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“I can take a child who hasn’t had success in school and, using Orton-Gillingham, teach that child to read,” says FDU alumna, Ann Marie Schwartz, who was certified in the Orton-Gillingham approach — a multisensory phonics technique used to teach literacy — by FDU’s Center for Dyslexia Studies in 2000. Individuals with dyslexia typically have trouble reading in a traditional manner and struggle with understanding and comprehending words and passages — it’s a common learning disability, affecting an estimated 40 million Americans.
Schwartz, who began her career as an elementary school teacher, says that she has been able to help many children in the 22 years since she was trained in the method, and that she is passionate about spreading the word. “Children with learning disabilities are often placed in special-education classes even though many are exceptionally bright,” she says. “There should be someone in every school who has this training and can identify and help children with dyslexia.”
To that end, Schwartz and her family’s foundation have made FDU’s Center for Dyslexia Studies a philanthropic priority. “When you see parents angry, sad and agitated because their kids are struggling, and then you see the effect on the whole family as soon as their kids stop having trouble and become successful, that’s very rewarding,” she says.
The impact of training even one teacher in this method can have a profound effect.
“Gifts to the center provide scholarships for teachers to learn how to teach reading to struggling readers,” says Mary Farrell, director of the Center for Dyslexia Studies. “It is a gift that keeps on giving. We estimate that, on average, our graduates teach 15 struggling readers each year throughout the course of their typically lengthy teaching careers. The impact of learning to read for a struggling reader is immeasurable in terms of its long-term outcomes for improved self-esteem, attitude and life expectancy.”
Veterans with entrepreneurial aspirations who are transitioning back into civilian life often need business training, like learning how to write a business plan, identify mentors, take advantage of networking opportunities and much more.
Veterans Launching Ventures (VLV) is a certificate program, run through FDU’s Rothman Institute of Innovation and Entrepreneurship, that provides veterans with the skills and support they need to seize entrepreneurial opportunities.
Since its inception in 2010, the program, which is supported by corporate sponsors including Bank of America, TD Bank and New Jersey Bankers Charitable Foundation, has enrolled 842 participants. About a third of participants have launched businesses. Others have used their skills in careers across all sectors.
Retired U.S. Air Force Command Chief Master Sergeant Mike Ferraro used what he learned during VLV to launch two businesses — both of which benefit veterans.
Bridging the Gap for Veterans provides vets with access to career-transition coaches, opening the door to veteran-friendly employers. The Coffee Platoon finances the operations of Bridging the Gap.
“We wanted a sustainable, predictable model for underwriting the work that Bridging the Gap does,” says Ferraro. “Based on what I learned at VLV, I settled on coffee, identified a roaster in Hoboken, N.J., and started placing the product in supermarkets.”
Coffee Platoon products are available in 76 ShopRite and five Foodtown supermarkets across New Jersey. “We are currently in talks with Wakefern, which could put us in 300 grocery stores in the state,” he says.
Ferraro’s business goals dovetail nicely with VLV’s. “A lot of veterans get out of the armed forces and don’t know what they want to do. We help them get acclimated. We provide mentorship. They don’t know how to open the doors. We help with that.”
Supporting VLV also aligns with the goals of New Jersey Bankers Charitable Foundation, says Michael Affuso, the foundation’s chair.
“We are proud to support this program and believe that it is an investment that will have an enormous return. These are people who have demonstrated an admirable commitment to this country, and that commitment carries over to their endeavors once they return to civilian life. We believe that supporting veterans interested in becoming entrepreneurs is a sound investment that will generate significant returns,” says Affuso.
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