By AMERICAN NEWS SERVICE Friday, April 24, 1998
Spring break may mean beaches, bikinis and beer for some, but students participating in Break Away, a national nonprofit group that steers people to community service projects, are delivering meals to AIDS patients, teaching Native American kids and repairing the environment in Utah.
This year, Break Away has hooked up students with programs like New
York City's Gods Love We Deliver, which brings meals to homebound AIDS
patients, the Cherokee Nation's Head Start Program and Utah's Plateau
Restoration program, which works to develop solutions to damage done to
fragile terrain.
Executive director, Kevin Roberts calculates as many as 20,000 students
will participate in such breaks this spring.“Education is a central
aspect of an alternative school break,†he said.“If we are helping to
send students to Appalachia to build homes, then we need to educate
them why there is a need to build those homes there. Working directly
with the issues and problems society has is a great way for students to
understand the world better.â€
Students pay their own way and are encouraged to be as involved as
possible in arranging the details of their breaks. “We ask students to
become as invested in their trip as is possible,†said Roberts.“That
includes deciding on destinations, recruiting fellow travelers and
performing the work once they get there.â€
“We have a focus index for those looking to serve in all kinds of
fields, such as agriculture, working with children and youth, domestic
violence education, immigration and migrant workers and homelessness.â€
Roberts thinks it's a safe bet that many students receive
longer-lasting satisfaction from their community service breaks than
from lying on the beach or frequenting bars.“ One of our slogans is
that spring break lasts seven days, “alternative breaks†last a
lifetime,“ he said.
By -The American News Service
I enjoyed reading the positive stories… I am heartened by the goodness and generosity that I see in people… Keep up your good work.