As the holiday season approaches we thought it was a good moment to update you on some grants we're making to support education, technology and the fight against modern day slavery.
STEM and girls’ education
Science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) open up great opportunities for young people so we've decided to fund 16 great programs in this area. These include Boston-based Citizen Schools and Generating Genius in the U.K., both of which work to help to expand the horizons of underprivileged youngsters. In total, our grants will provide enhanced STEM education for more than 3 million students.
In addition, we're supporting girls’ education in the developing world. By giving a girl an education, you not only improve her opportunities, but those of her whole family. The African Leadership Academy provides merit scholarships to promising young women across the continent, and the Afghan Institute of Learning offers literacy classes to women and girls in rural Afghanistan. Groups like these will use our funds to educate more than 10,000 girls in developing countries.
Empowerment through technology
We've all been wowed by the entrepreneurial spirit behind the 15 awards in this category, all of whom are using the web, open source programming and other technology platforms to connect communities and improve access to information. Vittana, for instance, helps lenders offer loans to students in the developing world who have have a 99 percent repayment rate—potentially doubling or tripling a recipient's earning power. Code for America enables the web industry to share its skills with the public sector by developing projects that improve transparency and encourage civic engagement on a mass scale. And Switchboard is working with local mobile providers to help African health care workers create networks and communicate for free.
Fighting slavery and human trafficking
Modern day slavery is a multi-billion dollar industry that ruins the lives of around 27 million people. So we're funding a number of groups that are working to tackle the problem. For instance, in India, International Justice Mission (IJM), along with The BBC World Service Trust, Action Aid and Aide et Action, are forming a new coalition. It will work on the ground with governments to stop slave labor by identifying the ring masters, documenting abuse, freeing individuals and providing them with therapy as well as job training. Our support will also help expand the reach of tools like the powerful Slavery Footprint calculator and Polaris Project’s National Trafficking Hotline.
To learn more about these organizations and how you can get involved, visit our Google Gives Back 2011 site and take a look at this video:
These grants, which total $40 million, are only part of our annual philanthropic efforts. Over the course of the year, Google provided more than $115 million in funding to various nonprofit organizations and academic institutions around the world; our in-kind support (programs like Google Grants and Google Apps for Education that offer free products and services to eligible organizations) came to more than $1 billion, and our annual company-wide GoogleServe event and related programs enabled individual Googlers to donate more than 40,000 hours of their own volunteer time.
As 2011 draws to a close, I’m inspired by this year’s grantees and look forward to seeing their world-changing work in 2012.
Rabu, 14 Desember 2011
Langganan:
Posting Komentar (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
-
▼
Desember
- Google blogging (and beyond) in 2011
- Remembering a remarkable Soviet computing pioneer
- Santa Claus is coming to town... find out where wi...
- On your mark, get set, GOMC!
- Test your creativity with our search caption chall...
- One more present under the tree—custom video messa...
- What were we watching this year? Let’s rewind 2011.
- Ending the year with another clean energy investment
- Make your own online scrapbook with 2011 green sea...
- Google+: A few big improvements before the New Year
- Ho-ho-hold the phone: Santa’s on the line
- Google Apps highlights – 12/16/2011
- Searching closer to home
- Dabble in Doodle history on our new site
- Zeitgeist 2011: How the world searched
- Google Cloud Print picks up steam
- Google+ Hangouts: going beyond the status update
- Giving back in 2011
- Experience the tsunami-affected areas of Japan thr...
- A Big Tent for free expression in The Hague
- Gmail and Contacts get better with Google+
- Congratulations to three Googlers elected ACM Fellows
- Atmosphere 2011: A view from the cloud
- Saluting Europe’s eTowns
- Show your love for charities on Google+ this holid...
- 10 Billion Android Market downloads and counting
- Inaugurating our new French headquarters
- Gravity Games highlight future scientists and engi...
- Say yes to CS during CSEdWeek
- Take a walk on the sell-side
- Get more into what you love on YouTube with our ne...
- Here comes Santa Claus
- America’s oldest flour company finds success on th...
-
▼
Desember
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar