After School and Summer Programs a. Teachers shall be paid a minimum of $32.00 per hour for teaching after-school programs.
b. Teachers shall be paid a minimum of $32.00 per hour for teaching summer school or any extended school year program.
After School and Summer Programs. Programs that offer both English or Spanish speaking families a safe place where their children can build both academic and social skills, and provide care while the students’ parents are at work.
a) After School Program students include minorities, children with disabilities, adoptive, and at risk-children. Laytonville Healthy Start, an affiliate of Xxxxxxx Memorial Park, provides a Grades 6-12 program with teen mentors and runs three days a week with activities including Cooking Class, Homework Help, Computer Access, Gardening, Arts and Crafts, Kite Making, and physical activities (basketball, etc.). The goal is to give children a safe place to hang out, get a snack, do homework, learn something new, and to expose them to healthy adult role models.
b) Nuestra Alianza has a bilingual program for children who attend the three grammar schools in Willits. The first priority is working intensely with new student arrivals from Mexico who only speak Spanish. The second priority is bilingual help with homework. The third priority is to assist all children with homework. When the academic component is completed, the children participate in sports, board games, art projects, dance, nutritious snacks are also provided.
After School and Summer Programs. Programs that offer either English or Spanish speaking families a safe place where their children can build both academic and social skills, and often provide care while the students’ parents are at work.
1) Laytonville Healthy Start FRC After School Program students include minorities, disabled, adoptive and at risk-children. Laytonville serves students in grades 6-12 and runs a two day a week after school program with activities such as cooking and snack making, homework help, computer access, gardening, arts and crafts, kite making, and physical activities (basketball, etc.). The Summer Program for children ages 4-11 utilizes teenagers from the community to act as mentors. The three-day-a-week, four-week program provides respite to parents and care-givers, since child care services are limited in the community.