Month: November 2016

Martin Luther King, Jr. & Willie Brown Middle School Forge New Frontiers

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The AthLife Foundation is proud to introduce the first two middle school programs partnered with our industry leading national platform: Martin Luther King Jr. Academic Middle School and Willie Brown Middle School of the San Francisco Unified School District. Both schools exhibit outstanding support for their student athletes through the creation of critical Academic Athletic Support Staff positions.  These caring adult mentors develop high impact programming that use the often untapped educational platform of sport to affect change.

It is exciting to expand our efforts to these two middle schools, as both are feeder schools to Phillip A. and Sala Burton High School’s PUMA Academy, currently in it’s third year of partnership with the AthLife Foundation.

This was made possible because of the tremendous vision of the YMCA Bayview Beacon Program and the AthLife Foundation’s Bay Area Board Members. Peter Wagner, an Academic Support Specialist, and Prasant Nukalapati, the Beacon Center Director, have been major catalysts to getting the programs up and running.

Official name: Student-Athlete Academy (S-AA)

Key Components: The Bayview Beacon’s Student-Athlete Academy is an after school program that is open to student athletes who are driven to succeed in the classroom. This year-round program supports each student by providing them with academic support, leadership skills, and motivation to build the community that surrounds them. The program offers an environment conducive for individuals to complete classwork but also provide additional help, such as tutors. Academy participants are also giving studying techniques that enable them to recognize their full potential as student athletes.

What helps make it successful?: One aspect of S-AA that differentiates it from other programs is the fact that students are able to maintain strong relationships with their athletic coaches. When the athletic coaches expect students to actively engage in the program with the help of specialized Academic Athletic Support Staff, they are able to gain access to the tools they need to succeed beyond the playing field. As a result, the achievements and sacrifices made off the field will enable them to be mentally stronger during the game as well.

Looking towards the future: One of the program’s long term goals is to have a student athlete academy in every middle and high school in the Bayview Area. The benefits of S-AA are numerous, especially during a time when students are developing study habits and understanding their ability to critically think. As a result of the program, there has been an increase in the amount of tutoring for student athletes as well as more resources for coaches to incentivize sports engagement through academic achievement. Thus, this program creates an environment where students can cultivate responsibility on and off the field and demonstrate what it means to be a student athlete. Because the AthLife Foundation is able to help fund schools, more staff can be hired to foster this academic growth. With more access to computers for MOOC engagement, electronic homework completion, and grade observation, students are more responsible for making the most out of their education. Because middle school is a crucial stage in a student’s life, academic and leadership skills are instrumental to the development of the student on and off the field.

For More Information about S-AA from the program creators click here.

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Canaries and Huskies Football Players are Hitting the Mark Off the Field

By Keith Groller of the Morning Call

Allen and Dieruff will meet for the 60th time in a high school football game Saturday afternoon at J. Birney Crum Stadium, and while there are more meaningful games in terms of championships and district seedings on this rivalry weekend, the game still means a lot to the kids on both teams.

The teams are a combined 3-15 and their District 11 playoff hopes were doused a few weeks ago.Yet, the Canaries and Huskies who keep competing, who still strive to do good things, and who know there’s a bigger picture and purpose to high school athletics beyond the standings and district rankings, deserve to be recognized.

Allen and Dieruff players continue to participate and thrive in a program sponsored by the AthLife Foundation.This is the sixth year the Allentown School District is participating with AthLife, and the results remain positive, much more so than what the scoreboard shows every week.In a nutshell, AthLife is an academic support program that works to ensure that deserving student-athletes from some of the nation’s most challenging communities can achieve in their careers long after they take off their helmets and pads for the last time.Because many Allen and Dieruff kids don’t have the family structure and financial backing that kids from other school districts may have, AthLife fills in the blanks and helps to keep kids on the right path.

“The program is still going strong,” said Melissa Roehrich, an Allen High teacher who is the adviser for the school’s SOAR program. SOAR stands for Students Overcoming Academic Roadblocks. “This is my sixth year of doing it and every year we’re more successful. A big plus is having [Allen head coach] George Clay as an ally. He preaches that academics must come first. A program like this won’t work unless you have the support of the head coach.

“Last year we had 14 seniors and nine of them went to college, including Wilberto Sicard, who is at Lehigh, two went into the military, one went into the Job Corps program and one went straight into the workforce. We’re pleased to have so many kids do well.”Clay’s Canaries have won just four games in the last five years, but he realizes that his job is much more important than merely winning games.

“AthLife is amazing because it helps our kids get an education and gives us support in places we need it,” Clay said. “Through AthLife we can provide a variety of experiences for the kids, like the Jason Garrett Camp [run by the Cowboys head coach] and other fun, educational programs. We’ve got former football players at Lehigh and Moravian and Kutztown and East Stroudsburg. AthLife teaches the kids what it takes to get there.”

Dieruff coach Kyle Beller agrees that AthLife has been a great help to him and his staff in keeping kids eligible and out of trouble.”It’s great for our kids because we have the opportunity to have tutors and mentors there to assist the kids and get them working on their grades,” Beller said. “It has been a very beneficial thing to our program. All of our kids go through it because we require them to attend study hall twice a week throughout the year.”

Beller said that there have been some exciting field trips over the years such as attending the NFL Draft when it was in New York City, and also going to watch Lehigh games.One special moment came last year when former Dieruff player Tariq Jarrah, who is a freshman at Lehigh, got to speak on behalf of 15 honorees at the AthLife Foundation’s annual conference in Philadelphia. He got to meet former NFL players at the function.

“We keep stressing to the kids that football is more than just playing a sport,” Beller said. “It can help to open doors to college and future careers. It also teaches you how to overcome adversity and just grind and get to work. It has raised our grade-point average and has done wonders for our kids.”

Roehrich said she’s not even a football fan, and doesn’t even understand all the fuss, but she cares about her kids and wants them to excel, just as Chris Smith does as Dieruff’s adviser in the Husky Leaders program.”At the college level, it’s commonplace for the athletes to get extra help with their work, and that’s whether it’s Division I, II or III program,” Roehrich said. “Colleges have support programs specific to the student-athletes, but at the high school level they don’t have that. So that’s where AthLife comes in.”

AthLife also arranges field trips to colleges and provides workshops on things like how you go through the college application process. Roehrich is aware of the struggles of the team on the field, but she stresses that no matter what happens on the scoreboard, they can still win in the classroom.

“Most of these kids will not be going on to play Division I football, but that’s OK,” she said. “Some of our young people think that sports are the only thing they can do. I want to show them that that’s not the case.

“I see it with the football kids who sometimes feel disappointed in themselves and get down because they’re not doing as well as they want to,” she added. “I try to highlight that there’s other things that they can be good at. Allentown kids can do good things, too. They just need to know that.”

Copyright © 2016, The Morning Call

http://www.mcall.com/sports/varsity/mc-aroundthevalley-1027-20161027-story.html
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