Donate

CHANGE A CHILD'S LIFE THIS SUMMER

You have the power to completely change a child’s life this summer. Your gift will help more high achieving students become better prepared to get to and through college.

We invite you to cover a portion of the cost or sponsor the total cost for at least one high achieving student with financial need to attend NAPCA’s college readiness and career exploration program for elementary, middle, and high school students.

The cost for one child to attend our summer program is $300 per week from June 15 – August 14 for a total of $2700 over 9 weeks. You can donate $2700, $2000, $1,000, $500, $500, $300, $150, $75, or any amount you wish. Whatever you donate will go directly to our scholarship fund to help over 1500 children and teens with financial need attend our college and career exploration programs this summer.

DID YOU KNOW?

Only 13% of students from low-income backgrounds earn bachelor’s degrees by age 24, compared to 62% of their wealthy peers.

Source: “Indicators” (Pell Institute, 2019)

MAKE A DONATION: CHOOSE YOUR GIFT AMOUNT

NAPCA Foundation is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit corporation.
Donations to NAPCA are tax-deductible. Tax ID #81-3012564.

BECOME A CHANGEMAKER!

$75

$150

$300

$500

$1,000

$2,000

$2,700

$ Other Amount

  • Your thoughtful gift plays an important role in providing financial assistance to helping more high achieving students with financial need get to and through college. All gifts are tax-deductible.
  • Your support will help students explore and experience different career paths to help them learn about future academic and career possibilities and make connections with professionals from different career fields to get a taste of what a future career might be like. 
  • This will also help students have a better idea of what they want to study in college and start participating in internships or volunteering their time now to experience their future career path. 
  • Students may find that they actually don’t like a certain career, and it’s better to learn this now, than when they are already in college and have spent a lot of time and money on an academic major or career training program that they no longer want to pursue.