In kindergarten, children from low-income households are typically behind their higher-income classmates – 11 months in math and 13 months in reading. Over time, that gap tends to grow: children who read below a basic level in third grade are nearly six times as likely as proficient readers not to graduate from high school on time. Through a unique partnership between public elementary and nearby private schools, Horizons offers Saturday and summer enrichment programs that build problem-solving skills, self-esteem, and a love of learning. In small classes, (5:1 student/teacher ratio) children delve into math, reading, science, arts, and ... swimming. Reading specialists identify struggling students and work with them individually or in small groups. Learning is both hard work and fun, and that lesson sticks: daily attendance rates are over 90%, and 80% of students return each summer. At Horizons, summer learning loss becomes learning gain.
Headquarters: DC-Ward 1
Where They Operate: DC-Ward 1; DC-Ward 3; MD-Montgomery County; Children served attend school in:; Ward 1 of the District of Columbia; Montgomery County in Maryland; The program operates in:; Woodley Park (DC); The Palisades (DC); Bethesda (MD)
Age Groups Served: Youth (5-11)
Ethnic Groups Served: African American; Asian American; Latino/Hispanic; Other
Population(s) Served: Men/Boys; Women/Girls; Students; Low- to Moderate-Income Community Members
Schools They Work In: HD Cooke Elementary; Bancroft Elementary; Rock Creek Forest Elementary; Maret School; St. Patrick's Episcopal Day School; Norwood School
- Number of people (clients, patrons, students, etc) your organization serves annually:
230 - Hours of tutoring, mentoring, or class-time you provide annually:
228 - Number of books (textbooks, school supplies) distributed/donated annually:
500
Awards & Recognition
n/a
Press
- Summer Learning Program Seeks to Close Opportunity Gap
Mon Jul 25 2011, The Washington Post
Horizons was featured in the Washington Post in an article, which examined summer learning loss among low income children.
Budget (FY2023)
- $3 million or higher
- The current budget for Horizons Greater Washington is: $1 million to $3 million
- $500k to $1 million
- Less than $500k
Catalogue charities range in size from $100,000 to
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