Students nurture a heart to give back
Top image: Miles Woods (left) and Josiah Gordon (right) at the spring scholarship presentation. (Photo: Josiah Gordon)
Undergraduate students Josiah Gordon and Miles Woods formed a nonprofit to provide scholarships for students at their former high school, determined to make positive change in their community
Josiah Gordon and Miles Woods have been friends since kindergarten. They know each otherâs families, have been in and out of each otherâs Denver homes and can communicate in a shorthand that comes only with knowing someone that long.
They played on some of the same basketball and Arapaho Youth League football teams, had many of the same teachers at Highline Academy and moved on to Thomas Jefferson High School with similar attitudes toward education: Eh, itâs fine.
âI understood (education) was really important because my parents harped on it, but I couldnât really say I enjoyed it,â Woods says.
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Josiah Gordon (left) and Miles Woods (right) are CU Boulder pre-med students majoring in integrative physiology and participating in the Miramontes Arts and Sciences Program. Last year, they decided to raise money for scholarships for students at their alma mater high school.Ěý
âFor me,â Gordon adds, âwhen I was younger it was not stressed. I come from a low-income family, but as Miles and I were growing up and our moms were getting to know each other, I was picking up a little bit on that emphasis on education.â
The COVID year changed everything. It was a reset button for both of them, helping them connect with their faith, giving them a bigger-picture perspective on what they want their lives to be and making them realize they really needed to get serious about school.
Fast forward several years, and theyâre both pre-med students majoring in integrative physiology at the °ľÍř˝űÇř. Both are also part of the Miramontes Arts and Sciences Program and both focused on goals that are big enough to motivate hard work but not so big that theyâre out of reach.
They also know, however, that the future canât happen without everything that came before it, so last year they hatched an idea to help students at their former high school who see the value of higher education but arenât sure how to pay for it.
In 2024, the two undergraduates with no previous experience doing anything like this started the âoriginally called Manum Dare, which means âto lend a handâ in Latinâto fundraise and award scholarships to students at Thomas Jefferson High School.
âSenior year, I think I applied to something like 26 different scholarshipsâeverything I could find,â Gordon says. âFor me, that was the start of thisâjust going to school with our peers, a lot of individuals who wanted to go to college and worked hard but just couldnât make it happen financially. I think we just have a heart to give back and do what we can to help.â
Learning to love learning
Both will admit, though, that the path to this point has been winding, and they didnât always care this much about education. Woods had the example of his mother, who was the first in her family to go to graduate schoolâsheâs an attorneyâand his father, who was the first in his family to go to college. They emphasized education to Woods and his sister, who recently graduated the University of California at Berkeley, and to Gordon when he visited the Woodsâ home. The message took a little while to sink in.
âI wouldnât say I was a bad kid by any means,â Gordon recalls, âbut I was definitely not a teacherâs pet. I gave my teachers a little trouble growing up, and thatâs common in young boys. I just didnât like school. I would say it wasnât until I got to high school that I started to take things a little bit more seriously. Plus, I had little more autonomy with choice for classes, and that made a difference.â
They took a human anatomy class together, which planted a seed: âIt was like, wow, this stuff is pretty cool,â Gordon says, so he tucked the thought away for future reference.
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Miles Woods (second from left) and Josiah Gordon (right) with the two Thomas Jefferson High School students to whom they gave scholarships for which they fundraised. (Photo: Josiah Gordon)
âWe were learning about the body in a way thatâs really applicable,â Woods adds. âSometimes Iâd be sitting in class like, why am I learning this? Sitting in algebra or whatever, it could get kind of boring. But in that class, it was really interesting, really immersive, and it got me thinking about the body and thinking âOh, thatâs how that works.â I remember one day (the teacher) was teaching us about tattoos and why they are permanent and how they stay in the body, and thinking that was so interesting.â
Both young men were also chasing dreams of playing college basketball, but things worked out how they were supposed to work out, Woods says. He originally committed to play basketball at another Colorado school, but the arrangement fell through a few weeks before the deadline to accept his admission to CU Boulder.
