Education — 19 April 2012
By
Capital News Service

Students at the University of Maryland got a chance to reduce their “Bacon number” on Wednesday as actor and philanthropist Kevin Bacon met with them to talk charity.

Bacon has become known away from the film set for his social networking website SixDegrees.org, that encourages charitable fundraising. At the university to judge the “Do Good” Challenge Awards, Bacon met beforehand with students at the School of Public Policy’s philanthropy and nonprofit leadership program.

“They’re not here to learn from me, I’m here to learn from them,” he said.

Bacon said he was “perhaps naive” when beginning his philanthropic work thinking he could turn Hollywood connections into support for his charity.

“When you’re famous, people want something from you all the time,” he said. By asking for help with SixDegrees, “I have become that guy.”

But what started as “a little bit of a joke” at Bacon’s expense — a game in which any Hollywood actor or celebrity could be linked to him by six degrees of separation or less; their “Bacon number” — Bacon has turned into a successful, multimillion-dollar charitable fund. Six Degrees was also integral to the “Do Good Challenge” organized by the school , where student teams set up charities and competed for donation funds and other prizes.

Actor and philanthropist Kevin Bacon speaking with University of Maryland students seeking a career in the non-profit sector (Capital News Service photo by Robert Baird)

Professor Robert T. Grimm, director of  the Philanthropy and Nonprofit Management program says he aims to teach students philanthropy is not just the art of giving away money, but forming business connections.

In his popular honors seminar, “The Art and Science of Philanthropy,” students act as the board of directors of a foundation that selects nonprofit groups to receive up to $10,000.

The money is donated by Potomac residents Karen Levenson, a Maryland alum, and her husband Bruce, co-founder of the business information company United Communications Group.

“With all the possibilities of things that you could choose to focus on, why philanthropy?” Bacon asked students before the end of class. One student answered that community help is important now because government services are shrinking. Junior Caitlin Virta, 20, says she is motivated to help through her education major.

“I had a really good education and I want to make sure others do too,” she said.

Jack McCullough, a junior, said the class opened his eyes to how achievable change can be.

“You can make an impact in so many ways” on a local level, he said, giving the extraordinary number of charities the class chose from as proof.

Established in January, 2010, Grimm says he wants the program to become one of the premier academic centers for the study of nonprofit management; the “envy” of other universities, and a model to follow.

“We want hundreds, if not thousands, of students to have this experience,” Grimm said. “We want to make philanthropy a pillar of the university experience.”

Short URL: http://cnsne.ws/J4OrSy

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About the Author

Robert Baird is an undergraduate journalism student at the University of Maryland. He has worked for a number of media outlets in his home country of Australia, as well as reporting for WMUC in College Park. Robert was news director at Australia's largest youth radio station, SYN, and a reporter for its current affairs show "Panorama." In 2007, he was editor of the regional newspaper The Harden Express. Baird will cover business and transportation for CNS.