Advertisement

PBHA Tutoring Programs Hit Hard

Dozens of Boston-area children who enjoy weekly tutoring by Harvard undergraduates are receiving less personal attention than in past years—their one-on-one study sessions turning, at times, into one-on-four affairs.

Phillips Brooks House Association (PBHA), Harvard’s community service organization, which runs more than 20 tutoring programs, has experienced a sharp decline in participation this year. Its officers attribute this drop to decreased first-year volunteerism, as freshman often constitute a large part of PBHA’s membership.

PBHA President Laura E. Clancy ’02-’03 has said that only 25 first-years attended the Freshman Day of Service—down from 300 last year. She also said that 250 fewer first-years were volunteering this year than PBHA had expected.

Neither PBHA members nor College administrators have been able to definitively explain the decline, but PBHA Community Outreach Officer Lindsay N. Hyde ’04 said that because tutoring programs require large numbers of volunteers, they naturally are hit hard by such a decline in overall membership.

Tutoring Troubles

Advertisement

While some PBHA program directors say their groups have maintained a steady membership, others describe the difficulty of finding tutors for all interested elementary and secondary school students.

Erin C. Nolan ’03, personnel director for the Mission Hill After School Program, says the program has altered its tutoring arrangements as a result of a volunteer shortage.

She says that, ideally, every child in the program receives one-on-one tutoring with a Harvard student. But this year, two, three and even four children are sometimes grouped with a single tutor.

“It’s really hard with 45 kids in the program to have enough volunteers,” Nolan says. “We have these days when there are huge gaps. We’ve had horrible Tuesdays and Thursdays when only 20 volunteers have been there for 45 kids—and that includes the directors who are coordinating things and can’t help out.”

Similarly, Keylatch Mentors has had to resort to group tutoring, according to director Ari M. Shaw ’04.

Shaw says that the group, which tutors in Boston’s South End, works with about 20 children per day but has only 10 to 12 volunteers per day—down from 20 last year.

“We only have one new freshmen this year,” Shaw says. “So we’re going to have to help [future program directors recruit] freshmen, or it’s really going to be difficult next fall.”

Future Recruiting

Franklin Afterschool Enrichment director Kristin M. Garcia ’05 says that her program is continuing to accept new tutors even though in past years they have cut off new recruiting after classes begin.

“We’re in the fourth week, but we’ll still take anyone,” she says. “Instead of trying to recruit freshmen, though, we’re building partnerships with other groups. We’re working with BMF [Black Men’s Forum] and some of their guys are helping us out.”

Advertisement