT Treasurer, during the Morong Summit on Disasters and Climate Change held last Oct. 10, 2010 at the Tomas Claudio Memorial Elementary School. It outlines the BECs' DRR programs in response to flooding, fires and dengue.
This document provides instructions for creating a course using iTunes U course creator. It explains that the outline is equivalent to topic areas and subheadings. Materials and resources can be added to posts or directly in the materials section. Posts, which can have unlimited numbers, are where learning resources like links, images, video, and audio are attached to topics. Discussion questions can also be added. Courses can be shared privately via link without publishing or collaboratively by adding up to 5 contributors.
El documento presenta un ejemplo básico de una página web creada en HTML. La página incluye un encabezado, un párrafo con la presentación del autor y un enlace a otro tema. Adicionalmente, se incluyen dos ejemplos más sobre el uso de JSP y PHP.
The document summarizes several community service projects undertaken by a 7th grade class. It describes projects with Stop Hunger Now where students packaged over 10,000 meals for those in need. It also discusses a project with Heifer International where students raised money to donate animals to provide long-term food sources. Additionally, it outlines a gleaning project where students picked extra crops from fields to donate to a local food bank.
This document outlines the services provided by an organization in response to disasters around the world. It lists the countries and locations where the organization operates, including USA, Dominica, Mexico, India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Haiti, Philippines, Ukraine, Cambodia, Indonesia, and Venezuela. It then describes the organization's disaster relief, recovery, and preparedness services, which include food and nutrition, disease control, shelter, health care, clean water, school supplies, support for vulnerable groups, livelihood recovery, and non-food item distribution. Statistics are provided for the organization's work in 2016, including the number of meals served, people prepared for disasters, individuals who received psychosocial care, blankets provided, and more.
AGROFRUIT VISION
To develop an agro industrial company , world wide leader in production, quality, profit, efficiency, and social responsibility.
AGROFRUIT MISION
To become a world-class family agribusiness in the region, and contribute to the sustainable development of the country and the region.
EcoFriendly Sask awarded over $20,000 in grants in 2015 to support 28 environmental projects across Saskatchewan. The grants funded a variety of initiatives including the NatureCity Festival in Saskatoon, updating guides to nature sites, signage for a wildlife sanctuary, advocacy for the Northeast Swale, an environmental film festival, repair of damaged ski trails, nature camps for children, raising awareness of native prairies, community gardens, research into solar energy, expanding a car share program, a winter cycling event, reusable dishes for schools, toy libraries, and more. EcoFriendly Sask encourages applications for its small grants to support additional local environmental projects.
This document summarizes the work of an organization called Thrive that provides meals to underprivileged children in Bangladesh. It started in 2012 by providing 240 meals per week from one school and has now grown to providing over 1,600 meals per week to children across five schools. The meals typically include a banana, hard boiled egg, peanuts and seasonal fruit or vegetable. The organization relies entirely on volunteers and donations to fund its work of feeding, educating and caring for children in need.
Food4Happiness - Christmas event for vulnerable kids ManilaChiara Gianola
In 2017 food4happiness decided to organise a feast for the children living in one of the biggest slums in Manila, with a Christmas party at Addition Hill Integrated School. This is the report.
PowerPoint highlighting Hilsman Middle School's Science & Energy Team's unique support of UNICEF through Trick or Treating and a Trash Hunger Campaign.
Authors: J. Hartman, C. Pamarang, S. Salley
Description: This project is about cleaning up the aina. They present a flexible and all-inclusive project to simply cleaning within your community. Each member contributed to their community whether cleaning their local park, cleaning along highways, and even planting native kalo with keiki.
Children in Bangladesh urgently need help after Cyclone Sidr, the worst cyclone to hit the country in a decade. Save the Children launched an emergency appeal to help families rebuild after their homes and crops were destroyed. Over 3,000 people were killed and hundreds of thousands left homeless. Save the Children has been operating in Bangladesh for over 35 years and started providing aid immediately after the cyclone hit. Their immediate response included distributing emergency kits, medical supplies, blankets, food and water purification tablets.
The community of Oldonyowas in Tanzania faces challenges including lack of educational resources and infrastructure, limited access to clean water and quality healthcare, and few economic opportunities. The community relies on animal husbandry and faces problems with unreliable crops due to semi-arid climate. Free The Children will partner with Oldonyowas to implement programs in education, clean water and sanitation, health, agriculture, alternative income generation, and community development to empower residents and help them lift themselves out of poverty.
