BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Nov. 15, 2007

Fighting World Hunger With A Mouse Click

Web Site Gives 10 Grains Of Rice To World Hunger Per Click — And That’s Adding Up

  • Play CBS Video Video Web Site Combats World Hunger

    An Indiana computer programmer has designed an inventive and revolutionary Web site in his quest to combat poverty and hunger throughout the world. Daniel Sieberg has the story.

  • Video Word Game With A Mission

    Freerice.com is an online vocabulary game that raises money for the United Nation's World Food Program. It's a simple way to help the world's hungry. Daniel Sieberg has the story.

    • Lee Heffernan's class at Fairview Elementary School has already donated more than 1,000 bowls of rice to fight world hunger, through freerice.com. Photo

      Lee Heffernan's class at Fairview Elementary School has already donated more than 1,000 bowls of rice to fight world hunger, through freerice.com.  (CBS)

    • On freerice.com, each correct word clicked puts 10 more grains of rice in your virtual bowl -- and those grains eventually are donated to hungry families. Photo

      On freerice.com, each correct word clicked puts 10 more grains of rice in your virtual bowl -- and those grains eventually are donated to hungry families.  (freerice.com)

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(CBS)  Fairview Elementary still does things the old-school way. But then Teacher Lee Heffernan discovered an online vocabulary game.

“I thought it would be too advanced for my 3rd and 4th graders, but they were instantly into it. I'm very compulsive about it, I really get into it, and so are they!” Heffernan said.

It’s called FreeRice.com. Odd, until you hear the twist. Click on a correct word definition - and boom - you’ve just donated 10 grains of rice to combat world hunger.

CBS News science and technology correspondent Daniel Sieberg asked kids in Heffernan’s class where the rice goes to.

“To other countries,” the class said. “To people who need it.”

"You just gotta get the answer right and you learn more and you help people at the same time," said 9-year-old Mallory Pyke.

The man who’s connecting these kids from America’s heartland to the rest of the world is also from Bloomington. And here’s a question for you. Which word best describes him:
A) Ingenious
B) Perseverant
C) Inspired
Or how about D) All of the above?

Ten grains of rice, by itself, it’s very little. But when you combine it with millions of people - each giving ten grains - it can turn into hundreds of metric tons.

John Breen is a computer programmer who’s long been interested in poverty and global issues. His outside-the-box idea has soared since its debut just six weeks ago.

One hundred and eighty-eight million grains of rice were donated yesterday, Sieberg said to Breen.

“Yeah, in total it’s just over 1.5 billion, and that’s just in a month. I think it shows you that people want to do something about world hunger.”

Read more on Couric & Co. blog.
Big-name sponsors pay for Web banners on the site. Those ad dollars go to the U.N.’s World Food Program. Breen’s first check was for $100,000, enough to feed 500,000 people for one day. The It could be on the ground in Bangladesh in a matter of weeks.

“Getting people, and young people, to learn about the problem of hunger and poverty I think that's really where John has struck it rich for us,” said Natalie Vaupel of the U.N. World Food Program.

Freerice.com is an international, viral sensation. Folks from Thailand to Germany and India are just as enthusiastic as those 4th graders in Bloomington. They may not be changing the world, but they will be improving thousands of lives, all with a simple, collective, click of a mouse.



An update from Daniel Sieberg: According to Breen, after the CBS Evening News story ran Thursday night, 20 million correct answers were clicked, bringing the donation total to more than 2 billion grains. Visitors to the site included, of course, those dedicated schoolkids from Bloomington, Ind.

The U.N. says the rice will be in cyclone-ravaged Bangladesh soon, with more likely on its way to drought-stricken Africa.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Video and Galleries from CBS Evening News: Eye On Technology

Add a Comment
by cattales1968 November 17, 2007 11:00 AM PST
Great idea and great cause. Wish I could access it but it gives me an error each time and the page lists something about an Apache Server. Hope I can access it soon at www.rice.com because my friends and I would like to help.

Thanks, cattales1967
Reply to this comment
by cattales1968 November 17, 2007 11:01 AM PST
Great idea and great cause. Wish I could access it but it gives me an error each time and the page lists something about an Apache Server. Hope I can access it soon at www.rice.com because my friends and I would like to help.

Thanks, cattales1967
Reply to this comment
by cattales1968 November 17, 2007 11:04 AM PST
Great idea and great cause. Wish I could access it but it gives me an error each time and the page lists something about an Apache Server. Hope I can access it soon at www.rice.com because my friends and I would like to help.

Thanks, cattales1967
Reply to this comment
by cattales1968 November 17, 2007 11:05 AM PST
Great idea and great cause. Wish I could access it but it gives me an error each time and the page lists something about an Apache Server. Hope I can access it soon at www.rice.com because my friends and I would like to help.

Thanks, cattales1967
Reply to this comment
by likeablunchs November 19, 2007 5:12 PM PST
'' .. i acquired such piles of such stuff, that my co-workets became so envious that they entered a state of such diminished capacity as to reduce their ability to produce goods and services, thereby reducing my ability to acquire piles of stuff .. so i compiled, with their assistance, 244,140,625 catalogs of stuff they could shop for with free catalog dollars (1 shopping ''mall'' / catalog for each 625 folk) .. and so i re-enabled them to do more business with the outside world and the inside world as well .. ''
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