top of page

In the beginning...


S.P.A.R.K. (Summers Producing Academically Ready Kids)
S.P.A.R.K. (Summers Producing Academically Ready Kids)

2015 was the year that I finally decided to pull the trigger on starting the foundation. A friend of mine who had a nonprofit informed me that he worked with the SMU Small Business Clinic to draft and file his paperwork. It was an easy process and it was free, so I decided to go that route. They only took certain cases, so I had to apply and be accepted into the program. Thankfully, I made the cut, however, I was told that to be approved as a nonprofit, a $400 application fee was required by the state. At the time my husband, David, and I had financial constraints and, $400 might as well have been $400,000. We just didn't have the money. But I forged ahead and prayed that the Lord would provide. The process went smoothly and we got everything done within a few months. Lo and behold, our financial situation was in a much different place by the time they asked me to write that check. In October of 2015, Noggin Educational Foundation became an official non-profit! That was only the first step, but the first miracle.


With that first step out of the way, I was terrified to make a move because I knew nothing about running a non-profit. I was an entrepreneur. I had started a video production business (10 years strong) and a tutoring business with my husband, but the non-profit world was completely unknown territory. My friend with the nonprofit called me one day and asked why I hadn't made any progress. A few months had passed and he knew nothing had been done. I told him I was afraid to move forward and he invited me to lunch at Chick-Fil-A. We went to Chick-fil-A because I had a two year old and he needed a place for her to play while we talked shop. Lawrence inspired me out of my analysis paralysis that day and encouraged me to think of one area we could make the most impact.


I had already done some research and found that the summertime was when a lot of learning loss occurs for most kids and is where the achievement gap widens for low-income students. I believed that doing a summer program would be the way for us to make the most impact. Lawrence told me my next step was to figure out how much I needed to run a summer program and to start asking for money. THAT terrified me! I've always been one of those people who claimed to be "terrible at sales". Usually people who feel they're "terrible at sales"are afraid to put people out. I was 100% that person, so this was going to be a true faith walk.


Around that same time I had another meeting with a friend who was a very successful nonprofit executive. She had raised millions of dollars. Shari told me that I needed to focus on the low hanging fruit. We'd not proven ourselves as a nonprofit and I had not proven myself as a nonprofit leader yet. The likelihood of a random company or random person giving us money was relatively low. Family and friends and other associates already knew and trusted David and me so we would likely be most successful with our sphere of influence.


So, David and I set out to call everybody we knew to ask them to support our efforts. We got on the phone with as many people as we could think of and told them about our vision and why this was on our hearts. We needed $10,000 for the summer program and I remember that it seemed like an insurmountable amount of money. Neither of us had raised that much money before. After two months of calling, to our surprise, we had raised $12,000! That was our second miracle.


In the summer of 2016, we started the S.P.A.R.K program, Summers Producing Academically Ready Kids. I reached out to several low-income apartment complexes to see if they would be interested in allowing us to serve their children. The program would be free for the complexes because we had raised the funds, so it seemed like a no-brainer. After presenting the opportunity to multiple complexes, finally two agreed.


David and I spent the end of the Spring creating and assembling math and reading activities, sitting up nights cutting and pasting in our bedroom. I remember one of the activities I created was several puzzles and each one took the length of a movie to cut. There was no Cricut then! By the beginning of the summer our little bedroom was overrun with bags of activities, but we were ready!


That summer we provided programming for 6 weeks, serving about 150 students. It was amazing to see the impact we had on them.


We ended 2016 with a motivated and excited four-person board of directors, a successful summer program, and a few fundraisers under our belts. There was still a lot to figure out, but we had a bonified non-profit with unlimited potential and joy in our hearts.


2015-2016 Timeline


October 15, 2015 - Noggin is established as a 501(c)(3)

April 2016 - First Board of Directors meeting

June - First S.P.A.R.K.

July - First #BoughtABackpack Challenge (200 backpacks collected)

September - First North Texas Giving Day - Raise $2,000 with 2 weeks notice!



2 Comments



As an honorary board member of Noggin Educational, I’ve had the privilege of witnessing its incredible journey from vision to impact. David and Doneda’s unwavering dedication to breaking educational barriers is truly inspiring. Their passion is changing lives, and I couldn't be prouder to have been part of this mission. The work being done here is a testament to what’s possible when purpose meets action!

Like
doneda
Feb 18
Replying to

Were so grateful to have your support for so many years, Benny!

Like
bottom of page