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Do Good Campus Fund

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do good sculpture in front of Thurgood Marshall Hall

Empowering Terps to go Fearlessly Forward and Change the World for Good

The Do Good Campus Fund supports the substantial efforts happening across University of Maryland aimed at reimagining learning and serving humanity both inside and outside the classroom. 

The Provost and the Do Good Institute, in collaboration with the Do Good Campus Strategic Leadership Council, will award at least $320,000 this academic year to faculty, staff, and student groups. Awarded funds will be available on July 1, 2025 for projects beginning in Summer or Fall 2025, and must be used within one year.

Campus Fund grantees will use their award to scale their impact according to the Do Good Learning Principles: experiential (TLTC definition), inclusive, innovative, social impact-oriented and in service of humanity. The core values of the Do Good Campus Fund are: experiential learning; diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging; social impact; service to humanity; collaboration; and innovation.

Read on for more information about the Campus Fund. 

Questions? Email dogoodcampusfund@umd.edu 

Important Fund Details

  • Application opens: September 16, 2024
  • Application submission deadline: November 4, 2024 before 11:59 pm EST
  • Application screening and interviews: November 2024 - January 2025
  • Provost’s review and awardees notified: Spring 2025
  • Mandatory Orientation: May 2025
  • Awarded Funds Available: Beginning July 1, 2025
  • Student Groups: $5,000
  • Staff & Faculty: $5,000-$35,000
  • Academic programs
  • Co-curricular programs
  • Scaling a student group project or student venture for greater impact or long term sustainability 

For examples of potential grants, see the project descriptions of 27 awarded grants from the first year of the Do Good Campus Fund here.

These examples are not, by any means, exhaustive. We encourage applicants to creatively propose ideas for a Do Good Campus Fund grant. 

Interested in Applying? Fill Out This Form Sign up for a webinar Request a 30 minute meeting

Application Process, Screening Criteria and Selection Details

Applications for the Do Good Campus Fund are being accepted from Monday, September 16, through Monday, November 4, 2024. All applications must be submitted through the application portal which can be accessed here.  

To help you evaluate this opportunity, all required elements for a complete submission are described below. If you decide to apply, please go to the portal, create an account, create a profile, and answer the questions. 

Applicants are encouraged to meet with a member of the Do Good Institute team for coaching prior to submission. This meeting is to help you develop a competitive proposal. To request a coaching session, click here

In addition, the DGI team will be hosting a series of webinars to review the purpose of the fund and the application process. To sign up for a webinar, click here.

If you have a short question that does not require a full coaching session, please check out our FAQ section below. If your question is not answered there, please send an email to: dogoodcampusfund@umd.edu

  • Once applications close, a selection committee consisting of Do Good Institute and other UMD faculty, staff and students will screen all submissions using a standard scoring rubric. 
  • Applicants may be invited to an interview with a member of the Do Good Institute team to discuss their proposal.
  • The Do Good Institute’s selection committee will recommend finalists to the Provost’s Do Good Strategic Leadership Council.
  • Council members will recommend applications for funding to the Provost. Council members will not review finalists that come from their home unit.
  • Based on the Council’s recommendations, the Provost - with the assistance of the Do Good Institute Director - will determine which projects receive funding from the Do Good Campus Fund.

Do Good Campus Fund applications will be evaluated on the following criteria:

  • Goals / Feasibility 
    1. Does the project being proposed make sense for addressing the issue that has been identified? Is it realistic? Relevant?
    2. Do the proposal's goal(s) and activities translate to the proposed impact?
    3. Does the proposed individual or team exhibit the ability to accomplish the goal(s) they've put forth?
    4. Does the proposal have the potential to make a meaningful impact within one year with this amount of grant funding? 
  • Relevance to Do Good Learning Principles 
    1. How well does the proposal incorporate experiential learning? (see TLTC definition
    2. Does the proposal present an innovative or creative approach to addressing the issue that has been identified?
    3. Does the proposal incorporate an inclusive approach to diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging?
  • Implementation, Impact, and Sustainability
    1. Does their proposed budget make sense for what they want to accomplish? 
    2. Has the proposal identified milestones that connect logically to the goals for the grant?
    3. Does the applicant explain how they will measure the social impact made with these funds? 
    4. Does the proposed individual or team present a plan to be able to continue this effort past the conclusion of this grant? 

Awardees will be expected to attend an in-person orientation event toward the end of the Spring 2025 semester.

All projects must be initiated by the Summer or Fall of 2025 at the latest and are required to begin spending funds within six months of receiving the funds. Each grant has a full fiscal year for implementation with an expiration date of June 30, 2026.

Grant awardees will be required to submit an end-of-year report with:

  • Key results (aligned to the project proposal’s performance metrics)
  • Spending
  • Anecdotes and stories that can be used to showcase the project in future communications

Additionally, the Do Good Institute will check in with the grantee every quarter (4x per year) to review progress, identify ways to further support the effort, and help address any issues.