Meanwhile, Gordon broke his foot during his senior year, but because heâd applied for so many scholarships, he was able to pursue an academics-based path rather than a basketball-based one.
âWeâd been planning to go our separate ways and chase the hoop dream, but then here we both were at Boulder,â Woods says. Gordon declared pre-med from the beginning, but it took Woods a semester of studying business to know for sure that medicine was his path.
âLetâs just tryâ
In Summer 2024, Gordon and Woods participated in through the CU Law School, a 16-week program that supports students in entering the world of startups, innovation and emerging companies. The program helps students come up with business ideas, work on pitches, partner with mentors in the business world and, at the end of the program, pitch a business proposal to a room of investors.
They had some business ideas and even developed one as far as the pitch stage, but their thoughts kept returning to the idea theyâd had in high school, from which they were only a year removed.
âWe kept thinking about our close friends who couldnât make it to college because they couldnât afford it,â Gordon explains, so they thought: What if, instead of a business, they started a nonprofit?
It was an audacious thought for people still in their teens, but theyâd spent the summer in rooms with great business minds, people whoâd started incredibly successful companies, and theyâd soaked up the lessons.
âWe thought, why not do it now?â Gordon says. âLetâs just try to raise a little bit of money and give it to someone at our alma mater.â
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Josiah Gordon (striped shirt) reads to children at an elementary school in the neighborhood where he grew up. He and Miles Woods (not pictured) are active community volunteers in addition to scholarship fundraisers. (Photo: Josiah Gordon)
Their initial goal was to raise $1,000, so they established a , promoted what they were doing on social media and harnessed the power of word of mouth. A day and a half after they started, theyâd raised $2,000. Not long after, a web developer whoâd seen what they were doing offered to build them a website. Other Thomas Jefferson alumni contacted them and offered support, including former NFL player Derrick Martin, who gave them a shout-out on social media.
They figured they should get serious about the nonprofit, so Brad Bernthal, then-director of the Startup Summer and an associate professor of law, put them in touch with law students who helped them create a 501(c)(3) as Manum Dare, later renamed Hem of Hope.
They established scholarship criteriaâa 3.25 GPA and involvement in extracurricular activities among themâand developed an application on their website, which included an essay. Gordonâs mother helped them read the essays, and in the spring they selected two $1,000 scholarship recipients.
âItâs definitely kind of rough knowing you canât help everybody how you want to, but I think you can find solace in the fact youâre helping somebody, and the little bit you can do right now for someone is better than not doing anything,â Woods says. âI think thatâs the stance you have to take.â
Bring positive change
Since awarding the first two scholarships, they have renamed the foundation Hem of Hope to reflect their faith, established a board, brought on CU School of Medicine student Sandra Appiah as a community impact ambassador and are exploring opportunities for mentorship and community collaboration. Theyâre also discussing fundraising strategies for next yearâs scholarships.
âWeâve been thinking of bake sales, maybe a 5K,â Woods says. âNow that we have a 501(c)(3), weâre hoping to find businesses to partner with on grants.â
Gordon adds that theyâve talked with representatives from other nonprofits, who have given them advice on grant writing, fundraising and community outreach.
They balance this with being third-year students in a demanding major, volunteering as practice players for the CU womenâs basketball team and planning for MCATs, medical school applications and graduation.
âJust being on the pre-med track itself is tough, but I think the way we grew up and some of our values definitely pay off,â Gordon says. âWe donât party; we donât go out to the Hill or anything like that, so that gives us extra time. The analogy that pops in my brain is a see-saw: Youâre not ever really going to be perfectly balanced, but I think that act of teetering is a kind of balance itself, kind of learning and establishing a good routine.
âAnd itâs important to us. You make time for the things that are important to you, and we want to bring positive change to our community.â
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