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Giving Comes in All Forms!

There are many ways to approach giving here at BHMS. While many folks contribute through our website, there are other avenues to explore as you and your family think about your long-term vision for giving. Read on to find the vehicle that’s right for you.

 

Arrange a Stock Transfer

Making a philanthropic gift through stock is mutually beneficial! Stock transfers allow you to take a tax deduction of the gift while avoiding capital gains tax. To set up a transfer today, contact our Development Office for more details.

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Establish a Donor Advised Fund

Donor Advised Funds, or DAFs, allow for your family to develop a true philanthropic vision. A DAF serves as a fund to hold your charitable giving. Not only do you receive an immediate tax deduction when you contribute, but this fund has the opportunity to grow, providing you with the chance to make an even larger impact on communities you care about. Speak to your financial advisor to explore if this is the right tool for you.

 

Make it a Match

Many companies offer matching contributions for their employees. Contact your employer to see if this opportunity is available for your annual gift!

  • Peace Mission:
    "Constructive education for peace… is a task that calls for the efforts of all humanity. It must aim to reform humanity so as to permit the inner development of human personality and to develop a more conscious vision of the mission of humanity and the present conditions of social life. These aims must be achieved not only because man is almost totally unaware of his own nature, but also because for the most part he does not understand the workings of the social mechanisms on which his interests and his immediate salvation depend." -Maria Montessori, from Education and Peace "An education capable of saving humanity is no small undertaking." -Maria Montessori, from Education and Peace Montessori’s peace mission is the global outcome of her method, which extends far beyond our academic content benchmarks. This work is not passive, a mere hope for the absence of difficult conflict and war. This is bold work that seeks to reconstruct society into an interdependent world in which all humans, not just the self, community, or country, are the beneficiaries of our efforts for justice. Maria Montessori wrote that our peace work begins and ends with students understanding themselves. It is through discovering other people and their stories that children begin to understand themselves. It is through discovering the way society functions for themselves and others that children begin to develop empathy and make their own plans for constructing a better world. Maria Montessori wrote that this is monumental work. The universally equalizing outcomes of her peace mission make it an essential component of the diversity mission at Brooklyn Heights Montessori School.
  • Fundamental Needs:
    The Fundamental Needs concept comes from the Elementary Great Lessons. The lesson is called Fundamental Needs of Humans. From their first year in Lower Elementary, students are taught the common characteristics of human society from the Stone Age to the present. They are taught that all people need: nourishment, clothing, shelter, defense and transportation as well as spiritual needs: art, religion, and self-adornment. The Fundamental Needs of Humans work is intended to demonstrate that all human beings have and have always had the same fundamental needs. The students will recognize that they too have those needs. We explore how groups of people satisfy these needs in different ways. Differences in cultures can be understood as an expression of how people satisfy their fundamental needs with the resources available to them.
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