Build a headquarters for social entrepreneurs. Housing creative, committed people and organizations under one roof would promote collaboration and innovation.
Offer social entrepreneurial fellowships. Providing Boston area college, business, law, and medicine graduates the opportunity to compete for two-year social entrepreneurial fellowships and loan forgiveness programs will encourage new generations of young leaders to act on their idealism.
Require service and civic curriculums. Boston's colleges and universities, which shape the minds of tomorrow's global leaders, should require students to engage in community service in Boston's neighborhoods and increase the work study allocation for service from 7 to 25 percent to enable all students to do so. Additionally, colleges should emphasize citizenship and public service in their curriculums.
Scale community service initiatives. Since community service experiences are where many new civic ideas are born, Boston should become an "All Star service city," with at least 20 percent of our young people participating in a year of fulltime service, and all elementary, middle, and high schools in the metro region adopting comprehensive community service programs.***
What are "social entrepreneurs"? Sounds like some sort of bastardization of the English language, like "sex workers" or "undocumented workers" or some such thing.