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Pepperdine Students Donate $84K to Local Charities

by Priya Shah – Business Editor

Pepperdine Students award $84,000 in Grants to Local‌ nonprofits

MALIBU, Calif. – A Pepperdine‍ University Nonprofit Management class culminated its semester-long project Tuesday ⁤with the awarding of $84,000 in grants ⁣to four local organizations, impacting a range of community⁤ services from‍ arts education to⁤ pediatric surgery. The grants,​ ranging from⁤ $5,000 to $25,000,⁣ were the result of extensive student research and⁢ deliberation.

The class, led by Professor Ruth Bernstein, began by evaluating 19 nonprofit organizations,⁤ narrowing ‌the⁣ field to 11 based on financial health and mission alignment. Students then formed small groups to conduct site⁢ visits, gaining firsthand insight into each organization’s operations before collectively deciding on funding priorities.

“There is so much impact that can be made and it was just⁣ amazing to see what it takes to try and spread our impact in as many ways as we possibly can,” said junior⁤ Molly ⁣Wallace. “It was really beautiful to see what we can do with this money and the ways we ‌connected with all these nonprofit organizations.”

Grant ⁢recipients included Shemesh​ Farms and Women‍ of Substance and Men of Honor ($5,000), White Hall Arts Academy and sarah’s House ($14,000), The Painted Turtle ($15,000), and Mending Kids ($25,000).

The $84,000⁤ total was ⁢comprised of multiple funding sources. $50,000 originated from the SEED⁤ Gift,a donation from a member of Pepperdine’s Board of⁢ Regents. An⁤ additional $18,000 ‍was earned through ⁤student giving pledges submitted to The Philanthropy⁢ Lab and a matching contribution from Gash, who attended the grant ⁣ceremony. The final $15,000 came from the ‌Nonprofit Leadership Collaborative within Pepperdine’s Business Division.

Bernstein emphasized the value‌ of the experiential learning opportunity for her students.”I just felt the joy and I think⁤ they’ll take this‌ with them and that the money will still have a major impact, even for ⁣the organizations that got a small amount ‌of⁤ money,” she said. “And knowing that⁢ the ⁣students chose well, with the ⁣thought and the process.”

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