- The document is a gift catalog from Neighbors, an organization that provides gifts addressing poverty, hunger and disease.
- The catalog contains 35 unique gift items that symbolically represent aspects of Neighbors' work, such as providing clean water, planting trees, supporting women's rights training, and helping farmers adopt sustainable practices.
- Donations to the gift items support Neighbors' integrated work in locations around the world.
Sobha Quartz - Rise High Awards 2019 - Initiatives Outside The GateKarnikaRoy2
Sobha Quartz, a residential community in Bangalore, summarizes its initiatives outside the community gates in three areas: waste management and environmental protection, community development, and charitable causes. It has led plastic ban and waste segregation campaigns, helped restore a local lake, collaborates with an orphanage by tutoring and financially supporting children, and brings cheer to differently-abled children and destitute seniors through donations and performances. The community recognizes that it has a long-term symbiotic relationship with the larger area and aims to contribute in sustainable ways.
This document provides a summary of the impact of donations to World Help in 2018. It discusses how donations rescued children from poverty through sponsorship, provided emergency aid to those facing hardships, spread the gospel through church planting, supplied Bibles to persecuted Christians, and supported numerous other humanitarian initiatives around the world. The letter expresses gratitude to donors for their generosity and commitment, which has significantly helped many individuals and families in need.
The JNN Foundation constructed a fresh water well for St. Joseph's Academy in Keroka village, Kenya which serves over 600 students, most of whom are orphans. This has improved the quality of life for students and the surrounding community. The foundation seeks funding to continue similar projects to help areas affected by poverty and disease. It thanks two families that donated to drill the well, allowing students to focus on their studies instead of walking long distances to fetch water. The foundation's vision is to provide clean water, sanitation and reduce disease in impoverished Kenyan communities by drilling wells village by village.
This is an empirical study about the Kalagan Tribe in Barangay Gumalang, Baguio District, Davao City. This was conducted by the Social Studies 10 students of Mr. Kid Mar V. Narido.
B the Hope for Haiti provides humanitarian aid to Haitian children through satellite schools, meals, medical clinics, and construction projects. They bring donated supplies from Canada on missions to feed, teach, and care for underprivileged children, as well as build facilities like bathrooms and a storefront. The photos show volunteers treating illnesses, distributing food and water, and teaching programs to help break the cycle of poverty in Haiti.
Reiser Relief Haiti April Newsletter
Reiser Relief is a volunteer run non-profit organization and one of its projects is dedicated to serving the poorest of the poor in Haiti
This document discusses water issues around the world and promotes UNICEF's Walk for Water event. It notes that over 900 million people lack access to clean drinking water and 2.6 billion lack sanitation. The story of Solange Tuyishime is shared, who as a refugee child had to walk long distances to collect water. Now as a UNICEF ambassador, she raises awareness about children's water issues. The document promotes the school's upcoming Walk for Water event on April 26th to raise funds so that children don't have to walk long distances to collect water.
This document provides information about the organization World Help and its work through partnerships. It discusses World Help's mission to provide aid to people in need around the world in over 20 countries. Some key areas of focus discussed include child sponsorship programs, clean water initiatives, malnutrition treatment, Bible distribution, women's health, orphan care, and disaster relief. The organization expresses gratitude to its partners and donors for enabling its humanitarian work and impacting lives for eternity.
The McCall family volunteered at Kids Against Hunger, helping to prepare for their monthly food packaging event where volunteers combine rice, soy, vegetables, and vitamins into packs that are shipped worldwide to malnourished children. The organization also sells merchandise to raise funds and the family plans to continue volunteering monthly as well as help organize larger packaging events involving 75-100 people working together. Kids Against Hunger's food packs each provide meals for six people, helping address the global problem of over one billion undernourished worldwide.
Similar to YESPINOY FOUNDATION DISASTER RISK REDUCTION PROGRAM (20)
11June 2024. An online pre-engagement session was organized on Tuesday June 11 to introduce the Science Policy Lab approach and the main components of the conceptual framework.
About 40 experts from around the globe gathered online for a pre-engagement session, paving the way for the first SASi-SPi Science Policy Lab event scheduled for June 18-19, 2024 in Malmö. The session presented the objectives for the upcoming Science Policy Lab (S-PoL), which featured a role-playing game designed to simulate stakeholder interactions and policy interventions for food systems transitions. Participants called for the sharing of meeting materials and continued collaboration, reflecting a strong commitment to advancing towards sustainable agrifood systems.
