Neighborhood Learning Alliance has hundreds of youth in summer programs

KASHIF HENDERSON

This Saturday, June 22, the annual Highmark Walk for a Healthy Com­munity is occurring on the North Shore.

Staff members of the nonprofit organization Neighborhood Learn­ing Alliance (NLA) will be participating in the walk. And they invite others to walk with them, while making a donation to the orga­nization that currently has more than 300 youth participating in positive summer programs in the Pittsburgh area.

“Our mission at Neigh­borhood Learning Alli­ance is to empower stu­dents from underserved communities to thrive academically and pro­fessionally,” said Ka­shif Henderson, Exec­utive Director of NLA, in a statement provided to the New Pittsburgh Courier. “The Highmark Walk for a Healthy Com­munity is a crucial op­portunity for us to rally the support of our com­munity and ensure the continued success of our programs.”

Henderson, in a sub­sequent exclusive inter­view with the Courier, June 18, said residents and community mem­bers donating to the or­ganization helps keep programs running for students, many of whom come from low-income families in Allegheny County. Henderson said donations of any amount can be made via its web­site,

neighborhoodlearning.org.

As we speak, NLA has high school stu­dents interning at 17 area locations through the popular “Learn and Earn Program,” includ­ing West Penn Hospi­tal, University of Pitts­burgh’s IT department and Happy Day Dessert Factory, on the North Side. The NLA students also can choose to learn a particular “career pathway” this summer. There’s the nursing and health career pathway, where students shadow doctors and nurses at West Penn; the business career pathway teaches best practices in finan­cial literacy; and the tech career pathway gets more into the digital are­na, thanks to CCAC and Pitt’s IT department.

The elementary school students are learning more about physical therapy, thanks to a Moonshot Grant from the Remake Learning Network. The students are putting joints togeth­er, learning how to prop­erly walk with crutches, design prosthetics, and Henderson said it really comes in handy as the students will watch on TV the Summer Olym­pics later this summer.

“Our theme is ‘Summer of Champions,'” Hender­son said.

Henderson, 38, who was raised in North Braddock and graduat­ed from Woodland Hills High School in 2004, has always been a strong supporter of youth. With his bachelor’s in social sciences from Pitt in 2009 and his Master of Arts in Teaching earned the following year, he spent years at Pitts­burgh Public Schools, in positions like high school/middle school social studies teacher to K-12 Gifted and Tal­ented Coordinator. In March 2022, after speak­ing with his mentor and hearing from other com­munity members, he took the leap from PPS to executive director of NLA. Still doing what he can to improve the lives of students in the region.

“After speaking to the community members who reached out, and a push by my mentor to step out of my usual comfort zone of a school district,” Henderson said he took on “something new,” and it’s a position he’s excitedly held for the past two-plus years.

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