Volunteers come out for new tutoring program
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Jennifer Kho
WESTSIDE -- About 40 volunteers signed up last week to serve a helping
of education to youngsters at the Someone Cares Soup Kitchen.
“I really want to help,” said Krissy Raiger, a 15-year-old volunteer
who attended the Someone Cares Soup Kitchen’s Tutoring Program volunteer
orientation Thursday. “I just really want to make a difference in
people’s lives. I really want to give.” The kitchen and Think Together,
which oversees the Shalimar Learning Center, are collaborating to open a
new learning center at the kitchen Feb. 26.
The new center was going to be called the Someone Cares Learning
Center but has been renamed the Soup Kitchen’s Tutoring Program.
Shalimar provides tutoring and academic help for Westside students in
first through 12th grades, and the Someone Cares Learning Center will
follow the same routine, said Laura Johnson, executive director of
Shalimar.
“We’re going to be helping the kids with their homework, and we will
have an arts day and a cultural day with music or painting,” said
Johnson, who will also be the executive director of the new learning
center. “We will pattern that after Shalimar. The only difference will be
the fact that the kids are going to be fed at the soup kitchen.”
The soup kitchen plans to greet the children with a snack when they
arrive after school and to send them off with a sack meal to take with
them when their homework is done, she said.
Merle Hatleberg, founder of the soup kitchen, said she thinks the two
organizations will work well together to help reach children on the north
side of 18th Street.
“The kids that can’t get to the Shalimar Learning Center will have a
very easy time to get here,” she said. “The main reason we have so many
people that come to the soup kitchen to eat is because of a lack of
education. If we can educate the children, maybe we can break the cycle.”
The learning center is aiming to attract 80 volunteers and is planning
to serve 35 children initially, Johnson said.
Aside from searching for volunteers, learning center staff members are
trying to gather books, paper, pencils and other supplies so it may spend
the next week getting the center set up, she said.
“The students are coming,” Johnson said. “They will be here Feb. 26,
and we will be ready.”
Krissy Raiger certainly seemed prepared Thursday.”I’ve always been
interested in volunteering and have through school, but haven’t found the
right place to volunteer myself,” she said. “I’m going to try this out
because I’m interested in the different variety of people they have come
in, and I think it would be great to have such an impact on little kids.”
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