Application Instructions

  • Your summary should describe the issue you will address, your goals and expected impact, project activities, approach to experiential learning and inclusivity, and what makes your project innovative or creative. 
  • What are your project’s goals and expected impact?
  • What are your project’s activities? More specifically, what will you do to address the issue you described?
  • List the milestones that connect logically to your goals and expected impact.
  • How will you know if your project has been successful? Explain how one would evaluate the impact of your efforts. (Quantitative & qualitative metrics, collection methods)
  • What about the project’s approach to addressing the issue is innovative or creative?
  • How will the project incorporate an inclusive approach to diversity, equity and belonging?
  • How will you sustain the project after the conclusion of this Campus Fund grant?
  • How will your project incorporate experiential learning?
  • How many students do you estimate will be engaged in experiential learning through the project?

Applicants are encouraged to craft budgets that fit their goals. Applicants are welcome, but not expected to supplement requested amounts with their own budgetary resources. 

Your budget should include all resources (personnel and material) required to complete your project, using this budget template (link to spreadsheet). Make a copy of the file and follow the instructions on the first tab of the file. Applicants are required to work with the business manager or grant management staff for their unit (i.e., College School, Office, or Division) to effectively plan the budget for this project. Detailed instructions are in the Faculty/Staff Budget Guidelines and Eligibility tab, below.

We require having a single lead applicant identified but of course encourage applications from teams. Faculty and staff must initiate this process by collaborating with the business manager or grant management staff for their unit (i.e., College School, Office, or Division) to effectively plan the budget for this project. Student groups with university accounts must work with their faculty/staff advisor or school/college business manager. They will be able to offer valuable assistance in the planning phase and aid in anticipating needs as well as providing guidance of standard operating procedures in the unit of the lead applicant. 

All applicants are required to provide a detailed budget using the template linked above. Expenses must comply with your unit’s standard operating procedures. All projects must be initiated by the Summer or Fall of 2025 at the latest and are required to begin spending funds within six months of receiving the notice to proceed. Each grant has an expiration date of June 30, 2026. 

Below is additional information to clarify questions related to funding eligibility and to assist with the budget planning. 

  • Construct your budget to indicate the first and last month that will incur expenses.
  • Allowable expenditures include personnel support requests, which may include stipends for existing UMD community members, temporary positions, hourly graduate and undergraduate student support, and other direct expenses related to project-specific development needs.
    • Personnel
      • Proposals should provide details about the responsibilities assigned to each team member, including students if relevant, and demonstrate how their collaborative effort will further the work proposed. 
      • Stipends for faculty and staff can be budgeted up to $5,000 per semester per individual or the equivalent of $15,000 over the course of a year. Collaborators' stipends may vary based on their level of involvement. Individuals have the option to participate in multiple teams, but they can only receive a stipend from one Do Good Campus Fund grant. Additionally, the proposed budget must include prorated fringe benefits.
        • Exact details of disbursement are dependent on appointment type. Refer to your payroll experts for guidance. Generally, faculty and staff stipends are processed as nonteaching overloads via nonstandard pay or summer pay for faculty if the work proposed is above and beyond your current workload with the approval of your unit. 
      • Hourly pay for students (both graduate and undergraduate) must adhere to the unit’s or program’s stipulated rates per University policies. Pro-rated fringe benefits must be factored into the budget. 
    • Other Direct Costs
      • Professional development;
      • Travel expenses;
      • Food and event costs, except alcohol;
      • Miscellaneous. 
  • Grant work may commence immediately upon the creation of the account. Funding will be reimbursed towards the end of the Fiscal Year.
  • Staff and faculty awards of all amounts will have Workday Worktags created. It is a requirement to use the Workday Worktag associated with the Campus Fund Project.  
  • Student groups will be transferred funds directly to their existing account or checks will be issued.
  • The funds will be allocated through the lead applicant’s home unit and placed in a unique Workday worktag. The home unit will manage payments to team members, cover other expenditures and maintain records.
  • Upon the awarding of grants, we will work to establish a series of dedicated accounts in Workday. Each grant recipient will receive an exclusive worktag specifically for their grant. All financial transactions associated with the grant must take place within this designated account; salary and expense transfers should be limited to the extent possible. This approach is designed to facilitate accurate reporting for this key strategic initiative.
  • The Do Good Institute and Academic Affairs will work with the relevant business managers to ensure the appropriate account features are incorporated. CBOs will receive a spreadsheet containing the comprehensive list of awardees for their respective College/School, along with access to the proposals, budgets, and award letters on Google Drive.
  • Expenses will be reimbursed based on incurred expenditures. The reimbursement process will occur towards the end of the fiscal year. The business manager can expect to receive the funds in mid-May and again after the fiscal year ends. They will be responsible for ensuring that expenses align as closely as possible with the budget proposal. 
  • Any remaining funds, should there be any, will be forfeited back to the Do Good Institute upon the conclusion of the project or the end of FY2026. Requests for potential no-cost extensions beyond this deadline, limited to 6 months, may be evaluated in exceptional situations, but approval is not guaranteed.
  • The funds transferred will be in accordance with the budget outlined by the lead applicant, a process that will be verified during the selection process. Proposals may receive full or partial funding, and in the case of partial funding, a budget note will be included in the award letter to provide clarification.
  • Goods acquired through this Initiative will be retained as the property of UMD.
  • Furthermore, we kindly seek permission to reach out to the grantee for a period of up to two years following the project's completion for updates and communication.

