organizations
52 orgs in this cluster's subtree
Every organization with primary activities in Parent and Family Engagement Coordination or any of its descendants. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
showing 20 of 50
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | HORSESHOE TRAILS ELEMENTARY PTO HORSESHOE TRAILS ELEMENTARY PTO is a parent-teacher organization dedicated to supporting students, staff, and the school community at Horseshoe Trails Elementa… | AZ | $74K | 13 |
| 2 | SKY CROSSING ELEMENTARY PTO INC Parent Teacher Organization supporting Sky Crossing Elementary School in Arizona by funding educational enrichment programs and school improvements. The PTO or… | AZ | $200 | 10 |
| 3 | BRIDGES PARENT TEACHER ORGANIZATION Bridges Parent Teacher Organization (PTO) is a volunteer-led nonprofit that supports Bridges Elementary School in Gilbert, AZ. The organization enhances the sc… | AZ | $66K | 9 |
| 4 | THE GREGORY SCHOOL The Gregory School is an independent college-preparatory school in Tucson, Arizona, serving middle and upper school students. It provides a holistic education … | AZ | $8.7M | 8 |
| 5 | PATTERSON PTSO Patterson PTSO is a parent-teacher-student organization that supports Patterson Elementary School in Gilbert, Arizona. It enhances the school community by orga… | AZ | $54K | 6 |
| 6 | Pinon Community School Board Inc Pinon Community School is an educational institution in Pinon, AZ, providing academic and residential programs for students from Pre-K to 12th grade. The schoo… | AZ | $3.8M | 5 |
| 7 | SALPOINTE CATHOLIC EDUCATION FOUNDATION Salpointe Catholic High School is a college-preparatory high school in Tucson, Arizona, operating in the Carmelite tradition of prayer, community, and service.… | AZ | $204K | 5 |
| 8 | Agua Caliente Elementary School PTG Parent-Teacher Group (PTG) supporting Agua Caliente Elementary School by fostering collaboration among families, staff, and the community. The organization wor… | AZ | $73K | 4 |
| 9 | CATALINA FOOTHILLS SCHOOL DISTRICT The CFSD Foundation supports teachers in the Catalina Foothills School District by raising funds and organizing events. It recognizes exceptional educators thr… | AZ | $201K | 4 |
| 10 | DESERT MOUNTAIN PARENT-TEACHER ORGANIZATION Parent-Teacher Organization supporting Desert Mountain High School in Scottsdale, Arizona. The PTO raises funds and organizes volunteer efforts to enhance stud… | AZ | $104K | 4 |
| 11 | Downtown Community School Inc Tucson Community School is a parent-cooperative preschool serving children ages 2 to 5 in Tucson, Arizona. The school emphasizes learning through play, outdoor… | AZ | $21 | 4 |
| 12 | HARELSON PARENT TEACHER ORG Harelson Elementary School is a public elementary school in Tucson, Arizona, serving students from kindergarten through fifth grade. The school emphasizes acad… | AZ | $51K | 4 |
| 13 | HERITAGE HEROES PTSA Parent-Teacher-Student Association supporting Verrado Heritage Elementary School in Arizona. Works to strengthen school-family collaboration, enhance education… | AZ | $57K | 4 |
| 14 | INGLESIDE MIDDLE SCHOOL PARENT TEACHER ORGANIZATION INC The Ingleside Middle School Parent Teacher Organization (PTO) supports Ingleside Middle School in Phoenix, AZ, by funding school improvements, student groups, … | AZ | $13K | 4 |
| 15 | Leading Edge Academy Maricopa Charter school network operating tuition-free K-12 campuses across Arizona, including in East Mesa, Gilbert, Maricopa, and online. Focuses on academic excellen… | AZ | $8.1M | 4 |
| 16 | MADISON TRADITIONAL ACADEMY GUILD INC MADISON TRADITIONAL ACADEMY GUILD INC is a parent-teacher organization that supports students, staff, and the school community at Madison Traditional Academy i… | AZ | $57K | 4 |
| 17 | MENTORKIDS USA MentorKids USA is a nonprofit organization based in Arizona that provides mentoring and leadership development programs for K-12 students in high-risk neighbor… | AZ | $1.3M | 4 |
| 18 | PARADISE VALLEY HIGH SCHOOL PTO BOOSTER CLUB The Paradise Valley High School PTO Booster Club supports Paradise Valley High School in Phoenix, AZ, by organizing fundraising events and volunteer opportunit… | AZ | $95K | 4 |
| 19 | PTA ARIZONA CONGRESS HOPI PTA Parent-Teacher Association supporting Hopi Elementary School in Phoenix, Arizona. Organizes school events, volunteer opportunities, and fundraising initiatives… | AZ | $497K | 4 |
| 20 | Sonoran Sky Parent Teacher Org Inc Sonoran Sky Parent Teacher Org Inc supports Sonoran Sky Elementary School by funding programs and initiatives that enhance student learning and community engag… | AZ | $135K | 4 |
theories of action
strategies used in this cluster
Theories of action extracted from orgs in this subtree. Click any to see the full set of orgs running the same approach.
