PLATINUM2023

Children International HQ

Bringing people together to end poverty for good.

Kansas City, MO   |  www.children.org

Mission

At Children International, we connect people around the world in the fight to end poverty. Working together, we invest in the lives of children and youth, build the healthy environments they need to thrive, and empower them to create lasting change in their lives and communities.

Ruling year info

1971

President and CEO

Ms. Susana Eshleman

Main address

2000 E. Red Bridge Road

Kansas City, MO 64131 USA

Show more contact info

EIN

44-6005794

Subject area info

Public affairs

Human services

Youth services

Youth organizing

International development

Population served info

Children and youth

Adolescents

Young adults

Low-income people

NTEE code info

Children's and Youth Services (P30)

Youth Development Programs (O50)

Fund Raising and/or Fund Distribution (W12)

Programs and results

What we aim to solve

SOURCE: Self-reported by organization

One billion children worldwide are living in poverty, and without assistance they face a difficult battle to escape the generational cycle of poverty.

Our programs

SOURCE: Self-reported by organization

What are the organization's current programs, how do they measure success, and who do the programs serve?

Nutritional Monitoring and Rehabilitation

Sponsored children who are moderately or severely undernourished are enrolled in a feeding program to facilitate rapid improvements in health and nutritional status. Parents and other caregivers are enrolled in a nutrition education program and receive instruction on the nutritional value of locally available foods, low cost meal preparation and prevention of malnutrition through proper care of sick children. Children will stay in the program for at least two months or until they have maintained at risk or normal weight.

Population(s) Served
Children and youth

Empowerment programs for children and youth are designed to teach life skills and social responsibility. CI partners with Aflatoun (Child Savings International) to implement its social and financial education program. The age-appropriate curriculum focuses on the development of pertinent life skills, the promotion and protection of the rights of the child, social responsibility and community service, and civic education. Sport for Development: Children and youth develop life skills and healthy behaviors by participating in physical activity, sport and play (including but not limited to soccer, basketball, volleyball, Zumba, running, Judo, Ping Pong and Chess). It also provides ample scenarios which coaches can build upon to teach life skills like, teamwork, problem solving and communication.Leadership Training provides children and youth with a hands-on learning experience so that they can practice important life skills, including interpersonal communication, public speaking, teamwork, problem analysis and decision making, conflict resolution and resource management. Participants learn the meaning of leadership and how to identify and strengthen leadership qualities in themselves and in their peers. Youth trainees also investigate and evaluate community problems and then identify possible solutions, and analyze the resources required to implement those solutions. The culminating activity for the youth participants is the implementation of a small-scale community service activity. Youth Councils:  Participants elect other youth to represent them, promote their interests and implement community-improvement projects. Arts programming helps children and youth develop life skills and protective behaviors through a variety of art forms including music, dance, theater, and painting. The art classes develop cognitive and psycho-motor skills in the participants while specific activities and teaching moments support the development of essential life skills such as communication, teamwork, and self-esteem. The program also instills core values such as dedication, perseverance, discipline and respect.

Population(s) Served
Children and youth

Children International ensures access to basic medical services for the entire sponsored population. This is accomplished through direct provision of services within CI's community centers or through coordination with public and private partners when possible. Services include free exams, free basic medicines and supplies, free and low-cost referral services for children and youth requiring specialized care and financial support to families during medical emergencies. CI also seeks to increase demand by building awareness around the importance of using health services when needed, this may include educational sessions, home visits, support in signing up for insurance plans or advice on availing their rights to health care.

Population(s) Served
Children and youth

This program is designed to help children and youth overcome barriers to school enrollment and completion (for pre-school, primary and secondary school). Beneficiaries receive material assistance items that are most needed in their local context in order to attend school. The most common types of material support given include: school supplies, school fees, uniforms, textbooks, transportation fees and financial aid (which could be used for any school-related expenses). In some locations, all school-going children and youth receive some type of benefit while in other locations, school-related benefits are given to selected beneficiaries based on level of need. The specific types of benefits given and the value of the benefits given vary by location. In addition to the material assistance, agency staff and volunteers may conduct follow-up visits to verify children’s school status and provide guidance to families for children who are not in school.