1.) Introduction
Our Movement is not new; it is the same as it was for Freedom, Justice, and Equality since we were labeled as slaves. However, this movement at its core must entail economics.
2.) Historical Context
This is the same movement because none of the previous movements, such as boycotts, were ever completed. For some, maybe, but for the most part, it’s just a place to keep your stable until you’re ready to assimilate them into your system. The rest of the crabs are left in the world’s worst parts, begging for scraps.
3.) Economic Empowerment
Our Movement aims to show that it is indeed possible for the less fortunate to establish their economic system. Everyone else – Caucasian, Asian, Mexican, Israeli, Jews, etc. – has their systems, and they all set up and usurp money from the less fortunate. So, the less fortunate buy from every one of them, yet none of them buy from the less fortunate. Moreover, the less fortunate really don’t have anything to sell.
4.) Collaboration with Organizations
Our Movement will demonstrate how organizations such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, National Urban League, Black Lives Matter, and others can assist in creating a much more indestructible Black Wall Street.
5.) Vision for the Future
Our Movement will not settle for less than those who came before us and stopped before the rights were equal. The economy, jobs, healthcare, education, housing, incarceration – everything is unfair, and what isn’t is rigged for the less fortunate to fail, as evidenced in society.
6.) Call to Action
Our movement has started and implemented everything needed for the advancement of the economic system. There are positions for only those who understand the importance of this movement, as failure to address it will continue the degradation of the people deemed less fortunate.
No, this isn’t Noah’s Ark, nor am I a Prophet. I’m just a man who wrote a couple of books, created a magnificent website: http://www.thearkproject.llc, and who truly hopes to try and initiate a truly sustainable economic system for deprived people. We may not all have the same beliefs, but if our methods are tried, tested, and proven, we can come together and help others. My website: http://www.thearkproject.llc is very informative and considerably controversial. Please check it out, and if you are afraid, leave immediately; it’s no place for cowards. The last Prophet said: “Whoever among you sees an evil action, then let him change it with his hand [by taking action]; if he cannot, then with his tongue [by speaking out]; and if he cannot, then, with his heart – and that is the weakest of faith.” [Sahih Muslim] If we all, or even some of us, did this, there would be significant change. We are able to witness it on small and grand scales, for example, from climate control to business partnerships. I encourage, invite, and challenge you all to support me by visiting my website.
Gamify it until you make it Improving Agile Development and Operations with ...Ben Linders
So many challenges, so little time. While we’re busy developing software and keeping it operational, we also need to sharpen the saw, but how? Gamification can be a way to look at how you’re doing and find out where to improve. It’s a great way to have everyone involved and get the best out of people.
In this presentation, Ben Linders will show how playing games with the DevOps coaching cards can help to explore your current development and deployment (DevOps) practices and decide as a team what to improve or experiment with.
The games that we play are based on an engagement model. Instead of imposing change, the games enable people to pull in ideas for change and apply those in a way that best suits their collective needs.
By playing games, you can learn from each other. Teams can use games, exercises, and coaching cards to discuss values, principles, and practices, and share their experiences and learnings.
Different game formats can be used to share experiences on DevOps principles and practices and explore how they can be applied effectively. This presentation provides an overview of playing formats and will inspire you to come up with your own formats.
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4. Casili Elementary School is located in the Sierra Madre
between the boundary of Rodriguez and San Mateo, Rizal.
5. School children and teachers of Casili Elementary School
literally risk their lives just to physically go to school everyday.
6. They have to walk mountain trails and cross a river
using an improvised “salbabida” or bamboo “balsa”
to attend their classes.
7. Donating fiberglass boat with
Yamaha outboard motor & life
jackets to ensure safety of
students & teachers in crossing
the river; distribution of solar
lamps & bulbs, school supplies
& teachers kits; teaching life-
saving & survival skills
8.
9. Donation of school supplies, books & learners kits to
children & youth victims of disasters
16. Oplan Bethlehem
is YesPinoy Foundation’s own modest way of
bringing help and hope to Yolanda victims,
particularly people living in Estancia, Iloilo whose
lives, natural environment and livelihoods have
been gravely affected by an Oil Spill which
happened at the height of the Super Typhoon.
