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{"monthlySchoolDonationEnabled":true,"callToActionDisplayName":"High School of the Future","outOfStateSupporters":40.4,"allowSchoolLevelGiving":true,"hasFundedProjects":true,"projectGratitudeData":[{"teacherId":10337750,"projectId":9868264,"letterContent":"The moment I handed out those 90 composition notebooks and color-coded envelope folders, something shifted in my classroom. Students who usually slouch in their seats sat up straighter. They flipped through the notebooks, ran their fingers along the folder edges, and actually smiled. One student even asked me, \"I can keep this?\" The answer was yes, and it mattered more than I realized.\r\n\r\nThanks to 15 generous donors who invested in this project, my classroom became a space where organization isn't just a rule, it's a practice that students want to follow.\r\n\r\nThe composition notebooks and envelope folders are the backbone of everything we do now. Every student has their own notebook for daily do-nows, vocabulary building, and reflective writing. The 8-color envelope folders sit in bins in the back organized by class, with students having the creative freedom to choose the colors of their folders. When I say \"go back to your notes from last week,\" or \"I am missing this worksheet\" students know exactly where to go look. No more shuffling through stacks. No more \"I lost it.\" Their materials are contained, visible, and theirs.\r\n\r\nBut what's truly transformed engagement are the coloring supplies. \r\n\r\nI didn't expect it, but the moment I brought out the colored pencils, Crayola crayons, highlighters, and markers, my classroom became electric. These aren't just nice-to-haves, they've become essential learning tools.\r\n\r\nIn my world history classes, students are now creating color coded timelines, maps, and notes with colored pencils and markers, mapping trade routes in brilliant blues and golds, sketching the architecture of different civilizations. A student who typically scores C's came up to me with a colored-pencil drawing of an Asian house, showing the progression of architectural styles across centuries. \"I actually get it now,\" she said, pointing to how she'd used different colors to show different time periods. That visual application filled in the gaps from the lesson.\r\n\r\nIn my survey of law classes, students are using highlighters and colored pencils to annotate case studies and primary source documents. They color-code key terms and opposing arguments and create visual hierarchies that help them see connections. One student used the Crayola crayons to illustrate a comparative analysis of civil rights cases, each case in a different skin tone, making a powerful statement about whose rights were being discussed. The work was more thoughtful, more engaged, more theirs.\r\n\r\nLast week, a student who barely spoke in class came to me with her organized folder. Inside: perfectly filed materials and color-coded notes. Margin notes in highlighter. Vocabulary words defined in her composition notebook, with colored pencil illustrations next to each term. \"I've never done this before,\" she said, almost in disbelief. \"I like how organized this is. Can we always do this?\"\r\n\r\nThat question broke my heart. She was asking permission to be organized, to care about her work, to have a system that works for her.\r\n\r\nWe're halfway through Q3 with lots of momentum. Students are now creating their own culminating creative projects where they choose how to best demonstrate their understanding of the unit. They're also writing reflective essays about their learning using specific notes they've collected and organized.\r\n\r\nThe colored pencils and markers aren't decorations. They're proof that their learning is valued enough to be beautiful.They're tools that help visual learners finally see the patterns other students hear in a lecture. They're invitations to engage differently, than they've been allowed to before.\r\n\r\nMy 120 students across 6 classes now come to school knowing they have real materials, not hand-me-downs or leftovers, but actual supplies chosen specifically for their learning. They have systems that work. They have colors that help them think. They have organization that shows them they matter.