 |
|
Eddie Armstrong, 1997 National YOY, has begun a foundation to provide college scholarships to minority students from single-parent households.
|
|
|
|
 |
Carolina Correa
2009-2010 National
Youth of the Year
|
A seven-year member of Boys & Girls Club of Pawtucket, R.I.,
Carolina Correa is the first Hispanic female and 63rd youth to
receive the title of National Youth of the Year and will serve a
one-year term as the national teen spokesperson for the 4.5 million
youth served annually by Boys & Girls Clubs through Club
membership and community outreach.
Correa recently graduated from Charles E. Shea High School, where
she mentored freshmen and tutored other students. She was nominated
to the City of Pawtucket’s Teen Hall of Fame, received the Rhode
Island Presidential Student of the Year Award and was inducted into
the National Honor Society of High School Scholars. She also
graduated in the top 3 percent of her class.
At her Boys & Girls Club, the young Latina learned English, met new
friends and found her niche in the aquatics program. Correa was
named most valuable swimmer three times and created a program to
teach the basics of swimming to inner city youth.
Correa has dedicated many hours to community service projects,
including tutoring immigrants who were preparing to take the U.S.
citizenship exam. An aspiring child psychologist, she now attends
Assumption College in Massachusetts.
Correa’s fellow 2009 Youth of the Year finalists are: Aneka
Billings, Boys & Girls Clubs of the Gulf Coast (Miss.); LaQuita
Grinnage, Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Milwaukee (Wis.); Christney
Kpodo, Boys & Girls Clubs of South Puget Sound (Wash.); and Tony
Spears, Boys & Girls Club of Bellville (Texas).
|