- Community-Led Systems Change 16 orgsBy centering community voice, lived experience, and local assets in governance, program design, and investment, organizations produce more equitable, sustainable, and effective outcomes, because solutions rooted in community ownership are better aligned with actual needs and more resilient to external shocks. This strategy unifies approaches that shift power and decision-making to the community level—whether through participatory grantmaking, member governance, co-created services, or culturally rooted programming. It goes beyond service delivery to transform systems by ensuring those most impacted by inequity shape the interventions meant to serve them. What distinguishes it is its foundational belief in community agency as the primary engine of change, rather than an input or beneficiary.Downtown Community School IncPARADISE VALLEY HIGH SCHOOL PTO BOOSTER CLUBPinon Community School Board IncTEMPE PREPARATORY ACADEMIES PARENT
- Family-School-Community Partnership 12 orgsBy integrating families, community members, and school staff as active partners in education, students achieve better academic, social, and emotional outcomes, because sustained, collaborative relationships create a cohesive support system that reinforces learning, belonging, and development across environments. This strategy centers on the belief that student success is not confined to the classroom but is co-created through strong, intentional partnerships among schools, families, and the broader community. Unlike isolated engagement tactics (e.g., one-off parent events), this approach institutionalizes collaboration—through governance, programming, and daily practice—ensuring that cultural values, individual needs, and community assets shape the educational experience. It distinguishes itself by emphasizing shared ownership, relational trust, and systemic inclusion of external stakeholders as core to educational efficacy.INGLESIDE MIDDLE SCHOOL PARENT TEACHER ORGANIZATION INCPARENTS AND TEACHERS AT SIMIS INCPTA ARIZONA CONGRESS OF PARENTS & TEACHERS INCPinon Community School Board Inc
- Holistic Youth Development 8 orgsBy addressing multiple dimensions of a young person’s life—academic, emotional, social, physical, and familial—organizations produce sustained personal and academic growth, because systemic inequities require comprehensive, long-term support that nurtures the whole individual within their ecosystem. This strategy centers on integrating education, mental and physical health, family engagement, leadership, and skill-building into a unified model of youth development. Unlike narrow interventions that target a single outcome (e.g., tutoring or meals alone), this approach assumes that lasting change emerges from coordinated, long-duration support across interconnected domains. It emphasizes relationship stability, identity formation, and empowerment as core drivers of resilience and upward mobility.CASA DE LOS NINOS FOUNDATIONCOCONINO COALITION FOR CHILDRENHARELSON PARENT TEACHER ORGLeading Edge Academy Maricopa
- Experiential Learning Model 4 orgsBy engaging students in hands-on, real-world experiences and active problem-solving, students achieve deeper learning and personal development, because direct experience fosters meaningful connections to knowledge, builds practical skills, and enhances motivation through relevance. This strategy centers on learning through doing, where students gain knowledge and skills by participating in authentic, often collaborative activities such as projects, field trips, service, or simulations. Unlike traditional instruction or one-off enrichment activities, this approach is systematically integrated into the curriculum and grounded in a belief that cognitive, social, and emotional growth are advanced most effectively when learners actively construct understanding through experience. It unifies diverse applications—from STEM projects to service-learning and inclusive classrooms—by prioritizing engagement, context, and reflection as core drivers of transformation.HARELSON PARENT TEACHER ORGNew School for the ArtsPTA Arizona Congress of Parents & Sam Hughes PTATHE GREGORY SCHOOL
- Personalized Learning Pathways 3 orgsBy tailoring instruction, pacing, and support to individual student needs and goals, students achieve deeper engagement and academic success, because learning is most effective when aligned with a student’s strengths, interests, and developmental trajectory. This strategy emphasizes customizing the learning experience through flexible curricula, technology integration, mastery-based progression, and responsive feedback. While some organizations focus on structural elements like college prep or whole-child development, this approach centers on adaptive pedagogy—seen in self-paced online learning, personalized writing feedback, and independent study models—that responds directly to the learner’s unique profile. It distinguishes itself from one-size-fits-all academic models by prioritizing learner agency, differentiated instruction, and ongoing assessment for growth.HARELSON PARENT TEACHER ORGLEGACY TRADITIONAL SCHOOL - MARICOPATHE GREGORY SCHOOL
