Voice of America
15 Aug 2020, 08:35 GMT+10
Two high-school students -- one a Boy Scout -- have created a free, online tutoring service for students during the COVID pandemic.
Manan Shah, 16, a high-school senior and Boy Scout from New Jersey, saw many students struggling with online classes during the COVID-19 pandemic, and created a system to help them.
"We still realized there was kind of that missing piece without a teacher being present at all times," Shah explained to VOA. "So, we figured this was our way to give back if we could get a team of volunteers to help the other students."
"We" is Shah and co-founder Linda Liu, 16, another high school senior, they created the nonprofit tutoring service Limitless Minds Inc. that offers free tutoring.
"Our team of high school volunteers offers free one-on-one virtual tutoring to [kindergarten to Grade 8] students in order to ease their transition to online education," according to the nonprofit's mission statement.
Shah has been a Boy Scout for a decade. He led a group of more than 100 Scouts as senior patrol leader and has served as a group leader. The Boy Scouts of America (BSA) provides "character development and values-based leadership training" to 2.2 million youth members up to age 21 and approximately 800,000 volunteers in the United States and its territories.
"I've done a lot of community service and also gotten a lot of leadership experience. And then I've also volunteered at a local conservation unit, where I had leadership experience and that was also community service," Shah said about his experience in Boy Scouts.
He also excels in advanced placement and honors classes, has placed first in national math competitions and scored a near-perfect score (1580) on the Scholastic Aptitude Test required for admission to most American universities, according to an article about him in a Boy Scout news site.
Co-founder Liu says her experience as a dancer has helped her create the non-profit as well.
"I've been dancing for over 10 years" competitively, she told VOA. "That really just builds a sense of responsibility, and there's a lot of leadership involved and you have to work together with your team."
Tutoring is free at Limitless Minds. Students get 30 minutes to two hours of tutoring per session. For safety and security, Limitless Minds requires students have a parent next to them for the tutoring session.
The tutors receive no pay, but they do earn volunteer hours for various groups.
However, starting an enterprise has not been all smooth sailing.
"Trying to keep in communication with everyone does get tough. It takes a lot of time, but at the end of the day, it is worth it," Shah told VOA in an interview.
Along with his co-founder, Shah has been supported by his family, teachers, school officials and the entire community.
"We've gotten positive feedback from school principals, from parents, really from all sorts of people and we even have tutoring logs where parents can submit feedback after each of their sessions," Shah explained.
"Overall, I think we both just want to help as many people as possible and start more chapters, get more tutors/tutees, help as many people possible, and just spreading Limitless Minds as far as possible," Liu said.
Although Shah and Liu will graduate next spring and plan to head to college in fall 2021, they say Limitless Minds will go on.
"Yeah, for sure. That's all we're here for. So, if people still want the free tutoring, which it seems like they will, then I'd be happy to continue," Shah said.
"You know, we're only getting started," Liu said. "We're not just going to start this and then go to college and leave it. It's something we're both passionate about. We're both dedicated to this, we want to keep this going and just really see where it can go."
'Generational Catastrophe' Possible as Pandemic Creates Education Crisis Antonio Guterres says pandemic has created the largest disruption to education in history
So far, Limitless Minds says it has provided more than 1,400 hours of free tutoring with a team of more than 300 high-school age tutors helping more than 300 students from grades kindergarten through Grade 8. And they have 14 chapters in the United States, Pakistan and El Salvador.
Shah advises anyone who wants to start a community-service organization should go for it.
"For anyone else who might want to start a community service initiative just like this just know that even if it seems overwhelming to keep going. We never even thought we'd come this far and be able to help so many people," he said. "Everything starts off small and as long as your heart is in the right place and really care about what you're doing it will start to grow. You'll be able to help a lot of people and that makes it really rewarding at the end of the day."
Get a daily dose of Nepal National news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Nepal National.
More InformationNEW YORK, New York - U.S. and global stocks tumbled Wednesday as lawmakers continued to navigate their way through Congress ...
PORTLAND, Maine: Fishermen in the US's only commercial-scale fishing industry for valuable baby eels, called elvers, have recorded a productive ...
LAS VEGAS, Nevada: A bill was introduced in the Nevada Legislature to provide the Oakland Athletics up to $380 million ...
WASHINGTON D.C.: Due to one of the tightest labor markets in decades, teenagers, who have been vital for filling summer ...
NEW YORK, New York - Republicans were in uproar Tuesday over the deal hammered out by President Joe Biden and ...
DETROIT, Michigan: After Ford Motor Co announced an agreement with Tesla to allow autos to be charged using the Tesla ...
DHAKA, Bangladesh - Human Rights Watch has sharply criticized a plan to repatriate Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh to Myanmar, claiming ...
Diamir, Pakistan - According to the country's disaster management agency, at least 11 people were killed when an avalanche hit ...
KATHMANDU, Nepal - According to sources, Luis Stitzinger, the expedition leader of the German operator Amical Alpin, has remained out ...
KARACHI, Pakistan - Dr. Seemin Jamali, former executive director of the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre (JPMC), died on Saturday night ...
© Provided by Xinhua © Provided by Xinhua
© Provided by Xinhua A Pakistani university team is working to introduce a Chinese method for producing royal jelly in ...