All posts by Hearts & Homes for Youth

The value of reading together

reading-across-americaReading is a fundamental tool to function in society and a vital skill to succeed in school and the workplace. Reading is one of the ways we learn and discover. At Hearts & Homes, we believe reading together is a great way to spend time with your kids, support their development, and build a stronger relationship.

Reading to toddler or preschool-age children, especially between the ages of two and five, is critical for their development. Reading to your kids can help them develop basic speech skills, communication skills, logical reasoning skills, ability to concentrate, memory retention, and a higher aptitude for learning.

The importance and benefits of reading do not end. Throughout our lives, reading fosters our imagination, introduces us to new ideas, and empowers us.

Reading is good and it is a great way to spend time with your kids. We suggest you that ask your son or daughter what they are reading, or ask them what they think would be a great book to read. After reading the same book, you can discuss the story, the characters, the issues that came up, and how the characters dealt with challenges.

Reading books with your kids is an opportunity to spend time together, enjoy each other’s company, have something to talk about, develop a ritual, and maintain open lines of communication while your kids grow up.

Check out the links below to read about family book clubs and to learn more about how you can start your own group!

Kemp Mill tours the nation’s capital

FullSizeRenderIn early December, the young men at Kemp Mill Group Home for Boys were taken to Washington, D.C. to visit historic memorials. Led by Counselors Rodney Henderson and Roger Smith, the boys visited the Lincoln Memorial, the Washington Monument, the MLK Jr. Monument, and the Korean War Memorial.

The boys were grateful for the trip; for all of them, it was their first time being in Washington, D.C. Before the day visit to the capital finished, the boys were already asking counselors to plan another trip to visit the Smithsonian museums, especially the National Air and Space Museum and National Museum of Natural History.

The trip was a spur of the moment decision by staff, to get the youth outside and give them an opportunity to learn about the nation’s capital and see some historic sites.

“These type of activities are important because they enhance our residents’learning experience as they study American history in the classroom,” said Mr. Henderson. “We want our boys to grasp the opportunities to learn, that are all around them, and for them to be inspired by the world as they make plans for their futures.”

Mr. Henderson explained that these outings and other unique experiences are opportunities for the boys to realize how many possibilities are in front of them. He also hopes that the boys learn more about community values and team building from the experiences of travelling as a group.

Food Lion Supports Hearts & Homes

FullSizeRender (2)Food Lion donated a gift certificate to Hearts & Homes for Youth on Wednesday afternoon at the Robert Oliver Place Food Lion in Columbia, MD. The donation came after community relations director Caitlin Buckley submitted a  request for support at the store.

The managers and employees at Robert Oliver Place Food Lion were glad to support Hearts & Homes for Youth and build another partnership in the community.

facesOfHunger_copy.v-2-2-5533-21328Food Lion strives to be a good neighbor and responsible corporate citizen in the communities it serves. An example of their dedication to community welfare is the “Groceries for Good” campaign Food Lion is holding through March 17. Through the campaign, when customers use their MVP card to buy five participating items, Food Lion will help provide five meals to local food banks.

Over 800 specially marked participating products in the “Groceries for Good” campaign are available for customers to buy and 100 percent of the donations benefit Feeding America. Feeding America is the leading domestic hunger-relief charity in the United States.

Food lion aims to provide 500 million meals by the end of 2020 to help solve the issue of hunger that affects many  people; so far Food Lion has donated nearly 600 million meals through in-store campaigns like “Groceries for Good,” through its food donation program, and through volunteerism.

Spring Forward: Upcoming Events

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Hearts & Homes on the Hill

On Wednesday, March 4th, from 11:00am to 1:00pm Hearts & Homes is hosting an information session in Room 170, Lowe House Building, Annapolis. Come join us for lunch and learn about our services, our kids, and how you can get involved. Food and refreshments will be provided!

Hearts & Homes for Youth is an organization dedicated to helping victimized youth. Since our founding over 50 years ago, we have served over 40,000 youth at our shelters, foster homes, and programs located across the state of Maryland. We invite you to come learn more about our organization and how you can make a difference in the life of a child.

Girls on the Green Golf Tournament

Friday, June 19, 2015
9:00am shotgun
Timbers at Troy Golf Course
Elkridge, MD

Click here to register
Fee $125 per player $500 per foursome

Join us for a fun day on the green on Friday, June 19, 2015 for our 4th annual Girls on the Green golf tournament “just fore women” at Timbers at Troy Golf Course in Howard County with a 9am tee off! You can see more on our Facebook page!

