The Catherine B. Reynolds Foundation is committed to supporting organizations
that recognize and foster the power of individuals to grow, to learn, and to
give back to the community. National Student Partnerships is such an
organization.
Founded in 1998 by two Yale undergraduates who perceived a lack of interaction
between members of the university community and residents of the New Haven
neighborhood in which Yale's main campus is located, NSP is the nation’s only
year-round, student-led volunteer service organization dedicated to helping
underprivileged individuals and families obtain the resources they require to
become self-sufficient.
NSP reaches out to those in need via a national network of 15 drop-in resource
centers. These offices, staffed full-time by student volunteers from area
colleges and universities, pick up where official social service organizations
leave off. Trained NSP volunteers work one-on-one with their low-income (and
often homeless) clients to ensure that they have access to assistance and
resources in critical areas such as housing, employment, health care, child care
and legal aid.
Yet helping people – important though that is – constitutes only part of NSP’s
total mission. Its other and no less important goal is to make a difference in
the lives of the young people who are actually doing that helping. In
tapping their boundless energy and channeling it into selfless acts of public
service, NSP helps its student volunteers achieve an enhanced degree of personal
maturity and further develop their innate potential as socially conscious
leaders of tomorrow.
This simple yet far-reaching concept – the power of the individual to make a
difference for the good – stands at the very core of NSP’s vision, and that of
its energetic young founders, Kirsten Lodal and Brian Kreiter. It is a vision
that National Student Partnerships shares with The Catherine B. Reynolds
Foundation, which is proud to be counted as a supporter of this innovative,
effective and growing organization dedicated to serving the needy by bringing
out the very best in America’s college students.
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