We require a written statement of support from your Dean, VP, supervisor, or group sponsor.

This statement may take the form of a document on letterhead or an email with a clear timestamp and signature block. Please submit the statement as a PDF.

The statement must include the following:

  • The author’s credentials and their relationship to you.
  • Their support for your proposal.
  • Their belief in your ability to deliver on this proposal if you are awarded funding.

Frequently Asked Questions

The Do Good Learning Principles are: experiential, inclusive, innovative, social impact-oriented and in service of humanity. The Change the World exhibit provides leading examples of student groups advancing these principles. Additionally, the Do Good Campus Fund will help significantly advance the University of Maryland’s Fearlessly Forward strategic plan. 

  • Applications are welcome from University of Maryland, College Park, student groups, individual full-time faculty and staff, and teams of University of Maryland, College Park, faculty, staff, and/or student groups. Teams may be interdisciplinary, multi-unit, and/or multi-school/college.
  • Alumni and part-time faculty and staff of the University of Maryland, College Park, are not eligible to apply for the Fund.
  • Applicants not affiliated with the University of Maryland, College Park, are not eligible to apply for the Fund.
  • Past Campus Fund applicants who did not receive funding are encouraged to re-apply.
  • Past Campus Fund grantees are not eligible to re-apply for funds for the same or substantially similar already-funded project at this time.

Yes, applicants may collaborate with part-time faculty/staff and/or public, private, and/or nonprofit stakeholders outside of the University of Maryland, as long as the applicant(s) themself(ves) is/are student groups and/or full-time faculty/ staff from the University of Maryland, College Park.

Student groups do not need to be officially recognized by the Student Government Association in order to apply. However, successful student group applicants will need to be well-positioned to sustain a grant process that will span at least two academic years (the application period during the 2024-2025 academic year and the award/ impact period during the 2025-2026 academic year).

  • The lead applicant is the individual submitting the application form through the Wizehive online application portal. For team applications, this needn’t be the individual contributing all or even a majority of the effort for the project, but it must be someone directly involved in the project who is a full-time staff, faculty, or student at the University of Maryland, College Park campus.
  • For applications where a student is the lead applicant, that student must not be graduating before May 2026.

It can, but it doesn’t have to. While the origin of an eligible project must be a University of Maryland-based full-time faculty, staff, and/or student group, their scale of impact is unlimited. A successful project’s impact may be local, global, or anything in between.

No. Applications will be considered holistically in terms of their potential for fulfilling the Do Good Learning Principles. We offer applicants the option of noting additional sources of funding in their application if they wish, but do not require or encourage it. In any case, we ask that an applicant’s budget clearly indicate how they will spend the funding specifically requested under this grant.

While we cannot anticipate the guidelines for future years of the Do Good Campus Fund, we expect successful applicants may be able to re-apply in future years with an appreciably different request for funding or to scale up a project funded in this round.

The purpose of the Do Good Campus Fund is to support and enhance a variety of academic programs and co-curricular approaches to social impact across campus and to enable any full-time faculty and staff or student group to scale their social impact.

See this link to learn more about the Do Good Campus Council.

Applicants may serve as a lead or supporting applicant on as many projects as they wish. If their applications are competitive, the Selection Committee will likely reach out during the screening process to ensure they have the capacity to successfully execute multiple projects.

No. Student groups that don't have any faculty or staff sponsors can only apply for a maximum grant of $5,000. Student groups that have faculty or staff sponsors are eligible to apply for grants above $5,000

No, but there are limitations on the number of stipends you can receive. (See the “Faculty and Staff Eligibility and Budget Guidelines” section above.)

The impact of the grant can be of any scope, whether that is local, national, international, etc., as long as the lead applicant is affiliated with the University of Maryland.

Yes!

If the project is student-led, there are other programs that you can apply to, such as Mini-Grants, Accelerator Fellows, and Do Good Challenge programs. Faculty and Staff-led projects are not eligible to apply for other DGI programs.

Our team works with the grantees to help them plan their projects and amplify their impact during the grant year as much as possible.

The awarded funds will be disbursed to your account beginning on July 1, 2025.

  • Yes. As long as there is not a material change to the goals and activities of the project, the DGI team believes that project leads know what is best for their project and may re-adjust their finances accordingly. If a material change to the goals and activities of the project is envisioned after a grant is awarded, project leads are required to consult with the DGI team before proceeding.

The unspent funds will be returned to The Do Good Campus Fund account at the end of the grant year. Awarded funds can't be transferred for the following year.


Questions?

Please send an email to dogoodcampusfund@umd.edu and a member of our team will get in touch.