- Community-Safe Celebrations 2 orgsBy mobilizing community volunteers and cross-sector partnerships to create supervised, substance-free graduation events, organizations ensure student safety and strengthen community ownership, because collective involvement increases oversight, social accountability, and shared responsibility during high-risk transitions. This strategy centers on transforming a potentially dangerous rite of passage—graduation night—into a safe, communal event through broad-based engagement of parents, schools, law enforcement, and local businesses. Unlike general volunteer programs or scholarship models, it specifically leverages community cohesion as a protective factor, turning event safety into a shared mission. The approach treats student well-being not as an individual responsibility but as a community outcome, sustained through long-term engagement and structured alternatives to risky behaviors.DESERT MOUNTAIN PARENT-TEACHER ORGANIZATIONTHUNDERBIRD PARENT ASSOCIATION
- Development Through Inclusive Athletics 2 orgsBy integrating athletics with personal development and lowering barriers to participation, organizations foster youth growth and community engagement, because structured, accessible sports create safe environments that build trust, teach life skills, and promote belonging. This strategy centers on using sports not just for athletic development but as a vehicle for holistic youth development—emphasizing character, inclusion, and social-emotional learning. It distinguishes itself from purely competitive or skill-focused models by prioritizing access, behavioral norms, and intentional programming that supports academic, emotional, and ethical growth alongside physical development. The shared belief across these organizations is that sports, when made inclusive and purposefully structured, become transformative platforms for individual and community change.COYOTE HILLS PTSOTHE GREGORY SCHOOL
- Faith-Integrated Formation 2 orgsBy embedding Christian faith and spiritual practices into personal, professional, and leadership development, we produce transformed individuals and communities, because spiritual formation rooted in divine relationship and biblical truth is the foundation for lasting change and Kingdom impact. This strategy unifies diverse approaches—leadership training, discipleship, scientific inquiry, youth development, and evangelism—through a shared belief that spiritual growth must be deeply integrated with all aspects of life and practice. Unlike strategies that separate spiritual and practical domains, this approach insists on their fusion, using mentorship, prayer, relational community, and theological alignment as levers for holistic transformation across personal, professional, and cultural spheres.Desert Christian Schools IncSALPOINTE CATHOLIC EDUCATION FOUNDATION
- Nutrition for Learning 2 orgsBy providing consistent access to nutritious food in educational settings, we improve academic performance and student well-being, because food security is a foundational prerequisite for cognitive function, attendance, and engagement in learning. This strategy centers on the belief that hunger and poor nutrition are direct barriers to education, and that integrating food support into schools and learning environments removes a critical obstacle to student success. It distinguishes itself from broader hunger relief by specifically linking nutrition interventions to educational outcomes, rather than treating food security as an isolated health or emergency need. Programs like backpacks, on-campus food closets, universal meals, and balanced meal programs all operate under this shared theory that feeding students enables learning.New World Educational CenterPATTERSON PTSO
- Tax Credit Leverage 2 orgsBy redirecting individual and corporate tax liabilities into private school tuition scholarships, we expand access to private education for underserved students, because donors are more likely to contribute when they receive dollar-for-dollar state tax credits that reduce their net cost to zero. This strategy leverages Arizona’s unique ecosystem of private and corporate tax credit programs to convert public tax obligations into private educational funding without relying on direct government appropriations. It distinguishes itself from traditional fundraising or needs-based aid models by aligning donor incentives (tax savings) with equitable access goals, enabling tuition organizations to scale scholarship funding through behaviorally motivated giving rather than philanthropy alone.DESERT MOUNTAIN PARENT-TEACHER ORGANIZATIONPTA Arizona Congress of Parents & Sam Hughes PTA
- Child-Centered, Relationship-Based Development 1 orgBy grounding interventions in responsive relationships and child-led, play-based experiences, children achieve holistic developmental outcomes, because secure relationships and intrinsically motivated engagement foster neural, emotional, and social growth in contexts that are meaningful and culturally attuned. This strategy unifies a diverse set of organizations around a shared theory of change: that sustainable developmental progress emerges not from standardized instruction or isolated services, but from nurturing, individualized relationships and experiential learning tailored to the child’s strengths, interests, and family context. It distinguishes itself from more directive or system-centered models by prioritizing emotional safety, caregiver partnership, and the child’s agency as core mechanisms of change, whether the setting is home visiting, therapy, early education, or therapeutic arts.Downtown Community School Inc