17. Oplan Bethlehem
has been an initiative of YesPinoy Foundation
led the its Founding Chairman Jose Sixto
“Dingdong” G. Dantes III, in partnership with
the Philippine Navy, FBI, GMA-7 Kapuso
Foundation, Dong’s friends from the
entertainment industry and the private sector,
local governments and agencies of Estancia
and Iloilo as well as thousands of ordinary
Filipinos and volunteers who lent a helping
hand to Yolanda victims through cash and in
kind donations over the past weeks.
18. Oplan Bethlehem raised a thousands of cash
donations and received tons of
relief goods consisting of food
packs and bottled water, hygiene
and house hold kits, ecobags and
medicines from donors.
19. Oplan Bethlehem Beneficiaries
Six big boxes of biscuits and 100
boxes of bottled mineral water
Distribution of 500 family packs
to Yolanda victims at Villamor
Airbase last November 22, 2013
20. Oplan Bethlehem Beneficiaries
Each sack contains 10 kgs of rice,
noodles, biscuits, coffee, milk,
toothpaste, toothbrush, soap,
shampoo, medicines, alcohol,
pail & blanket
Distribution of 1,027 sacks of
relief packs to hundreds of
families from 3 barangays at
Estancia, Iloilo last November 28,
2013
21. Oplan Bethlehem Beneficiaries
Distribution of 1,507 white
ecobags & 1,476 green ecobags
at Estancia, Iloilo last December
16, 2013
Green ecobag:
bottled water,
crackers, noodles,
clothes pitcher,
tumbler, bathroom
set, dining set &
sandwich container
White ecobag:
blanket, diaper,
towel, placemat &
coaster set
22. Oplan Bethlehem Beneficiaries
Distribution of 1,000 white
ecobags & boxes of mineral
water to families living at Tent
City, Estancia, Iloilo last
December 16, 2013
Distribution of 1,983 family
packs to families living in 4 cities
of Antique last December 16,
2013
23.
24.
25.
26. Over 27 communities
and schools in Metro
Manila, CALABARZON,
Central Luzon, Davao
and La Union
Trained more than
7,500 students, youths,
teachers, community
and barangay leaders
Almost 25,000
participants in
emergency drills in
communities and
schools
Partnered and
mobilized over 130
LGUs, government
agencies, CSOs, peoples
organizations
Editor's Notes
We are living in the age of the New Normal when extreme weather have become the norm as a consequence of climate change.”
The same is true here in the Philippines - one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world where occurrences of great earthquakes, powerful volcanic eruptions, super typhoons and other natural and manmade hazards pose serious threat to lives, properties and livelihoods. Ondoy, Sendong, Pablo, Bohol Quake and Yolanda devastated homes and schools, took many young lives and created thousands of internally displaced children and youths.
An estimated 100 million young people, including children, are affected every year by disasters. In fact, children and youths represent more than a third of disaster victims worldwide. They are one of the most traumatized by disasters, because they have difficulties in coping with the unexpected and painful interruption into their own lives than adults.
When Super Typhoon Yolanda hit the central Philippines in November 2013, around four million people were displaced, most of them hailing from the Eastern Visayas, which was the most devastated region. Thirty (30) percent, or 1.2 million, of those affected were the youth (mostly aged 15 to 24), making them one of the vulnerable sectors in terms of disaster risk.
Worse, reports about rising numbers of child laborers and out-of-school youths (OSYs) in Yolanda affected areas highlight the urgency of giving special attention to child and youth protection in the Yolanda recovery and rehabilitation program.
We cannot stop natural hazards turbo-charged by climate change from happening; but we can prevent them from developing into disasters.”
The key is disaster risk reduction; everyone, particularly the Filipino youth, must always prepare for the worst and plan for the above normal”.
Children and youths are not just a vulnerable group, but can play vital roles in their communities before, during and after disasters.
Therefore, raising awareness of children and the youth about what disasters are, what natural hazards exist in their specific communities, and what tools are available for them to prepare and mitigate the potential impacts of disasters will build their confidence and ability in dealing with life threatening situations. When they learn and practice DRR from a young age, behavior change becomes embedded in their lives at such an early stage that it will be passed on to succeeding generations when they become adults.
As partners and champions, Filipino youths should step up for disaster risk reduction.
The Casili Project is the best example of YPF’s prevention and mitigation program.
The plight of the “tawid-ilog” school kids from CES first caught public attention last year when Darwin Flores of Smart Foundation and Marikina Watershed Initiative posted pictures of school kids and their teachers crossing the Montalban River aboard salbabidas on his Facebook page. Public awareness about CES further heightened when GMA 7 News featured the kids and teachers in series of newscasts.
