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The Value of Philanthropy – Teaching Kids to Give Back
“Children are the world’s most valuable resource and its best hope for the future.”
– John F. Kennedy
Everything boils down to education. When we teach our children to value themselves, they learn to value others. Teaching kids to care is the greatest gift that we can bestow upon them. It helps them understand how to balance their own needs with the needs of those around them – family, friends, and teachers.
There is nothing more gratifying than seeing kids helping kids: our young fifth graders, the All-Star Givers, at Washington Heights-based P.S. 152 raised over $1100 from spare change as part of Common Cents Penny Harvest, the largest child philanthropy program in the US. Our Teen Action Club collected almost 1,000 cans of food for local food pantries, winning them free airline tickets, which they used to fly to Las Vegas, not for a part to help another nonprofit clean up graffiti and clear our parking lots! They understand firsthand that they can make a difference when they work together.
At The Children’s Aid Society , we strongly encourage our youth to engage in philanthropic efforts, through community school programs and teen initiatives, like our Bronx Youth Council, where middle and high school students actively participate in neighborhood issues that directly affect them. Issues such as gang violence, mental health, education and hunger are some of the problems they face in their community. Each student chooses a specific issue, makes it his or her own personal cause and, at the end of each year presents a recommended plan of action to peers, teachers and government officials alike.
“You give but little when you give of your possessions.
It is when you give of yourself that you truly give.”
Philanthropy and community involvement builds character, fosters a strong sense of compassion, and transforms young people into just and benevolent leaders. And – it simply feels good to help others! But our kids have already figured that one out!
ChildrensAidNYC: Can't wait to see how much Madison Avenue loves kids! Join us Dec 6 for our Miracle on Madison fundraiser: http://bit.ly/3pCOge #ShopMiracle
ChildrensAidNYC: This could be really cool -- @RippleReader is a service that lets parents, grandparents, etc., "read" books to their kids from a distance!
ChildrensAidNYC: We're giving the pundits of tomorrow a head start! Our "Radio Rookies" program teaches kids to talk about tough issues: http://bit.ly/gww85
ChildrensAidNYC: See how you can promote speech and language development in young children: http://bit.ly/22DQA0
ChildrensAidNYC: Speech pathologist Stephanie Sigal met w/ our Early Childhood staff to promote language development. See what happened: http://bit.ly/1ddCmX
ChildrensAidNYC: @richlombino How did the ArtWalk turn out?
ChildrensAidNYC: Hey NYC! @groundworkinc is organizing Groundwork After Work, for "socially-conscious professionals" ~ http://pingg.com/0ER0
ChildrensAidNYC: How important are the first 5 years of your child's life when it comes to speech & language? VERY. http://bit.ly/22DQA0
Stephanie Sigal excites Early Childhood training staff about promoting speech and language development
On November 10th, Stephanie Sigal, a New York City speech – language pathologist spoke to a group of over 20 early childhood teachers, directors and special needs coordinators about how speech and language develop over the first five years of life and strategies to promote children’s speech and language skills.
image courtesy of www.sayandplayfamily.com
Stephanie spoke about the benefits of eliminating habits that encourage poor oral motor skills (e.g., sippy cups, bottles, pacifiers) and the importance of encouraging language skills through the right level of modeling for each child. She discussed the importance of not only reading to children every day, but how important it is to choose books that will encourage speech and language skills. Stephanie pointed out how crucial it is for babies, toddlers and even school age children to be read to face-to-face so that they can observe facial expressions. Our faces, and especially our mouths should always be visible to children in conversation.
Staff left the training excited and referred to the workshop as “eye opening.” Many of the participants, who are parents themselves, spoke about how they would immediately begin to incorporate Stephanie’s tips into their work with children at home and at school.
Stephanie Sigal MA CCC-SLP offers speech, language and oral motor therapy for babies, toddlers and school age children in Manhattan. She specializes in assessing and treating articulation disorders from an oral motor perspective. Stephanie’s methods improve speech clarity and resolve problems such as tongue thrusting and drooling. Stephanie also has family-friendly language programs to help young children maximize language skills.
You can learn more about Stephanie and her Manhattan-based speech therapy company Say and Play, at: http://www.sayandplayfamily.com/
ChildrensAidNYC: Save the date and help save a child. Miricle on Madison on December 6 from 12-5. See how you can make a difference: http://bit.ly/Nhxiy
ChildrensAidNYC: It's almost that time of year when fashion & shopping unite to help children: Miracle on Madison http://bit.ly/3pCOge #ShopMiracle
ChildrensAidNYC: There's an Art Walk tomorrow benefiting Coalition for the Homeless & @yourfirststep - celebs, art help the homeless heal http://j.mp/47Z6xv
ChildrensAidNYC: RT @kanter: Check out the Charter for Compassion http://bit.ly/oDXGD -- and follow them: @TheCharter
ChildrensAidNYC: Do you know the warning signs of domestic violence? http://bit.ly/409LhJ
What’s On Your REAL Holiday Wish List?
