To grow their grantmaking budget, members of Teens for Tomorrow have taken matters into their own hands. Read how they raised $30,000 to bring their impact to new heights.
Read MoreSiri Pothula was at school when she got the good news. “I saw the email, and my first instinct was to just stare at it. I was like, ‘This is not real. I did not do that.’” Read how Siri and other Teens for Tomorrow members raised over $5,000 to expand their grantmaking budget.
Read MoreParticipants in the Quad Cities Community Foundation’s Teens for Tomorrow (T4T) program, a youth philanthropy group of high school students, today announced the recipients of the program’s annual grants.
Read MoreTeens for Tomorrow will be awarding a total of $10,000 to nonprofits dealing with one of three issues that are especially critical to address today: education equity, racial injustice, and social inequities.
Read MoreWini Aboyure believes philanthropy is all about contributing to the good of the community, with whatever resources you have. "My generation is a generation of empathy—and Teens for Tomorrow gives us an opportunity to practice that.” Read more
Read MoreMaitreyi Shrikhande, a junior at Davenport Central High School and a member of our Teens for Tomorrow Program, writes about philanthropy, no matter one’s age.
Read More“I learned so much about my community—things I never would have known if it hadn’t been for this program,” said Davenport Central High School Junior Maitreyi Shrikhande.
Read MoreA group of local teenagers have spent the past year identifying promising opportunities and pressing needs in the Quad Cities area as part of the Quad Cities Community Foundation’s Teens for Tomorrow program.
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