\r\n\r\nWith your $671 investment, you gave my students permission to care about their work. You gave them the tools for visible, organized, colorful learning. You sent the message that these students in Philadelphia, students from often under-resourced schools, students with so much already stacked against them, deserve classrooms as beautiful and organized as any private school.\r\n\r\nMy students are learning that organization isn't punishment. It's power.","fullyFundedDate":1764673383110,"projectUrl":"project/help-the-firebirds-take-flight/9868264/","projectTitle":"Help the Firebirds Take Flight!","teacherDisplayName":"Ms. Traore","teacherPhotoUrl":"https://cdn.donorschoose.net/images/placeholder-avatars/272/teacher-placeholder-6_272.png?auto=webp","teacherClassroomUrl":"classroom/mstsclassroom"},{"teacherId":9701272,"projectId":9637638,"letterContent":"I would like to send a sincere thank you to you all for choosing to sponsor my class. Each item benefited my students in a huge way. Specifically the 2 tier metal cart help us reinforce the importance of hygiene and caring for each other. It made for a beautiful display in our classroom, front and center. The students really enjoy being independently responsible for caring for themselves. Secondly, the highlight of the project was receiving the sharpie art markers in order to make beautiful art work to display boldly around the classroom. As a new school year project, I guide my students on creating a theme for our class, this year my students decided to do a graffiti wall. The sharpie markers made their artwork colorful and vibrant. This increase student engagement and social skills building by 80%, it was a big team building activity. The laminating pouches are always a useful tool to help make resources in our classroom durable, for instance making division/multiplication charts to remind our students of their ability to recall math skills in everyday activities. Because of your generosity, my classroom has a bit more resources to help my students grow.","fullyFundedDate":1756174538593,"projectUrl":"project/help-my-autistic-support-students-shine/9637638/","projectTitle":"Help My Autistic Support Students Shine!","teacherDisplayName":"Ms. Patterson","teacherPhotoUrl":"https://storage.donorschoose.net/dc_prod/images/teacher/profile/orig/tp9701272_orig.jpg?crop=1:1,smart&width=272&height=272&fit=bounds&auto=webp&t=1755789844621","teacherClassroomUrl":"classroom/9701272"},{"teacherId":9226174,"projectId":9631922,"letterContent":"Just want to start off by saying thank you again for donating to my classroom. These supplies have really set us off on a great year. \r\nThe laminator is my biggest win! I use this with their schedules, hall passes, worksheets, and classwork! We also use our whiteboard calendar everyday. The students change the date and the weather on it during morning meeting. Each student's chair has a flex band around the legs for fidgeting and the students actively use the toys as well! \r\nThese donations have created such a comfortable environment for my freshman. Thank you for everything!","fullyFundedDate":1756262076980,"projectUrl":"project/back-to-school-supplies/9631922/","projectTitle":"Back to School Supplies","teacherDisplayName":"Ms. Cabry","teacherPhotoUrl":"https://storage.donorschoose.net/dc_prod/images/teacher/profile/orig/tp9226174_orig.jpg?crop=1:1,smart&width=272&height=272&fit=bounds&auto=webp&t=1764814581165","teacherClassroomUrl":"classroom/9226174"},{"teacherId":8497914,"projectId":9668088,"letterContent":"About 3 months ago, my project \"Stocking Up on Classroom Essentials\" was fully funded here on Donors Choose thanks to your generous support. I want to express just how grateful I am for your contributions to this project!\r\n\r\nThanks to this project, each of my students has a notebook and a folder to use for my class. They also have erasers and pencils they can use to complete their work, paper for writing and drawing, and hand sanitizer to keep clean. These essential basics have made learning possible for every learner. The class set of whiteboards and markers allows me to easily check for knowledge and to provide students with a fun way to engage with learning. The rug, seat cushions, and fidget toys have helped make our room more comfortable and calm. I see the positive impacts of your generosity play out in my classroom each day. \r\n\r\nThank you once again for your donations to this project. Thanks to your support, you have helped me best support my students during my first 3 months of teaching.","fullyFundedDate":1756705129111,"projectUrl":"project/stocking-up-on-classroom-essentials/9668088/","projectTitle":"Stocking Up on Classroom Essentials","teacherDisplayName":"Ms. McQuoid","teacherPhotoUrl":"https://storage.donorschoose.net/dc_prod/images/teacher/profile/orig/tp8497914_orig.jpg?crop=2540,2540,x1115,y483&width=272&height=272&fit=bounds&auto=webp&t=1756346942654","teacherClassroomUrl":"classroom/8497914"},{"teacherId":8497914,"projectId":9655067,"letterContent":"About 3 months ago, my project \"Curating a Colorful and Comfortable Classroom!