- Community-Funded Enrichment 1 orgBy mobilizing community resources through fundraising and volunteer engagement, organizations expand student access to extracurricular and enrichment opportunities beyond what public funding provides, because collective investment strengthens both program sustainability and community ownership. This strategy centers on closing resource gaps in education by activating local stakeholders—families, businesses, and volunteers—to fund and support programs that schools cannot fully provide. It distinguishes itself from top-down or grant-dependent models by emphasizing grassroots participation, shared responsibility, and the belief that community-led support increases both the relevance and longevity of student programs.MADISON TRADITIONAL ACADEMY GUILD INC
- Culturally Grounded Development 1 orgBy embedding Indigenous culture, language, and community governance into education and youth programming, we foster identity-affirming development and community resilience, because cultural continuity strengthens engagement, belonging, and self-determination. This strategy centers Indigenous knowledge systems, intergenerational learning, and community-led institutions as foundational to personal and collective well-being. It goes beyond cultural inclusion to assert sovereignty in program design, governance, and pedagogy, distinguishing it from generic youth development models that treat culture as an add-on rather than a core mechanism of change.Pinon Community School Board Inc
- Low-Overhead Impact Maximization 1 orgBy minimizing administrative and operational costs, organizations maximize the proportion of resources directed to programs and beneficiaries, because reducing overhead increases efficiency, transparency, and donor trust, thereby amplifying social impact. This strategy unifies organizations that prioritize financial stewardship and operational leanness—through volunteer-driven staffing, zero-overhead models, endowment earnings use, or shared resource infrastructure—to ensure nearly all funding directly serves mission goals. Unlike broader capacity-building or service delivery strategies, this approach centers cost efficiency as a core theory of change, treating overhead reduction not just as a practice but as a lever for greater accountability, donor confidence, and programmatic scale.HIGHLAND LAKES SCHOOL PARENT TEACHER STUDENT ORG
- Music as Transformative Practice 1 orgBy engaging individuals in meaningful musical participation and performance, organizations foster personal, social, and cultural transformation, because immersive artistic experiences cultivate identity, connection, and developmental growth. This strategy centers on the belief that music is not merely an art form but a vehicle for deep individual and collective change. It unites programs that use music to build character, bridge cultural divides, support youth development, and create ritual or spiritual experiences—going beyond skill acquisition to emphasize holistic growth and community belonging. Unlike strategies focused solely on performance excellence or audience expansion, this approach treats musical engagement as a formative, identity-shaping practice.New School for the Arts
- Self-Sustaining Revenue via Thrift 1 orgBy operating thrift stores and reinvesting earned revenue, organizations fund social services and program delivery, because self-generated income increases financial sustainability, reduces donor dependence, and keeps resources circulating within the community. This strategy centers on using retail operations—particularly thrift and consignment stores—as engines for ongoing social impact. Unlike traditional donation-dependent nonprofits, these organizations leverage community donations of goods to create low-cost inventory, sell it to the public, and reinvest profits directly into mission-aligned programs. This creates a feedback loop where community participation fuels both environmental sustainability (through reuse) and social services, distinguishing it from one-way aid models or externally funded programs.BASIS SCOTTSDALE PRIMARY WEST BOOSTERS
- Teacher-Centered Systemic Improvement 1 orgBy strengthening teacher effectiveness, leadership, and support systems, organizations improve student outcomes because high-quality instruction and educator retention are foundational to equitable and sustainable academic success. This strategy centers on the belief that transformative change in education flows primarily through empowering educators—through development, recognition, collaboration, and working conditions—rather than through top-down mandates or isolated interventions. It distinguishes itself from broader community or policy-focused strategies by prioritizing the classroom-level driver of teacher quality as the primary lever for systemic improvement, while still incorporating aligned leadership, evidence use, and community support to sustain impact.CASA ACADEMY INC
- Trauma-Informed Care 1 orgBy creating safe, empowering, and culturally responsive environments that recognize the pervasive impact of trauma, organizations improve engagement, healing, and treatment outcomes, because individuals are more likely to participate in services and regulate emotionally when they feel physically and psychologically safe. This strategy centers on understanding and responding to the biological, psychological, and social effects of trauma across all levels of service delivery. It distinguishes itself from other approaches by prioritizing emotional and physical safety, minimizing re-traumatization (e.g., through restraint-free practices), and embedding principles like trust, choice, and empowerment into organizational culture, staff training, and client interactions. While other strategies may focus on specific services (e.g., housing or peer support), trauma-informed care functions as a foundational lens that shapes how all services are delivered.COCONINO COALITION FOR CHILDREN