On Wednesday, the Corporation for National and Community
Service (CNCS)
announced $205 million in grants to fund 288 AmeriCorps
programs and the service of 43,000 AmeriCorps members nationally. Providence Children’s Museum is one of only two organizations in Rhode
Island to receive full federal funding in the highly competitive 2014
grant cycle.
The Museum’s program was awarded a 3-year
grant and will receive $159,600 annually from the CNCS for 12 full-time
AmeriCorps members. The Museum has been an AmeriCorps site since 1997
and has served over 20,000 children through innovative outreach to
inner-city schools, community centers and Head Start programs. With
this funding, the Museum will welcome its 19th AmeriCorps team in the
fall.
Designed to help close the achievement gap between advantaged
and disadvantaged children, the Museum’s AmeriCorps program provides
stimulating interactive learning experiences not available to most
low-income children. Under the guidance of Museum education staff,
AmeriCorps members work to inspire a lifetime love of learning,
providing enriched learning experiences for all greater Providence Head
Start preschoolers and conducting Learning Clubs for inner-city
school-age children.
The Museum’s 2014-15 AmeriCorps members will:
- Implement engaging play-based classroom activities that
encourage problem solving in all 56 Children’s Friend Head Start
classrooms, serving 1,000 3- to 5-year-olds and supporting Head Start’s
goal of improving school readiness.
- Guide Head Start children on classroom field trips to the Museum for hands-on play and learning.
- Deliver Learning Clubs – hands-on STEM (Science, Technology,
Engineering and Mathematics) enrichment activities with a focus on math
– for 200 low-income 2nd-4th graders in after-school and summer
programs at the Boys & Girls Club and Highlander Charter School in
South Providence.
- Support recess by facilitating play-based activities at Highlander Charter School and Mary E. Fogarty Elementary School.
- Welcome all Head Start and Learning Club program
participants and their families to Family Nights at the Children’s
Museum, where they receive free year-long Museum passes.
“Bringing hands-on fun and learning to thousands of disadvantaged kids
each year, AmeriCorps greatly increases the Museum’s capacity to serve
families who need it most,” said Museum Executive Director Janice
O’Donnell.
Click here for more information about the Museum’s AmeriCorps program.
Federal funding from the Corporation for National and Community
Service must be matched by private support. The Museum’s AmeriCorps
program is also supported by Serve Rhode Island and currently receives
additional funding from Amgen Foundation; Bristol County Savings
Charitable Foundation; The John Clarke Trust, Bank of America, N.A.,
Co-Trustee; Cox Charities of New England Fund; CVS Caremark Charity
Classic; Frank B. Hazard General Charity Fund, Bank of America, N.A.,
Trustee; Sovereign Bank Foundation; Textron Charitable Trust;
UnitedHealthcare of New England; and donors to the Museum's Annual
Campaign.