Most of the 120 CES school kids and their teachers crossed rivers especially during the rainy season when rivers become raging, deep waterways if only to attend their classes in a public school that is without electricity and regular supply of water, and plagued with various education resource gaps.
In response, YPF carried out a fundraising campaign called Walk Forward Together from March 1 to July 15, 2013 to raise funds for the Casili Project for the benefit Casili Elementary School (CES).
YPF’s emergency response program has focused on the following:
education in emergencies: providing learners and teachers kits to students and teachers; conducting feeding sessions in schools; and repair of damaged school facilities (Oplan Restore Paaralan);
humanitarian assistance to victims of disasters, especially children and youth in the form of distribution of food, water, medicines, hygiene kits, and nonfood items (blankets, matresses, household kits, etc.).
YPF has carried out different humanitarian assistance campaigns: Ondoy Relief Operation; Help the Children of the Storm for victims of Habagat, Pepeng, Quiel, Sendong, Pablo and other disasters; and last year, Oplan Bethlehem for Super Typhoon Yolanda victims in Estancia, Northern Iloilo.
Disaster preparedness and resilience start with the young and the youth.
In response, YPF has carried out Para Paaralan para sa Kahandaan (3PK).
Para Paaralan para sa Kahandaan (3PK) is YPF’s innovative disaster risk reduction (DRR) education program where YPF trainers teach people in barangays, schools and workplaces DRR principles, disaster risk mapping, surviving a 72-hour disaster, basic responder training, contingency planning and disaster preparedness advocacy. It employs learning by doing, interactive workshops, games, problem-solving, actual demonstration, simulation exercises, drills, the internet and the arts in explaining to ordinary people the ABCs of DRR.
The primary objective of 3PK is to empower ordinary Filipino, especially children and the youth, to become partners and champions for DRR. After every 3PK, we expect trained community members and leaders to spearhead disaster preparedness campaigns, promote DRR best practices in their localities and even organize quick reaction teams that can assist regular responders in times of emergencies and calamities.
In partnership with the DILG under the late Sec. Jesse Robredo, YPF rolled out Para Paaralan para sa Kahandaan West Valley in 2012, targeting selected most vulnerable communities and schools located near or along the West Valley Fault: Brgy. Aguho, Pateros; Pangarap Village, Caloocan City; and Brgy. Pinagsama, Taguig City.
The output of 3PK West Valley are the following:
making of barangay and school hazards and risk maps;
formulation of earthquake preparedness, mitigation and contingency plans;
formulation of flood preparedness, mitigation and contingency plans’
dry run of combined community and school earthquake evacuation plan, and simulation exercises of rescue of earthquake victims.
New School Building and One Chair, One Child Project in Estancia, Iloilo
The rains cannot stop Dingdong from fulfilling his commitment to the school children, parents and teachers of Estancia Central Elementary School to build a new four-classroom two-storey school building with good WASH facilities
In a simple program at Estancia Central Elementary School located at Estancia, one of the northern Iloilo towns hard hit by Super Typhoon Yolanda almost nine months ago, Dingdong unveiled the billboard marker and inspected the ongoing construction of the new four-classroom two-storey school building which is expected to be finished by October this year.
As Founding Chairman of YesPinoy Foundation (YPF), he saw the extent of damage and destruction suffered by the school during YPF’s relief operations at Estancia last November and December 2013.
Dingdong reminded the students and teachers, “Last November, we wrote ‘Bangon Estancia’ on the wall of a damage classroom to signify our commitment to build back better”. “Today, Estancia is rising from the ruins of Yolanda through our common efforts powered by spirit of bayanihan”, he stressed.
YPF successfully raised funds from its donors to finance the school building project at Estancia Central Elementary School, while its partner, the Philippine Business for Social Progress, has been managing the construction of the new school building.
Dingdong also turned over the first batch of new 3,000 school chairs to school Principal Gerry J. Tingson under the One Chair, One Child Project, a joint initiative of YPF and Lifeline Foundation.
“We, the students and our parents, commit to plant a coconut tree or any fruit-bearing tree for every school chair donated to our school by YesPinoy Foundation”, said a student to Dingdong. “By doing so, we help in the recovery of our town by providing livelihood opportunities to our parents when the trees bear fruits in the future”, the student added.
YPF gave out 150 vegetable seed packs with fertilizer and 100 coconut seedlings from the Philippine Coconut Authority and Department of Agriculture to the school during the Estancia event.