Population(s) Served
Children and youth

Children International provides dental care to children and youth through free cleanings, fluoride treatment, sealants, and restorative care and extractions. Most of the field locations use the Basic Screening Survey (BSS) methodology which was developed by ASTDD and has been used in CI's University of Arkansas at Little Rock (UALR) for several years. This methodology includes two steps: first children are assessed by a basic screening survey to determine their need for care, next children are prioritized for exams to receive a treatment plan. The treatment plan is carried out by CI clinics or through referrals from CI. This ensures that children and youth receive early treatment when needed instead of waiting for people to come in once the damage has worsened. Programs will often include educational components and activities that create demand for the services, because visiting the dentist is not a very habitual practice.

Population(s) Served
Children and youth

The Scholarship program is designed to assist youth with enrollment and completion of secondary school. Youth are required to apply for the scholarships and typically must meet certain requirements in order to maintain the scholarship, such as minimum grades, completion of the academic year and in some cases, volunteer service hours. Preference is given to youth who meet certain criteria such as: Is a minority, indigenous or a member of another economically or socially disadvantaged population; Is female in a country where girls face additional barriers over boys in acquiring an education; Is an “out-of-school” youth, who has left school prematurely to pursue employment; Has a large number of siblings or is a member of a single-parent household; Achieves high academic scores according to local standards;

Exhibits exemplary leadership skills and/or a tendency toward positive community involvement, either within or outside of the sponsorship program; Alongside the provision of the scholarships, staff members engage with the youth and their parents to help increase parental support and involvement in their children’s education. The value of the scholarships vary by location and are renewable.

Population(s) Served
Adolescents

This program is designed to provide participants with basic computer literacy and internet navigation skills. The majority of participants in the courses are youth ages 12 and older; however, some locations do offer the program to children as young as 8. Participants receive hands-on instruction in the use of basic applications and computer programs such as: Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint; Email; Internet Navigation; and Internet Safety and Security. Some locations also provide advanced instruction on the use of computers and technology for business, marketing, employment and entrepreneurship. Through a partnership with Intel, Children International is using an Intel-developed curriculum in the computer skills courses that can be adapted to the context and need of each location. In addition to the formal computer skills program, all sponsored children and youth have access to the computer centers for learning and school-related activities, such as online research, homework and digital literacy and numeracy programs.

Population(s) Served
Adolescents

Children International currently implements the ESL program in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The program targets youth who have completed secondary school and wish to use English as their primary skill to enter the job market. The ESL program is designed to help youth improve their English comprehension, speaking, reading and writing, with the goal of increasing their marketable skills for employment.

Population(s) Served
Young adults

This program distributes direct assistance to help families meet urgent needs.

Population(s) Served
Families
Non-adult children

Programs that help children and youth develop emotional well-being with a focus on resilience. These programs teach children and youth how to self-care, self-calm and identify emotions and help young people build vital life skills, so they can stay mentally healthy and on the path out of poverty.

Population(s) Served
Children and youth

Where we work

Awards

Our results

SOURCE: Self-reported by organization

How does this organization measure their results? It's a hard question but an important one.

Millions of dollars of economic assistance distributed to children and families.

This metric is no longer tracked.
Totals By Year
Type of Metric

Output - describing our activities and reach

Direction of Success

Increasing

Context Notes

Our families needed economic assistance to replace lost income due to the pandemic.

Number of children who have access to education

This metric is no longer tracked.
Totals By Year
Population(s) Served

Children and youth

Related Program

Educational Support

Type of Metric

Outcome - describing the effects on people or issues

Direction of Success

Increasing

Context Notes

Ensure access to continued learning and education for 75% of sponsored population. Exceeded goal with 93% enrolled in formal education or participating in CI continued education.

Percentage of youth becoming employed within 6 months from completing an employability program.

This metric is no longer tracked.
Totals By Year
Related Program

Educational Support

Type of Metric

Outcome - describing the effects on people or issues

Direction of Success

Increasing

Context Notes

Maximize job placement for ex-sponsored youth through technical training or academic education, and training in life skills and job-readiness skills.  

Number of participants in employability programs designed to prepare them for formal employment.

This metric is no longer tracked.
Totals By Year
Type of Metric

Outcome - describing the effects on people or issues

Direction of Success

Holding steady

Context Notes

Employability programs include post-secondary scholarships, ESL, job-readiness skills such as how to complete a job application, gathering legal documents or build a resume and conduct a job search.

Goals & Strategy

SOURCE: Self-reported by organization

Learn about the organization's key goals, strategies, capabilities, and progress.

