Between pageant competitions, dancing and acting, Amelia Lisowe, 12, has a lot going on – but still finds time to brighten the worlds of foster children.

The Arkansas native’s family motto is “find something you’re good at and use it to make the world a better place,” Amelia told USA TODAY. The young volunteer has done just that.

In 2018, she founded her nonprofit organization Lisowe’s Lights, which provides night lights to children in the foster-care system. 

“Sometimes, foster kids have to leave in the middle of the night because of neglect, abuse or drugs,” said Amelia, who is now in the sixth grade. “Having that night light makes it more comfortable in a new house where they may not know anybody, and makes them feel more safe.”

The Bryant Middle School student raised enough money in 2018 to donate more than 500 night lights to foster kids across central Arkansas, according to the organization.

Since then, Amelia’s nonprofit has extended its reach to 50 U.S. states and nine countries, People.com reported.

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‘A need in my community’

Lauren Lisowe’s involvement as a board of directors member of Court-Appointed Special Advocates, or CASA, influenced her daughter Amelia’s decision to make an impact in the foster community.

“I got to go along with her to a lot of events when I was younger,” Amelia said. “Finding a way to help foster kids was easy for me to do when I saw there was a need in my community.”

Amelia, then 8, searched for places to volunteer – but kept being turned away. She was too young, she was told.

“I felt kind of defeated because I love to volunteer,” she said. 

Nonprofit organization Lisowe's lights founder Amelia Lisowe, 12, loads up lights that were boxed at a packing party at the Saline County Boys and Girls Club in Benton, Arkansas, in summer 2022.

One day as her mother mentioned that foster children occasionally have to leave their homes overnight, Amelia considered her own fear of the dark.

“I couldn’t imagine being in a new home and being in that darkness,” Amelia said.

She shared her idea of collecting night lights for foster children with a school counselor. Her school then hosted a drive collecting $1 donations, and Lisowe’s Lights expanded from there.