motorola foundation

Features

Empowering People through Mobile Technology

June 27, 2012 : BY Motorola

Can mobile technology help the blind?  Enable more people to purchase farm-fresh foods?  Empower citizen-scientists to reduce invasive plant and insect species? Increase high school students’ skills in math and science?  Yes.  It can do that and so much more.
Curious and creative minds at nonprofit organizations throughout the United States are asking these kinds of questions every day. And the Motorola Mobility Foundation, the philanthropic arm of Motorola Mobility, is proud to help them make their dreams a reality. Combined with other grant-making programs this year, the Motorola Mobility Foundation has provided one million dollars in funding for digital, social, and mobile technology programs that expand awareness and engagement in communities across the country.

These are just a few of the exciting programs underway:

  • Horizons for the Blind will revolutionize the way people who are blind or visually impaired shop. A mobile scanning application will give users quick and efficient access to product information on the go.
  • Thousands of low-income shoppers who rely on Food Stamps can’t use them at farmers markets.  Just Harvest Education Fund is about to change all that by equipping the Pittsburg Citi-Parks farmers markets with wireless technology to process food stamps as well as credit and debit cards; making fresh, healthy food accessible to everyone regardless of income.
  • The Adler Planetarium will develop Explorers Wanted, a location-based alternate reality game using online, social and mobile media to engage the Chicago community in astronomy through positive, personal experiences. Gamers will use a series of clues and challenges to advance the plot of an overarching story, culminating at the museum for an exclusive, final event.

This year’s largest grant was awarded to the Center for Mobile Learning at the MIT Media Lab.  The year-long collaboration between MIT and the Motorola Mobility Foundation will create a signature curriculum based on App Inventor, a simple tool for building Android applications.  It will focus on empowering young learners in the world of mobile computing by giving them the ability to create and personalize their own mobile applications.

View the complete list of this year’s Empowerment Grant winners.

The Motorola Mobility Foundation focuses its funding on education, community, health and wellness and disaster relief. For more information, on Motorola Mobility Corporate and Foundation giving, visit Motorola.com/give

{ 0 comments }

Features

At Motorola, we want to help you help others

March 2, 2012 : BY Motorola

Are you a nonprofit making a difference in your community? Great! We want to give you something. To help organizations bring new and different forms of mobile technology to their communities, the Motorola Mobility Foundation established the 2012 Empowerment Grants. This year the Foundation is looking for nonprofits to show how the innovative use of digital and mobile technology can be used to further their mission.

Could an interactive map increase community participation with your website? What about a social media campaign to gain new volunteers?  Maybe you’ve thought about showing people what you’ve been up to using a digital story book?

All those ideas that seemed cost-restrictive are now within reach.  But hurry, applications will only be accepted until March 23, 2012!

Learn more about the 2012 Motorola Mobility Empowerment Grants

{ 0 comments }

Features

Last week was the Motorola Mobility Foundation’s first Global Week of Service and more than 2,700 employees volunteered for projects in communities around the world.

This year, employees chose from 150 different projects that spanned 23 countries. Some people taught seniors the “ins and outs” of technology; others stocked food pantry shelves. A group in Russia prepped the landscape at the botanic garden for the upcoming winter and in 12 schools around the world groups taught students how to build Android™ apps.

Motorola has always been proud of its volunteering and community involvement, which is why Motorola Mobility has continued the Global Service tradition started by Motorola, Inc. Take a look at what we did this year:

{ 0 comments }

Features

At Motorola Mobility we believe technology should simplify, connect and enrich people’s lives. That’s why we and the Motorola Foundation partnered with Autism Speaks to give families with autistic children Motorola XOOM tablets.

The Motorola XOOM is a great tool for autistic children because there aren’t distracting peripherals and the touchscreen interface is very intuitive.

Working with Autism Speaks and the Motorola Foundation, we gave forty-five families with autistic children in the Chicago and San Diego areas Motorola XOOMs. The families are using the tablets every day to help their children build communication skills, improve confidence and increase sociability.

“[The XOOM] helps him with his independence, we’ve taught him it is his device and he is proud of it. The screen size of Motorola XOOM is essential- it is similar to a standard piece of paper, so he can practice his handwriting skills accurately, and the video modeling is much more engaging,” explained one family member in the program.

We know our products are great for techies wanting the latest gadget, but we also believe they are more than that. So we’re working with researchers and application developers to make even more resources available to families with autistic children.

Listen to some of the families in the program and hear what they have to say.

Watch Video

{ 0 comments }