Charting impact

Four powerful questions that require reflection about what really matters - results.

Our goal is to eradicate poverty in the life of every child and person we meet. We connect people all over the world, facilitating strong relationships and partnerships across socioeconomic and cultural boundaries. Because we believe everyone shares the basic human right: to live free from poverty for good.

We incorporated the learnings from our pandemic response in 2020 and 2021 and have focused on a life-span model program areas — Health Equity, Education, Life Skills and Youth Employment.
Economic Assistance: 100% of sponsored children, youth and families in our program received economic assistance (215,274 individuals).
Connecting With Families: In 2022, we successfully connected 279,631 times with sponsored families, reaching 100% of sponsored families. Data collected can be used to identify our families’ true situations and needs, which helps us develop effective and appropriate programs and services.
Health Equity: In 2022, Children International’s Health Equity focus area continued its transition from health service provision to health system strengthening. Agency health teams prioritized the Health Promotion Program (previously known as Demand Generation), which improved access to health services and strengthened our provider network, ensuring more treatment options for our children and youth.
Access to Education and Continued Learning: We focused on ensuring sponsored children have access to school and succeed, by providing material and financial support and tutoring. CI is also prioritizing Early Childhood Care and Development to make sure sponsored children are healthy and prepared to enter primary school.
Life Skills and Empowerment: These programs build an individual’s ability to make choices, take action, and work toward their goals, which are essential for the journey out of poverty. Building life skills, like creativity, critical-thinking, problem-solving, cooperation, negotiation, decision-making, self-management, resilience, communication, respect for diversity, empathy and participation, is a key ingredient to empowerment.
Emotional Well-Being: These programs teach children and youth how to self-care, self-calm and identify emotions. Living in poverty leads to stress and emotional strain. These programs help young people build vital life skills to deal with daily life stressors and change, to take control of their emotions, and to lead their lives with balance.
Youth Employment: These programs help youth enter the formal job market through technical training or academic education, and training in life skills and job-readiness skills.  
Our monitoring, evaluation and learning (MEL) process changed in 2021 due to the pandemic. We couldn’t require the typical outcome measures — such as pre- and post-assessments measuring changes in program knowledge, attitudes and practices — because programs were rapidly changing to meet the needs of their participants. In 2022, we started to add back in global outcome measures, where feasible, while ensuring each program team could adjust to local context. We continue to track participation and program completion. We are looking at the data more frequently with a focus on progress toward goals. We continue to focus on learning, collecting feedback and adapting in real-time.

In partnership with our supporters, we offer a data-driven, long-term and holistic program designed to end poverty for the children and youth we serve. We establish roots where we work, building safe community centers and trusted teams that focus on learning, leadership and growth. Children and youth who graduate from our program develop comprehensive educational, social and leadership skills, enabling them to alter the course of their lives and impact their communities.

Children International has 67 community centers in 10 countries around the world. These community centers are where most of our programming takes place. We have a team of dedicated, in-country staff who oversee the day-to-day operations of each center and the programming that takes place. Not to mention, we also have a team of 5,000 volunteers around the world who believe passionately in Children International's mission and help us deliver our programs and services.

In 2022, the COVID-19 pandemic began to subside, and governments relaxed or lifted public health restrictions. For our agencies, this meant reopening our community centers, returning to the office, meeting families face-to-face and transitioning some of our programs back to in-person implementation. While the pandemic signified loss for sponsored families and agency staff, they were hopeful and happy to connect in person again.

The effects of the pandemic on sponsored families have been great — job loss, reduced access to education with significant learning loss, reduced income, limited access to nutritious foods, etc. And while it may seem that the world has moved on from the pandemic, our children and families are still recovering. In 2022, as an organization we continued to adapt, stay connected and deliver programs and services to support sponsored families recover from the pandemic. Thanks to the determination of our global teams, volunteers and families — combined with the support and commitment of sponsors, donors and partners — we achieved tangible impact for our children and youth.

We incorporated the learnings from our pandemic response in 2020 and 2021 to improve program delivery, while keeping an eye on the future as CI outlined its life span model — a new model for engaging our sponsored children and youth and delivering outcomes. Our program areas — Health Equity, Education, Life Skills and Into Employment (formerly known as Youth Employment Programs) — adapted and evolved to the realities on the ground and the most urgent needs. We continued to provide financial relief with Economic Assistance and regularly connect with families to assess their needs, link them to programs and services, and make sure no family is left behind. We also continued to rely on strong relationships with our volunteers and partner organizations. And we conducted successful pilot programs and other innovative initiatives that showed promise as longer-term solutions, shaping our approach beyond the pandemic.

