GEAR UP (Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs) is the Bray Center's pre-college preparation program serving students in grades six through 12. For close to 10 years, nearly 200 students annually receive a wide variety of support and mentoring in the effort to prepare them for college entrance upon high school graduation. The end goal combines enrollment in a post-secondary education facility (four-year university, two-year college, technical school, etc.) with the resources (grants and scholarships) necessary to pay all costs. All they have to do is the school work to get there. Parents are engaged as well as school personnel, creating a team of support for each youth. Eligibility requirements include low-middle family income qualification for free or reduced lunch, and willingness to participate.
Starting in sixth grade, students and parents are introduced to ideas about what courses to select as electives to best prepare them for the pre-college coursework in high school. They are given opportunities to visit college campuses, and some stay for a week during the summer in dorms - attending workshops in college classrooms. The physical and emotional experience of being "in college" plants seeds which are near impossible to contain. Also in middle schools, agency GEAR UP staff present bi-weekly Life Skills sessions in the schools during lunch/study period. Although elementary age students aren't technically enrolled in this program, GEAR UP staff also drop-by elemntary school lunch periods just to be seen and to interact with up and coming GEAR UP students. For all on-site school activities, school staff are extremely supportive and take the greatest care to insure proper district guidelines are adhered to.
Once in high school, GEAR UP program participants are steered not just toward completing the basic requirements for high school graduation. Details of the over-and-above requirements including Geometry, and extra courses in foreign language, literature, etc. for college entrance are emphasized. Building a resume of extra curriculars and community service is encouraged and facilitated based on student interests. For those who are more likely to attend a two-year college or technical school, another focus is designed to accomodate the pursuit of their skills and talents. Students who complete the Bray Center's GEAR UP program achieve a 97% high school graduation rate.
During their Junior year, GEAR UP students are encouraged to sign up for and take the ACT test. Preparation workshops are offered to help achieve the best outcome for these test scores. Waivers for the cost of these tests are arranged for active GEAR UP students.
As graduation approaches, Bray Center GEAR UP staff meets with students and parents to help identify where they will apply for college and how to complete the application process. Come January of the Senior year, financial aid paperwork begins. From assistance for parents needing to file federal tax returns to completing the FAFSA (Pell Grant), and other grant and scholarship forms, the Bray Center GEAR UP staff is able to access enough resources for parents to be able to pay for full tuition and expenses for up to five years of full-time college enrollment for their child.
GEAR UP is a federally funded (US Department of Education) national program (in several states), which is administered in Wisconsin through the state Department of Public Instruction at seven locations state-wide.
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Monday, February 9, 2009
Holistic Man
The latest Bray Center program development..."Holistic Man" is as much a long running effort as it is a new program because it now has a measurable structure to it. For 15 years, Bray Center staff has been fielding nearly daily inquiries from among young men, mostly late teens and early twenties, ranging from ages 14 through 24. They ask for assistance to find work, to finish high school/GED requirements, to get or recover a driver's license to be able to get to a job, to manage family dynamics/relationships/childcare/etc., and to find their niche in society, their personal strength, their inner spiritual base. This year, the Bray Center has these young men complete intake forms identifying demographic data, personal situations in academics and/or the justice system, goals which define their Individual Action Plan. Staff provides encouragement, guidance and mentorship, daily measures of the steps of action identified for success.
There is no traditional funding for "Holistic Man" as of yet, so Bray Center staff operate as volunteers in the effort. This target population is maybe the least attractive to program funding sources, even though their plight affects so many; their children/our children, their sense of value/our moral value, their future/our future. We just couldn't wait any longer to begin in a structured and measurable manner to help address these issues facing a growing number of young men who find themselves in a threatening environment, both of their own making and of a society which seems to have them pegged as failures. The program goal is to assist as many as possible through a combination of high expectations (taking steps to help themselves, leaving the street activities, enrolling in schooling/training of some kind, taking responsibility for self and community) and authentic encouragement/guidance. For the record, young women have always asked for and received attention as well.
We'll keep you posted as to the success of the program.
There is no traditional funding for "Holistic Man" as of yet, so Bray Center staff operate as volunteers in the effort. This target population is maybe the least attractive to program funding sources, even though their plight affects so many; their children/our children, their sense of value/our moral value, their future/our future. We just couldn't wait any longer to begin in a structured and measurable manner to help address these issues facing a growing number of young men who find themselves in a threatening environment, both of their own making and of a society which seems to have them pegged as failures. The program goal is to assist as many as possible through a combination of high expectations (taking steps to help themselves, leaving the street activities, enrolling in schooling/training of some kind, taking responsibility for self and community) and authentic encouragement/guidance. For the record, young women have always asked for and received attention as well.
We'll keep you posted as to the success of the program.
Sunday, February 8, 2009
Activities & Services
As an independent non-profit 501(c)3 social service agency and not a city run center, the Bray Center relies on grants and donations to operate. The programs described above are in large part funded, helping to pay for staff time, supplies, utilities, etc. Then there are the activities and services we provide the community which are not officially funded, in fact the staff time would be considered volunteerism and the supplies and other costs to provide this support must be absorbed by small fundraisers and unexpected donations. The Bray Center can be rented for private activities during hours in which official program activities would not conflict. In fact, rentals are a significant necessity to pay for the "unfunded" activities and services of the agency.
