Idea for Helping Teachers Pay Student Loans

In my third installment for ideablob.com Week at the Entrepreneurial Mind I chose to offer advice to the idea titled Helping Teachers PayOff Student Loans. Here is their idea:

I am currently working on starting a non-for-profit to help third-year teachers pay off student loans. Do you know that most teacher’s loans are three times what they will make in one year as a first-year teacher? Do you know that teacher’s annual increases do not even cover cost-of-living expenses? Do you know that most new teachers have to work a part-time job at night or on the weekends (and during the summer when they should be able to refresh and plan for the next year’s class) just to make ends meet? That means many of them can’t make the full commitment to the kids which is the reason they opted to get certified to and take a lower paying job to begin with.

Here is my advice:

You need to find start-up money from a foundation that supports education. Do some searches to see which foundations give money in that space. Foundations always have detailed information of specifically what they will and won’t give to, and often include a list of previous grants that they have awarded. You can find all of this on their websites. I would suggest you use the $10,000 as seed money to develop a strong grant proposal that meets their criteria. Hire a grant writing specialist as a consultant to help attract the big money you will need for this program.
Also, think about setting up an endowment with the gifts you receive. Donors like a gift that keeps on giving. By setting up the donations in an endowment you only use the earnings from the gifts each year to pay out to teachers.
I would make a giving the awards to teachers a competitive process. Develop criteria, such as community service or their engagement with students beyond the classroom, as how you evaluate each teacher’s application.