Daemen College : News : News Releases
Summer Reading Camp Set For Seneca Babcock July 18 Through 28
Daemen Center for Sustainable Communities and Civic Engagement Will Again Lead Summer Reading Camp in Seneca Babcock, July 18-28
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Initiative Supported by Grants from Dollar General Literacy Foundation, Community Foundation for Greater Buffalo
July 11, 2011
Media
Contact: Mike Andrei
Director-College Relations
716.839.8472
mandrei@daemen.edu
Cheryl Bird
Program Executive Director
Contact: Daemen College Center for Sustainable
Communities and Civic Engagement
(716) 839-8489
cbird@daemen.edu
This month, Daemen College, with support from the Dollar General Literacy Foundation, will again conduct a reading camp for students from Buffalo’s Seneca Babcock neighborhood. The two-week camp will run from July 18 – 28, and is supported by $2450 awarded to Cheryl Bird, Executive Director of the Daemen Center for Sustainable Communities & Civic Engagement (CSCCE), from the Dollar General Literacy Foundation Summer Reading Program Grant program.
Daemen has also received a $1250 grant from the Josephine Goodyear Foundation Fund at the Community Foundation for Greater Buffalo for the Reading Camp.
The camp will be led by Bird together with over 60 volunteers from throughout WNY, and including a group of 23 who will be traveling from Duluth, Georgia, to participate. The volunteers – community members, parents, and students – will assist with preparing school supplies, back packs, classroom activities, and a graduation event.
“The purpose of the camp is to engage 70 low-income children in reading activities during the summer months so that they are better prepared for the next academic year,” Bird stated. “We will serve children in first through eighth grade who are identified as struggling with serious reading difficulties. Seneca Babcock is one of the lowest income neighborhoods in Buffalo; it is a community that Daemen College has assisted in many ways for more than a decade.
“Participating students will receive backpacks with new school supplies at the end of the camp. Daemen College has successfully run this program since 2003, and has served over 900 children to date. Offering the reading camps is part of our goal to prepare students from Seneca Babcock for academic success.”
While students who participate in the reading camp are enrolled primarily in three schools – Southside Elementary, Lorraine Academy, and Discovery Academy – the camp will take place at the Seneca Street Church in Seneca Babcock. A final celebration and graduation will be held on the last day of the camp.
This is the second recent grant Daemen has received from Dollar General’s Literacy Foundation. In 2009, the College received $2,610, awarded to the Reynolds Center for Special Education and After-School Programs at Daemen. The Center and its executive director, Elizabeth Wright, used the funds to acquire ONfinity, a learning tool for children who struggle with reading. The portable, interactive whiteboard system transforms any flat surface into a touch screen; it is estimated that over 100 students per year now use this equipment in after-school and summer programs offered by the College.