Tue Jun 1, 2010 12:00 AM - Fri Jun 4, 2010 12:00 AM
FASFAA 2010 Annual Conference
Registration:
NOTE: Active Members MUST be logged in
to access the Member Registration Form
(located at the bottom of this page once logged in)
Conference Program on the Web:
Click Here
To be directed to the Doral web site for reservations:
Click here
Additional Conference Information:
Click Here
Conference questions???
Please email
Request for Refunds or Cancellations
All refund requests will be honored if received by the Bookkeeper no later than
7 days prior to the conference. Otherwise all fees are nonrefundable but are
transferable to another attendee for the same conference.

FASFAA Annual Conference Project

Educate Tomorrow, Corp. (http://educatetomorrow.org) is an international, nonprofit, certified 501(c)(3) organization. All over the world, poverty denies children, as well as adults, the promises of a better tomorrow. Forgotten by society and social welfare programs, children born into poverty are trapped in a cruel and often violent cycle that frequently continues for generations. Lacking the inspiration, confidence, knowledge, and means to change, entire families are lost to the cycle of hopelessness.
Educate Tomorrow believes that the best way to end the cycle of poverty is through education. Our mission is to make education an attainable goal for the most disadvantaged in our world, so that all may be afforded the possibilities that can be achieved through learning. We strive to reach out to these individuals and provide them inspiration, guidance, and support and lead them on the path of life-long learning.
Educate Tomorrow's primary mission in the US is to provide one-on-one educational mentors to foster care children that are turning 18 and "aging out" of the system. Since its founding in 2003, Educate Tomorrow has successfully implemented its mentoring programs, education programs and life skills camps across the nation. Additionally, it has reached internationally by continuing to support the work of it's founders who established one of the first local language primary schools, adult literacy programs and boarding schools in the remote and impoverished village of Kabey Fo in Niger, West Africa.
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