This holiday season, we all want to treat ourselves to something special — maybe some new jewelry, a chic pair of shoes or that “must-have” toy for the kids…
But what if your wishes could make a REAL difference, not just in your own home, but in the lives of children who need a lot more than just a new toy? If you had that kind of magic at your fingertips… What would YOU wish for?
Well, now you have that magic.
Join us for the Miracle on Madison on December 6, 2009 from 12-5 pm to fulfill your wish list and ours. The Children’s Aid Society will receive 20% of the day’s proceeds from all participating stores, and that money will provide vital health services to the underserved children in NYC!
Plus, before December 6, make a comment here and let us know what your REAL holiday wish list would look like. Because we all love new shoes, sweaters, games and toys — but some wishes on our list can’t fit in a gift box.
This holiday season, help your gifts go just a little farther. Save the Date and Save a Child.
Opening Up a Crowded Home After a Sister’s Death
The New York Times Neediest Cases Fund has recently featured this Children’s Aid story about a family opening up their crowded home after a sister’s death. Below is an excerpt from the original article.
Felicia Fields, center, and her family. Clockwise from top left, Johnathon, Jasmyn, Barron Smith, Tichina, Christopher and Justin.
The Fields household is jam-packed.
Pots and pans are stacked atop the kitchen table. The refrigerator is close to overflowing. Crates of clothes cram the living room, and there are not enough beds for the family of seven living in the tiny two-bedroom, one-bathroom apartment in a housing project in gritty Morrisania in the Bronx.
“It’s overcrowded,” admitted Felicia Fields, 38, the head of the family. “But we don’t stress on it as long as we have love.”
The sudden death of Ms. Fields’s sister, Carol, from septicemia in June 2008 brought two more children into a space that already included Ms. Fields’s children — Justin, 10; Jasmyn, 14; and Johnathon, 19 — and her fiancé, Barron Smith. The fathers of Tichina Fields, 17, and Christopher Fields, 8, declined to take an active parenting role after Carol Fields’s death, so Felicia Fields moved them from their apartment in Riverdale, and was eventually granted full guardianship.
“I’m just grateful to keep them together, because I couldn’t imagine a world without them,” Ms. Fields said. “I couldn’t let them go to foster care.”
Tichina, a straight-A student and a fledgling writer who became afflicted with cerebral palsy after suffering from bleeding in her brain after her premature birth, and Christopher, a train and bridge buff who has autism and attention deficit disorder, refused to eat for a while after the move. Christopher told a school counselor he wanted to go to heaven with his mother. But eventually they became enmeshed in the family fabric, wordlessly tapping away on their Game Boys alongside their cousins and swapping computer time for the completion of their chores.
To learn how you can make a difference for this family and many others, please link over to The New York Times Neediest Cases Fund or contact:
The New York Times Neediest Cases Fund
230 West 41st Street
Suite 1300
New York, NY 10036
(800) 381-0075
Photo courtesy of Ayman Oghanna for The New York Times
ChildrensAidNYC: RT @ChildrensAidNow: The Center for American Progress examines community schools, including CAS schools in NYC, in a... http://bit.ly/HChhk
ChildrensAidNow: The Center for American Progress examines community schools, including CAS schools in NYC, in a new report, http://bit.ly/HChhk
In an Emergency, the Neediest Cases Fund Provides Relief
The following is an excerpt from the November 6th issue of The New York Times:
By KARI HASKELL Published: November 6, 2009The New York Times Neediest Cases Fund begins its 2009-2010 campaign today. The tradition of helping those who are struggling to provide for themselves and their families began 98 years ago, after Adolph S. Ochs, then the publisher of The New York Times, encountered a shabbily dressed man who was out of work and down on his luck. Their exchange inspired Mr. Ochs to begin printing profiles about the city’s worst-off citizens in The New York Times. Since then, readers have responded to the articles printed every holiday season by sending in contributions by mail and, more recently, online at nycharties.org. All told, the Fund has raised over $244 million.
Below, the seven agencies supported by the Neediest Cases Fund describe how readers’ donations bring stability to people’s lives in times of crisis.
Children’s Aid SocietyA child walks to school without a coat in winter and does not want to worry his jobless mother about it. A widowed father chooses to use his reduced wages to put food on the family table, but doesn’t know where to turn when he receives a utility shut-off notice. These are family situations that come to The Children’s Aid Society on a daily basis.
To learn how you can make a difference, please link over to The New York Times Needist Cases Fund or contact:
The New York Times Neediest Cases Fund
230 West 41st Street
Suite 1300
New York, NY 10036
(800) 381-0075
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