Other events in the community

The Junior Women’s Club of Chevy Chase is holding a charity wine tasting event on Saturday, March 21st from 7-9pm at Huckleberry Fine Art Gallery in Rockville. The proceeds from this event will benefit Hearts and Homes and A Wider Circle. Get your tickets to “Unwined”

The Rotary Club of Howard West is hosting their Charter Night Celebration on Saturday, March 14, from 6-10pm! Enjoy food, drinks, great company, and entertainment! Click here to register

There are many like-minded organizations holding golf tournaments this Spring. Check them out at the Maryland State Golf Associations Charity Corner

A Wider Circle will have their 2015 National Conference on Ending Poverty on Saturday, March 28, 2015 from 10:00am to 4:00pm at the Washington Convention Center. http://www.sjcs.org/careers-at-sjcs/marketing-and-fundraising-manager

St. John’s Community Services is looking for a Marketing and Fundraising Manager. If you or someone you know is interested, click here to apply. Join a great group of people working for a great cause!

Hearts & Homes Information Session at the Capital

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Please join us

Wednesday, March 4th
11:00am – 1:00pm
Lowe House Building, Room 170

Snacks and refreshments provided

Hearts & Homes for Youth is an organization dedicated to helping victimized youth. Since our founding over 50 years ago, we have served over 40,000 youth at our shelters, foster homes, and programs located across the state of Maryland. We invite you to come learn more about our organization and how you can make a difference in the life of a child.

Hearts & Homes staff look forward to speaking with your about our youth, our programs, and opportunities to get engaged.

If you have any questions, please contact Caitlin Buckley at cbuckley@heartsandhomes.org

Princess Party

PP-230x300Join us on July 17, 2015 for our annual Princess Party! The event is an opportunity for the girls and young women of Hearts & Homes for Youth to pick an outfit, get dressed up, and feel like princesses!

Hasn’t every female, at one time or another, dreamed of being “Princess for a Day”? The young ladies of HHY have that experience thanks to Susan Davis, wife of devoted HHY Board Member Larry Davis!

“I was just purging, going through my closet, and I found I had dresses,” Davis recalls. “A lot of them had tags on them, and I thought, I can do something with these dresses.”

All of that turned into Princess Party – and an entire office floor transformed into a shopping mall, with not only gowns and shoes and jewelry, but also volunteers to do hair, makeup, and even teach the girls “the walk.” Click here to read more!

At the Princess Party, our young women pick a dress or two, matching shoes and jewelry. Their makeup, hair, and nails are done by local business professionals who volunteer their time. The young women enjoy a delicious assortment of food and attention from all the guests, staff, and volunteers at the Princess Party!

At this event, Hearts and Homes is filled with giggles, happiness, and young women who felt beautiful, confident, and immeasurable self-worth.

The care and attention the volunteers afforded to our young women is priceless! If you would like to get involved, contact Vicki Valle at vicki@heartsandhomes.org 

Kings of Style Party

10303815_10153030538727112_496461201850301520_n-300x219Join us this August for our annual Kings of Style Party! The event is an opportunity for the boys and young men of Hearts & Homes for Youth to pick an outfit, get dressed up, and become kings of their own style!

We hope that the youth leave the party with a fresh sense of confidence and self worth, in addition to formal attire that they can wear to future events and job interviews!

There are many ways you can get involved, from donating gently used suits, shoes, and accessories, to being the dinner sponsor, to volunteering at the event and meeting our boys! If you would like to get involved, contact Vicki Valle at vicki@heartsandhomes.org

Most Valuable Kids

IMG_2500Hearts & Homes is grateful to Most Valuable Kids (MVK) for giving our youth tickets for various games! Recently, the Hearts & Homes youth at Kemp Mill Group Home for Boys enjoyed a Georgetown basketball game!

Hearts & Homes depends on generosity from the community to provide boys and girls with unique recreational activities and outings that support their growth and development.

MVK is an organization with locations across the country that offers children’s organizations access to professional and collegiate sports and entertainment events through an online ticket donation and reward system. MVK believe that sports and entertainment provide a positive source of inspiration for children in a world where there are many negative alternatives.

MVK distributes unused tickets to underprivileged children, allowing them to experience the thrill of live events! MVK focuses on giving the opportunities to boys and girls, 18 and under, through the numerous organizations that focus on children in low-income and under-served households.

Finding peace in posture

10990879_10152781085648789_5523273683796100040_nSky House Yoga is a donation-based yoga studio and wellness collective in Silver Spring. Sky House Yoga offers all of their services at donation-based price ranges, ensuring that no one is ever turned down or priced out. Courtney Boyce is a 200-hour Registered Yoga Teacher who recently volunteered her services to the girls at our Helen Smith Group Home.

Courtney chose to volunteer her services to Hearts & Homes because she wanted to focus on communities where yoga is not readily available or accessible, such as younger and under-served populations. She was inspired when she reflected upon how much she would have benefited from yoga in her teenage years. She said, “The need at that age for what yoga teaches – health, loving yourself, treating yourself well, learning to love your body, and being comfortable and confident in who you are – is essential. That is a skill that we as young women, unfortunately, have to learn.”

