There are innumerable benefits to coordinating a campus book drive,
for student leaders and bookstores alike. The most obvious, of course,
is the tremendous amount of material and financial support that Better World Books is able to provide to our literacy partners as a result of their hard work.
For student organizations,
spearheading a drive is not only a meaningful service project, but also
a successful fundraiser, as well as a great way to generate some buzz
and raise your profile on campus, which can lead to a greater
recruitment turn out.
For bookstores,
supporting a drive drives foot traffic to your store, and does wonders
in terms of generating goodwill toward your store – particularly during
buy-back, when it’s needed most. Many stores are taking the positive PR
one step further, by providing bookstore scholarships or making
donations to local charities with funds provided by BWB.
But in many cases, there are far greater – yet harder to measure -
implications to coordinating a book drive. For example, many of the
900+ BWB book drives that took place last Spring were coordinated by Alternative Breaks
groups. Alternative Breaks is an amazing organization that provides
students with the opportunity to engage in week-long, intensive
service-learning projects over Winter and/or Spring Break, as opposed
to hitting the beach for a week of debauchery.
These groups often use the funding they’ve generated through their
campus book drive to subsidize the expense of sending large groups of
students to a distant locale for a week of service. Speaking from
experience (I participated in 3 Alternative Breaks as an undergrad), I
can tell you that some of the students who participate in these trips
will have the most profound, defining experiences of their lives. Some
of these students will be so deeply moved that they will alter their
course of study and their chosen career paths. Some of them will choose
a life of service as a direct result of having participated in an
Alternative Break. Indeed, most of the choices I’ve made in my own
professional life can be traced back to my first Alternative Break in
1997, when I traveled from Kalamazoo, Michigan to Atlanta, Georgia to
work with the city’s homeless population.
So please, dig deeper. Look beyond the most obvious and immediate benefits of coordinating (or simply supporting) a campus book drive. There is such
great potential in cultivating a civically engaged student body. One
act - be it donating a book, coordinating a drive, or supporting a
student organization that is - can set off a chain reaction that will
dramatically affect the lives of far more people than you’ll ever know.
Pay it forward.