Big Brothers Big Sisters
Services, Inc. will create successful mentoring relat ionships
for all children in the service region who need and desire them resulting in
individuals who will have brighter futures and make a positive impact in their
schools, workplaces, and communities.
Big Brothers Big Sisters Services, Inc.
exists to empower children to reach their
potential by continuously recruiting, developing, and training mentors to
provide professionally supported, one-to-one Big Brother and Big Sisters
relationships.
Organization Overview
[This information is found on our
BBBS National Agency website]
We have set out to serve one
million children by the year 2010. Today, Big Brothers Big Sisters serves over
200,000 children, ages 6 through 18, in 5,000 communities across all 50 states
Big Brothers Big Sisters
one-to-one mentoring makes a huge difference for the youth it serves.
Research consistently demonstrates that Big Brothers Big Sisters mentoring helps
at-risk youth overcome the many challenges they face. The most compelling
evidence was found by Public/Private
Ventures (P/PV),1 showing that Little
Brothers and Little Sisters are:
-
46% less likely to begin
using illegal drugs;
-
27% less likely to begin
using alcohol;
-
52% less likely to skip
school;
-
37% less likely to skip
class;
-
More confident in their
schoolwork performance;
-
Able to get along better
with their families.
Big Brothers Big Sisters was
selected by Forbes Magazine as one of its top ten charities, making the
publication’s “gold star” list of charities which it believes are worthy
of donor consideration, in its annual survey of 200 large charities. The
magazine surveyed 200 non-profits and rated them on how efficiently they collect
and distribute dollars. Forbes looked at three categories:
charitable commitment; fundraising efficiency, and donor dependency. Big
Brothers Big Sisters has an annual budget of ~$205M of which $15M represents the
national office budget.
We encourage you to learn more
about our foundation
supporters and our corporate
sponsors.
1Tierney, J.P., Grossman, J.B., and
Resch, N.L. (1995) Making
a Difference: An Impact Study of Big Brothers Big Sisters.
Philadelphia: Public/Private Ventures
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