From the yoga sessions, Courtney hopes for the girls to realize they need to make time for themselves when dealing with stress, trauma, or anything they feel is out of their control. She hopes they understand that they are perfect as they are, and that with a stronger sense of self, they can more easily deal with anything that comes their way. She hopes they will realize that peace is already inside us, we just need to connect with it.

“Teaching the girls has reinforced that we are all human, we all have things going on, and that we all need love and support. No matter where you come from or what you do, we humans need to be kind and love one another. Having an open-mind and open-heart makes anything possible. We all have many things to be thankful for.”

Courtney says she has been surprised by how open, energetic, and interested in learning the Helen Smith girls have been during the sessions. She has enjoyed getting to know the girls individually, commenting that “they are all so different from one another, yet at the core, they all have the same needs and desires.”

Courtney hopes that in the coming sessions the girls continue to find peace and to accept themselves as they are. “Even if they never go into posture or get into yoga, if they remember that someone once told them stopping for a moment to clear their minds and open their hearts has numerous benefits, I will have succeeded.”

Helping Homeless LGBT Youth

Damamli MomAs homelessness continues to top the list as one of the nation’s biggest and most expensive problems, many seem to forget that for as many homeless adults that are on the streets, there are the faces of youth also looking for a place to call home. The thought of the homeless youth seems to confuse some people; “If they’re homeless, at least they are with their family,” or “There must be someplace they can go, some family member will take them in. Who would sit by and let a kid live on the streets?”

The harsh reality is that many youth that are homeless are not choosing a life on the streets, but have been forced to leave their homes due to their families not being excepting of the lifestyle. One group that this rings true for is LGBT youth.

According to study that appeared in families in society, one out of every five homeless youth (20 percent) is LGBT-identified. LGBT youth also suffer victimization on the streets at a rate much higher than non-LGBT-identified groups.

When youth up to age 21 can no longer remain in their homes due to their birth families being unable or unwilling to care for them, they are sometimes (depending on the circumstances) able to receive help from the state, by entering into the custody of the Department of Social Services (DSS) or the Department of Juvenile Services (DJS), through placement in group homes, independent living programs and foster care. Youth who do not receive services from these agencies are often left to fend for themselves and vie for the few resources available to homeless youth.

One such program, the Transitional Living Program, a four bed semi-independent living apartment operated by Hearts & Homes for Youth and located in Prince Georges County, Maryland services homeless youth ages 16 to 21 from any jurisdiction in Maryland. The program is self-admitting, meaning that any homeless youth that do not have other resources available to them through being in the custody of DSS or DJS can receive services from the program. The need for such resources for homeless youth is very high, and even higher in the LGBT community, yet available resources in no way match the need; programs such as this one are in dire need of financial partners so services can be expanded.

Homeless youth who do receive help from the state often face another difficult plight. Many of those adolescents identify as LGBT and just like any youth in care, are looking for a safe and loving environment. But even more, LGBT youth in care are also searching for the trusting relationship with a caregiver that will allow them to fully express who they are without the fear of rejection or ridicule. This type of relationship is something that many youth in care did not receive from their birth families and is the reason why some of the youth and up in care.

Determining an appropriate placement for a youth in care who identifies as LGBT is not always an easy task, nor one that is often done with the individual needs of the youth in the forefront. To be blunt, the amount of placements that are available to youth in care are sometime scarce, so attempting to secure placement that means all the youth’s needs can be difficult.

Placement in a group home or independent living program can be difficult due to the fact that the youth will be placed in an environment with other youth from a variety of different backgrounds, and may not be excepting of the youth’s sexual orientation. If a youth is transgender, placement is even more difficult because a youth is placed according to their assigned gender and not the gender they identify with.

Another option for placement is foster care, which can sometimes work better for LGBT youth because there is a little bit more variety and flexibility in the types of homes and foster parents available. But the search for a good foster parents is not always an easy one, especially in today’s economy.

My search for foster parents takes me many places: I advertise in local newspapers, visit neighborhood fairs and festivals, attend community meetings and post flyers. But my greatest source of referrals is people that are willing to take a greater interest in our nation’s greatest resource, our youth, and talk about the issue to everyone they know.

The kind older neighbors next door, the gay couple that you attend church with, or the single mother in your aerobics class are our foster parents; so is the quiet gentleman you ride the bus with, the retired nurse that you see from time to time when you visit your parents, and the mechanic to whom you bring your car. Our foster parents come from all walks of life and different experiences, but they all share one thing in common, they answered a call to service and changed the lives of one or more young people forever.

What I look for in foster parents are people who can handle the challenges of what can sometimes be a difficult situation, and grow from those challenges. To me, the difficult situation of a child in foster care and an LGBT adult are connected. Both groups are often stigmatized and misunderstood, and the opportunity to bring both kids together by a gay couple or single gay person becoming a foster parent to a child in need is an opportunity for both sides to provide the other party with something they may have been missing. For the foster parent, a child that they may have been wanting and have possibly been told time and time again was unattainable. And for the foster child, there would be love and support in a safe environment where they can finally be themselves.