\" was fully funded here on Donors Choose thanks to your generous support. I want to express just how grateful I am for your contributions to this project!\r\n\r\nWith the art supplies, we've been able to make an assortment of projects, such as visual representations of world religions in World History class and poetic device anchor charts in English class. The classroom is not only nice and welcoming thanks to the fake plants and LED light, but the magnetic calendar kit and dry erase markers help me keep us organized and on track. Overall, these supplies have successfully brought color and comfort into the classroom and that means the world to me!\r\n\r\nThank you once again for your donations to this project. Thanks to your support, you have helped me best support my students during my first 3 months of teaching.","fullyFundedDate":1756596338209,"projectUrl":"project/curating-a-colorful-and-comfortable-clas/9655067/","projectTitle":"Curating a Colorful and Comfortable Classroom!","teacherDisplayName":"Ms. McQuoid","teacherPhotoUrl":"https://storage.donorschoose.net/dc_prod/images/teacher/profile/orig/tp8497914_orig.jpg?crop=2540,2540,x1115,y483&width=272&height=272&fit=bounds&auto=webp&t=1756346942654","teacherClassroomUrl":"classroom/8497914"}],"pageName":"schoolpage_32211","usesÐǿմ«Ã½":true,"infoPageType":"school","demographicsInfo":{"numStudents":569,"numTeachers":26,"percentFrplEligible":95,"percentAsian":1,"percentBlack":92,"percentWhite":1,"percentIndigenous":0,"percentLatinx":3,"showFreeAndReducedPriceLunchInfo":true,"showDemographicsInfo":true,"sourceTooltipString":"the National Center for Education Statistics","gradesServed":"9 - 12","studentTeacherRatio":"21.9:1","demographicsDataSource":"MDR School","equityFocus":true,"titleOne":true,"metroType":"URBAN","ncesMetroType":"CITY_LARGE"},"inStateSupporters":59.6,"schoolId":32211,"financialInfo":null,"twitterShareText":"Learn more about High School of the Future on @Ðǿմ«Ã½:","schoolName":"High School of the Future","canonicalPageUrl":"schools/pennsylvania/philadelphia-city-school-district/school-of-the-future/32211"}
Join the 314 supporters who believe in this school.
About this school
High School of the Future is
an urban public school
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania that is part of Philadelphia City School District.
It serves 569 students
in grades 9 - 12 with a student/teacher ratio of 21.9:1.
Its teachers have had 41 projects funded on Ðǿմ«Ã½.
Boost support for this school! Share this page with friends, family, alumni, and fellow supporters. Every connection helps teachers get the supplies they need and shows how much your community cares about its students.
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Every donation funds real needs — pencils, books, lab equipment, art supplies, and more — helping students learn and thrive. We ship supplies directly to the school, and you'll see exactly where each dollar goes.
of students receive free or reduced price lunch
Data about students' economic need comes from the National Center for Education Statistics, via our partners at MDR Education.
Source: the National Center for Education Statistics
96%
of students are Black, Latino, Native
American, or Asian
Data about school demographics comes from the National Center for Education Statistics, via our partners at MDR Education. The numbers in this chart may not add up to 100% because of limitations in the available data.
High School of the Future Support on Ðǿմ«Ã½
Last updated Mar 9, 2026
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High School of the Future
$39,911
raised using Ðǿմ«Ã½
41
projects
funded
27
teachers
funded
314
donors
3
projects
for
basic supplies
7
projects for
technology
6
projects for
books
3
projects
for
art supplies
High School of the Future has received support from
187 individuals from Pennsylvania and
127 individuals out-of-state.