Contact: Noah Kippley-Ogman
Gads
Hill Center
Tel. 312.226.0963 x241
Email: nkippleyogman@gadshillcenter.org
For Immediate Release
GADS HILL CENTER HELPS TEACH KIDS HOW TO PLAY
TENNIS
New QuickStart Program Presented at nearby Harrison Park
On Thursday October 16th at Harrison
Park, Gads
Hill Center
teamed up with Chicago’s
Midtown Tennis Club and the United States Tennis Association to give
neighborhood children the opportunity to try a new tennis program called QuickStart. For the mostly Latino children who showed up,
it was the first time that anyone had ever taught them how to play tennis.
Gads
Hill Center
has been serving the out-of-school educational needs of neighborhood children
and families since 1898. QuickStart Tennis supports
Gads Hill’s skill-based curriculum that helps children develop teamwork and
other life skills.
QuickStart is a program aimed at
children ages 10 and under that introduces kids to tennis in a new way. Instead
of trying to teach kids how to play using standard sized nets and rackets, QuickStart uses equipment that is more appropriate for
smaller children. Children from Gads Hill lined up for a chance to learn.
“Every kid plays soccer,” said Lizette Torres, Director of
Youth Services at Gads Hill, “so why not give them an alternative? After
purchasing a racket, tennis is really an inexpensive sport. You can find a
court at almost any park.”

Special guests included Alan G. Schwartz, the TCA Holdings
Board Chairman, local alderman Daniel Solis, two time women’s double Olympic
gold medalist Mary Joe Fernandez, Lizette Torres, Gads Hill’s Director of Youth
Services, Tony Gonzalez, the Supervisor at Harrison Park and Kurt Kamperman, the CEO of the USTA, shown in the above
picture from left to right.
At Gads
Hill Center,
tennis is going to be incorporated into Club Learn’s
program. “We feel that tennis will help our children think more positively
about team work and pursuing their dreams,” said Barbara Castellán, Chief
Executive Officer. She believes that tennis will teach leadership skills, life
skills, and sportsmanship: all important values that Gads Hill believes
children should have.
For more than 100 years, Gads
Hill Center
has supported low-income families in Chicago’s
southwest side to bring about long-term, positive change. Families have found a
safe haven at Gads Hill through the educational, social and emotional support
offered. The incorporation of a tennis element into existing programs will provide
yet another way to reinforce positive values and provide social and emotional
support for children. With generous support from local governments and private
donors, Gads Hill continues to strengthen its services to meet the needs of a
greater number of children and families now and well into the future.
For more information about the event or other questions,
please contact Noah Kippley-Ogman at 312.226.0963 x241 or email him at nkippleyogman@gadshillcenter.org