Past Event! Note: this event has already taken place.

Winning with Words: How to make your next grant application stand out

April 27, 2017 at 1:00 PM to 2:00 PM

Location:Online - Register using the form below to receive the webinar link!
Cost:Free
Audience:Anyone
Key Contact:Nicole Bedford
Contact Email:cfice@carleton.ca

A cartoon tree covered in green apples with dollar sign centres.Grant writing is hard work. Since grants are often the primary funding source for many non-profit, charitable, and community organizations (not to mention academic research), the skills for writing a good grant application are paramount.

On Thursday, April 27, from 1pm – 2pm EST, join us for Winning with Words: How to make your next grant application stand out.

In this webinar, Stachen Frederick and Lee Rose will share their tips and pointers for making your next grant application stand out in the pile.

Level: Intermediate – Attendees will benefit most if they have some experience or knowledge of the grant-writing process.

Topics to be Covered:

  • Grant Writing from a Community-Based Perspective (Stachen Frederick)
    • General experiences writing grants for community organizations
    • Tips for framing and preparing the budget for your next funding application
  • Grant Writing from a Funder’s Perspective (Lee Rose)
    • What funders generally look for
    • What details make an application stand out (i.e. easier to fund)
  • Discussion (Katalin Koller)
    • How these tips might apply to grant-writing for Community-Campus Engagement grants
  • Questions

Length: 1 hour

Attendance is limited so be sure to reserve your spot today!

Presenters:

Portrait of Stachen Frederick, presenter for Winning with Words (webinar).Stachen Frederick has over 15 years of experience in the field of community and program development internationally and in Canada (Ottawa, Greater Toronto Region including Peel Region). She has done a number of consultancy jobs for organizations such as the Jane and Finch Family and Community Centre- The Spot, the AIDS Committee of Toronto and Gateway for New Canadians. Her unique blend of social work and the arts has led to the development of a number of notable projects including H.I.P to be Global (Health International Perspective to be Global through HIP HOP) and Race to Youth Leadership. She is the Founder of BrAIDS for AIDS. Her community development work has been recognized by Black History Ottawa, the High Commission of Trinidad and Tobago, YMCA Canada, How She Hustles with CBC Toronto. She is currently the Executive Director of Weston Frontlines Centre: a youth centre in a priority neighbourhood in Toronto.

Portrait of Lee Rose, a member of CFICE's Steering Committee.Lee Rose is a curious social innovator with an aptitude for working across systems to drive change. Currently, he leads Community Foundations of Canada’s work in the field of knowledge philanthropy – working across the organization, our network of 191 community foundations, and the broader philanthropic sector to mobilize and activate non-financial capital (i.e. data, research, knowledge, networks) in the pursuit of social change. He is also the lead for the Community Knowledge Exchange, a platform that seeks to catalyze and curate fundamental shifts in how individuals, institutions and communities build and share knowledge in the pursuit of social change. Lee’s connections to the philanthropic and community sector are both pan-Canadian and local. He currently sits on the board of Imagine Canada, and is also the past-president of the Ten Oaks Project, an organization that connects and engages children and youth from LGBTQ+ communities in activities rooted in play. When he’s not catching up on what’s new in the world of community knowledge and social innovation, Lee can usually be found spending time with this three kids, chasing after his runaway dog, or wishing he was tipping a canoe on Lake Temagami.

Portrait of Katalin Koller.Katalin Koller has over eight years’ experience as a project manager in First Nations education, a sector where securing external funding, managing intricate partnerships, and creatively composing project ideas is not only a matter of success, but also of survival. Keenly interested in social and environmental justice, Katalin embraces a holistic perspective shaped by her time working at the Province of New Brunswick and more recently, as a collaborator to Mi’kmaq and Wolastoqey Nations in not-for-profit community development. After coming to Ottawa in 2013 and spurred by her passion for decolonizing education, she joined the Community First: Impacts of Community Engagement (CFICE) project as the Research Associate for the phase 2 working group Aligning Institutions for Community Impact (AICI). AICI’s mandate is to support institutional culture change in post-secondary education toward enhanced community-campus partnerships in the co-production of knowledge. Katalin is a PhD candidate in geography with a specialization in political economy at Carleton University, studying the geographies of cross-cultural reconciliation enacted in spaces of solidarity.