Anonymous wrote:Anyone who thinks a high school student is actually running their own successful non profit: I would love to sell you a timeshare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every year countless nonprofits are founded by high schoolers, only never to be heard of after they graduate, am I missing the point here or are these just resume fillers?
This is an old ploy that stopped working about 3 years ago. AO’s are wary of these now.
Really? Then how are kids still getting into these top colleges when their best activity is starting one of these non-profits?
Anonymous wrote:If parents are really smart their kids start one together and then all get into Ivies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We get it - your kid would rather play video games then do community service...
I'm sure there are "empty" non-profits, but don't bash the kids who are putting in hard work to try to make a difference...
In the nonprofit world, a premium is placed on not duplicating infrastructure and administrative costs. It is always better to dedicate yourself to an existing non-profit than it is to create a new one from scratch. The options aren't service or video games. It's volunteer with an existing organization or drain their resources by competing with them to try to make yourself look extra special.
And play video games. All work and no play makes Johnny a dull boy.
This is a really important point. A kid who starts a nonprofit risks looking both uninformed and arrogant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We get it - your kid would rather play video games then do community service...
I'm sure there are "empty" non-profits, but don't bash the kids who are putting in hard work to try to make a difference...
In the nonprofit world, a premium is placed on not duplicating infrastructure and administrative costs. It is always better to dedicate yourself to an existing non-profit than it is to create a new one from scratch. The options aren't service or video games. It's volunteer with an existing organization or drain their resources by competing with them to try to make yourself look extra special.
And play video games. All work and no play makes Johnny a dull boy.
Anonymous wrote:I thought this fad had passed, but know a senior just admitted to Stanford with a lame non profit as one of the centerpieces of her resume.
Anonymous wrote:We get it - your kid would rather play video games then do community service...
I'm sure there are "empty" non-profits, but don't bash the kids who are putting in hard work to try to make a difference...
Anonymous wrote:We get it - your kid would rather play video games then do community service...
I'm sure there are "empty" non-profits, but don't bash the kids who are putting in hard work to try to make a difference...