Canadian Kindness Leaders Program

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Canadian Kindness Leaders Program

You’ve enrolled in the Canadian Kindness Leaders program year 2, and your students have a truly GREAT project idea. And then the age old problem of funding comes up – parents are a well you’ve gone to already several times. Where do you turn?

  • Many communities have a Community Foundation, a community arts council (if you’re in BC, check out the BC Arts Council member directory), or a United Way that may have funding your project would qualify for.
  • Larger stores, particularly regional brand grocery stores or Co-ops, often have community funds for which you can apply, as so local or regional credit unions.
  • Turn your project into a self-funding social enterprise by having a paid feature that provides funds for the charitable elements (e.g. The TOMS shoes model of buy one-donate one).
  • Create a crowd-funding site and ask your parent advisory group to help spread the word.

What ideas have you had success with? What have you tried that failed, and what did you learn from the failure? Please share your thoughts in the comments below.

Canadian Kindness Leaders Project Ideas

As Canadian Kindness Leaders continues and expands in the 2021-22 school year, we are lucky to have great ideas of past projects schools have implemented. There are 18 projects featured on the Canadian Kindness Leaders website here: Featured Projects.

  • What might your students do this year?
    If you’re a new CKL school, what projects does your community most need?
    If you’re a returning CKL school, will you build on last year’s project, or start something new?

Please ask questions and share your experiences in the comments below.

WITS Program Foundation receives Canadian Heritage funding for national Canadian Kindness Leaders Project!

WITS Program Foundation has received funding from Canadian Heritage for their Canadian Kindness Leaders project. Canadian Kindness Leaders will engage more than 10,000 youth aged from 9 to 12 in British Columbia, Manitoba, Alberta and Quebec, and in both official languages. From art projects to volunteering, youth involved in the project will use their creativity to encourage and promote lateral kindness, empathy, appreciation, diversity, and inclusion.

“We are very proud that Canadian Heritage is providing funding for us to reach Canadian youth across the country” said Andy Telfer, Executive Director of the WITS Programs Foundation. “Especially at this time of uncertainty, by participating in this project, youth will show that kindness is important in Canada and that they can make a positive difference.”

I found the WITS Program to be an exceptional tool to help children learn at an early age how to deal with peer victimization, and how important it is to treat each other with respect. Until bullying and peer victimization are a thing of the past, I strongly encourage other schools to implement the WITS program on an annual basis.

– The Honourable Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Canadian Heritage

The project engages youth in two stages. In the first stage, it uses the evidence-based WITS LEADerS training curriculum to empower youth to develop problem-solving skills to peacefully resolve peer conflicts. This program provides strategies to prevent peer victimization and bullying by engaging youth in leadership activities, demonstrating how youth can help themselves, their peers, and younger children to “use their WITS”.

In the second stage, youth will develop kindness-based community projects. Through an online sharing platform, youth will post their projects and connect with other youth across Canada. In addition, youth will vote on the most inspiring youth action project. Inspiring projects will be recognized near Pink Shirt Day, Canada’s national anti-bullying day.

The overall aim of the project is to empower youth to participate in civic life and lead through positive actions. The project will promote and support priorities including kindness, diversity, inclusion and connect with official language minority communities in Canada.

To learn more about the WITS Program Foundation and its Canadian Kindness Leaders Project, visit https://www.canadiankindnessleaders.ca/

Media contact, CKL Program Manager, Renée Cenerini, at pmgr@witsprogram.ca or call 250-386-7625 or Toll free at 1-855-858-8766