Financials

Children International
Fiscal year: Oct 01 - Sep 30

Revenue vs. expenses:  breakdown

SOURCE: IRS Form 990 info
NET GAIN/LOSS:    in 
Note: When component data are not available, the graph displays the total Revenue and/or Expense values.

Liquidity in 2022 info

SOURCE: IRS Form 990

19.85

Average of 10.15 over 10 years

Months of cash in 2022 info

SOURCE: IRS Form 990

1.3

Average of 0.8 over 10 years

Fringe rate in 2022 info

SOURCE: IRS Form 990

21%

Average of 21% over 10 years

Funding sources info

Source: IRS Form 990

Assets & liabilities info

Source: IRS Form 990

Financial data

SOURCE: IRS Form 990

Children International

Revenue & expenses

Fiscal Year: Oct 01 - Sep 30

SOURCE: IRS Form 990 info

Fiscal year ending: cloud_download Download Data

Children International

Balance sheet

Fiscal Year: Oct 01 - Sep 30

SOURCE: IRS Form 990 info

The balance sheet gives a snapshot of the financial health of an organization at a particular point in time. An organization's total assets should generally exceed its total liabilities, or it cannot survive long, but the types of assets and liabilities must also be considered. For instance, an organization's current assets (cash, receivables, securities, etc.) should be sufficient to cover its current liabilities (payables, deferred revenue, current year loan, and note payments). Otherwise, the organization may face solvency problems. On the other hand, an organization whose cash and equivalents greatly exceed its current liabilities might not be putting its money to best use.

Fiscal year ending: cloud_download Download Data

Operations

The people, governance practices, and partners that make the organization tick.

Documents
Form 1023/1024 is not available for this organization

President and CEO

Ms. Susana Eshleman

Susana Eshleman's profound devotion to helping children and youth overcome poverty and her desire to bring contributors and beneficiaries together to create big changes are making an impact in the countries where we work and at our headquarters. In her own words: “I am very honored and humbled to have the opportunity to lead an organization whose vision I feel so passionately about. I have looked deep into the eyes of hopeless, hurting children all over the world, and every time I meet one of these children, my resolve to help them grows.” Originally from Argentina, Susana brings a wealth of experience, both personal and professional. She has traveled the world and has a personal understanding of Latino culture. She also has a Harvard MBA and more than 16 years of marketing leadership experience at Hallmark, including serving as Multicultural Leader in their Multicultural Center of Excellence.

Number of employees

Source: IRS Form 990

Children International

Officers, directors, trustees, and key employees

SOURCE: IRS Form 990

Compensation
Other
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Show data for fiscal year
Compensation data
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Children International

Highest paid employees

SOURCE: IRS Form 990

Compensation
Other
Related
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Compensation data
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Children International

Board of directors
as of 07/28/2023
SOURCE: Self-reported by organization
Board of directors data
Download the most recent year of board of directors data for this organization
Board chair

Mr. Brad Cloverdyke

Retired/American Century Invenstments

Term: 2019 - 2023

Susana Eshleman

President & CEO of Children International

David Cacioppo

President of Emfluence, Inc.

Liderman Duin

Owner, Bluepoint2

Brad Cloverdyke

Retired

Steve Berger

Partner, A.T. Kearney

Aviva Ajmera

CEO, SolveKC

Roland Paanakker

Principal, Paanakker & Co.

Adam Newsome

CEO, Lazer Spot

Marvin Irby

CFO, National Restaurant Association

Ena Williams Koschel

COO, Casey's General Stores

Organizational demographics

SOURCE: Self-reported; last updated 1/24/2022

Who works and leads organizations that serve our diverse communities? Candid partnered with CHANGE Philanthropy on this demographic section.

Leadership

The organization's leader identifies as:

Race & ethnicity
Hispanic/Latino/Latina/Latinx
Gender identity
Female, Not transgender
Sexual orientation
Heterosexual or Straight
Disability status
Person without a disability

Race & ethnicity

No data

Gender identity

No data

Transgender Identity

No data

Sexual orientation

No data

Disability

No data