You can help to provide a brighter future for children and for our entire community by investing in Success BY 6 Ottawa.

Here are some of the ways you can become involved:
- Become a Success By 6 Ottawa Champion. Join Success By 6 Ottawa in our work in this community. Help us to advocate for children in every arena — from government to education and beyond.
- Provide in-kind support. Each project, program and organization dedicated to children has needs for facilities, equipment, supplies, services and time. Choose a project that speaks to your heart and meshes with your vision, and know that your support will touch young lives. Ask us for a list of projects that you can become involved in.
- Advocate for workplace and legislative policies that support families. Challenge our leaders to evaluate each decision in light of its impact on children and the people who care about them.
- Advocate for family-friendly workplaces. It is important for employers to encourage employees to balance their work and family lives. Employers that help parents take good care of their children will see increased productivity.
- Volunteer in a preschool initiative. Work directly with the dedicated people involved in Ottawa's excellent preschools, parenting initiatives, recreation programs, reading partnerships — or any other effort that is making a difference for kids.
- Be a model for the children in your life. Spend “together” time with your own children or grandchildren, no matter what their age, and encourage older children to be involved with younger children at home, at school and in the neighbourhood.
- Check out the Ottawakids Events Calendar for upcoming activities that you can support.
- Donate to Success BY 6 Ottawa. We would be pleased to speak with you about the various options — from one-time to multi-year donations. Download a pledge form by clicking here.
For more information on how you can help, please contact us.
Making A Difference Request For Nominations
Early Childhood Development — Did You Know?!
More and more evidence points to a clear link between health problems later in life (for example, high blood pressure, Type II diabetes, some mental health problems) and a child’s early years, from conception to age six.
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