Significant in the non-funded area of Bray Center activities and services are the partnerships which have developed over the years with Department of Corrections Transitional Employment (serving recently released non-violent offenders still on probation) and Senior Employment (serving senior citizens in need of employment) programs. Through these efforts, those organizations place their clients at the Bray Center, to be trained, mentored and supervised in the area of employability skills development and eventual job placement in the community. Bray Center Staff facilitate the basics of employment expectations, time and task supervision, dealing with every day challenges in the lives of those placed with us in order to help them overcome any barriers to their success. Ultimately, these clients and the organizations which place them depend on us to implement the program. Clients are paid by the DOC & SER programs. The Bray Center receives no monetary compensation. It has become evident over the years, that increasing numbers of these placed clients are sometimes the parents and sometimes siblings of the children we serve. This of course affords us even greater access to the avenues of success for program children and their families.
Daily information and referral services provided by the Bray Center benefit callers and visitors who seek assistance with food, housing, employment, social justice, counseling, transportation, transitions of many kinds, and more. Daily crisis intervention occurs whether staff is called on to mediate conflicts or emergencies within families, on the street corners, or in school settings.
When food supplies are available during the summer, 50-75 neighborhood children up to age 18 are served lunch Monday through Thursday. The Bray Center staff pick up or prepare the lunches each day, transport and store them until it is time to serve the children. Without the help of some neighborhood parents and teen volunteers, the agency staff would be responsible for the entire summer lunch operation.
Holidays, block parties, cook outs, wheelbarrow races, and side walk chalk competitions coincide with neighborhood spelling bees, spring clean-up days, and flower planting. A recycling education plan is in the works to focus agency staff, visitors and neighbors on the importance of the new three Rs; Reduce, Reuse, Recycle to go along with the classic Reading, Writing and Arithmatic, which the structured agency programs continue to promote.
UW-Extension Nutrition Experts and Junior Master Gardner programmers from other agencies call upon Bray Center staff to help recruit, enroll, and supervise their work to provide special activities for the children. Many church ministries use agency staff and facilities to reach out to children and families in the neighborhood. Other agencies send their staff to the Bray Center to help reach their specific target populations with program services and benefits. Area child care centers bring their young clients to the Bray Center to use the gym (air conditioned in the summer and heated in the winter). So to, the public school down the block finds the Bray Center gym to be more conducive to teaching their physical education students than their own space.
Families and community groups depend on the Bray Center for a place to hold events, meetings, and celebrations. Individuals rely on access to things like a copy machine and fax service to help facilitate submissions of medical records and utility subsidies. The Bray Center, its open doors and attentive staff assure that all these community needs receive the best attention possible.
Significant in the non-funded area of Bray Center activities and services are the partnerships which have developed over the years with Department of Corrections Transitional Employment (serving recently released non-violent offenders still on probation) and Senior Employment (serving senior citizens in need of employment) programs. Through these efforts, those organizations place their clients at the Bray Center, to be trained, mentored and supervised in the area of employability skills development and eventual job placement in the community. Bray Center Staff facilitate the basics of employment expectations, time and task supervision, dealing with every day challenges in the lives of those placed with us in order to help them overcome any barriers to their success. Ultimately, these clients and the organizations which place them depend on us to implement the program. Clients are paid by the DOC & SER programs. The Bray Center receives no monetary compensation. It has become evident over the years, that increasing numbers of these placed clients are sometimes the parents and sometimes siblings of the children we serve. This of course affords us even greater access to the avenues of success for program children and their families.
Daily information and referral services provided by the Bray Center benefit callers and visitors who seek assistance with food, housing, employment, social justice, counseling, transportation, transitions of many kinds, and more. Daily crisis intervention occurs whether staff is called on to mediate conflicts or emergencies within families, on the street corners, or in school settings.
When food supplies are available during the summer, 50-75 neighborhood children up to age 18 are served lunch Monday through Thursday. The Bray Center staff pick up or prepare the lunches each day, transport and store them until it is time to serve the children. Without the help of some neighborhood parents and teen volunteers, the agency staff would be responsible for the entire summer lunch operation.
Holidays, block parties, cook outs, wheelbarrow races, and side walk chalk competitions coincide with neighborhood spelling bees, spring clean-up days, and flower planting. A recycling education plan is in the works to focus agency staff, visitors and neighbors on the importance of the new three Rs; Reduce, Reuse, Recycle to go along with the classic Reading, Writing and Arithmatic, which the structured agency programs continue to promote.
UW-Extension Nutrition Experts and Junior Master Gardner programmers from other agencies call upon Bray Center staff to help recruit, enroll, and supervise their work to provide special activities for the children. Many church ministries use agency staff and facilities to reach out to children and families in the neighborhood. Other agencies send their staff to the Bray Center to help reach their specific target populations with program services and benefits. Area child care centers bring their young clients to the Bray Center to use the gym (air conditioned in the summer and heated in the winter). So to, the public school down the block finds the Bray Center gym to be more conducive to teaching their physical education students than their own space.
Families and community groups depend on the Bray Center for a place to hold events, meetings, and celebrations. Individuals rely on access to things like a copy machine and fax service to help facilitate submissions of medical records and utility subsidies. The Bray Center, its open doors and attentive staff assure that all these community needs receive the best attention possible.
Sunday, February 1, 2009
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