diofav 23

Catholic News Herald

Serving Christ and Connecting Catholics in Western North Carolina
Pin It

081817 jack summitCHARLOTTE — Jack Deering doesn’t know which career he’ll choose, but he knows he wants to make an impact on the world around him.

The recent Charlotte Catholic High School graduate has spent the summer working as a Bank of America Student Leader at the YWCA. He will be attending the University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill this fall.

The Bank of America Student Leader program connects students to employment, skills development and service. They’re awarded paid summer internships with local non-profits. Deering was recognized as a student leader because of his numerous community and volunteer activities.

“My volunteer work is who I am. I know no matter where I go in life, I always need to be making a positive impact on the people around me,” Deering says. “That’s my driving force. Wherever I go in my career, it needs to make a positive impact on the world around me. It’s a rewarding experience for me.”

He’s considering majoring in pre-med with a biology concentration, or economics and a business school major, he says.

“Faith plays a big role in my drive to volunteer,” adds Deering, a parishioner of St. Gabriel Church in Charlotte. “A big part of emphasis during our education at CCHS was service. Through our religion classes, it’s been instilled in us that we need to give back.”

The goal of the Student Leaders Program is to connect community-minded kids to each other and then invest in them so they keep bettering the community in the future, Deering says.

As a student leader at the YWCA, Deering spends some of his days on “intern tasks” like cleaning out filing cabinets or working on marketing materials. Other days, he’s helping at the YWCA’s learning centers, which run after school and all day during the summer, on literacy-based learning programs for kids in grades K-5.

“It’s great to help give these children the one-on-one reading time and academic help that they need,” Deering says. “It’s super important to help these kids get up to their reading level, and it’s great to see improvement.”

During his last day at one of the centers, the children gave Deering thank you cards – the highlight of his summer, he says.

“They said things like, ‘Mr. Jack, thank you so much for helping us to read’; ‘You are brave to show up here’; ‘Thank you for helping me when I didn’t know how to swim’; ‘Thank you so much for coming out here. Thank you for working for the YWCA, we love you,’” he read.

“Not even being there that long, it’s great to see the impact you can have on the children. It doesn’t take a lot to help the kids in a tremendous way. Some just hit a roadblock when they’re reading on their own and won’t understand the book. It’s good to be there to help them.”

Before spending this summer at the YWCA, Deering has been an instructor and team captain for Carolinas Healthcare System’s Adaptive Sports and Adventures Program, an intern at the Charlotte Mecklenburg Main Library, and served on the superintendent’s Student Advisory Board.

Carolinas Healthcare System’s ASAP provides sports opportunities for physically disabled athletes and facilitates practices. Deering says he was inspired to get involved after he watched his brother play a match against a young man who competes in a wheelchair. Additionally, he has led a team of 10 able-bodied players to participate in the annual Strokes for Spokes Tennis Tournament, where his team raised more than $8,000 to help buy more wheelchairs.

Deering is very much in tune with the issue of economic mobility after serving on the North Tryon Cultural Collaborative. He helped to analyze the challenges that contribute to communities having a lack of access to resources.
There, he and the other interns learned about the problems affecting Charlotte residents and studied how people move out of poverty, he says. Their team made recommendations on how to expand access to services in North Tryon, including a discount app and a free community fair.

Part of the Bank of America Student Leader program includes a week-long summit in Washington, D.C., with more than 200 student leaders from across the country.

“We’re proud to offer this program that teaches the next generation of leaders valuable skills that will help them in their professional careers and build better communities where they will work and contin-ue to contribute,” said Charles Bowman, Market President.

After meeting his peers, some of whom have started non-profits and helped write legislation, Deering says he was inspired to want to do more. He also realized he needs to learn more about current issues, going beyond the headlines, he says.

“I’m doing well, but there’s more I can do,” he says. “I need to know more about what’s going on in my community. I need to engage more with local elected officials because that’s where we can have the most impact.”

— Kimberly Bender, online reporter