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COURTS AND COMPUTERS: Head
tennis coach Diana Sumner works with ninth-grader
Destiny Williams on her forehand, while Weekes
helps sixth-grader Benito Amaral with a web search.
Linda Cicero |
as patrick johnson dispatches
an opponent on a back court in Taube Family Tennis Stadium,
his mom is pulling a huge pan of spaghetti and meatballs
out of an oven in a nearby building.
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Linda Cicero |
Veronica Johnson slathers garlic butter on toasted
bread and hurries to fill some 20 paper plates and get
them on the tables. She knows the high school students
will have only 15 minutes to eat dinner between the
end of their tennis matches and the start of their one-on-one
tutoring.
The nonprofit East Palo Alto Tennis & Tutoring
(EPATT) program enrolls about 100 mostly Latino students
from more than 30 local elementary, middle and high
schools. There are another 100 on the waiting list.
Most of the kids participate four afternoons a week,
spending one hour on the court and at least 1 1/2 hours
in tutoring. EPATT also expects parents to become involved
with the program, often by regularly making dinner for
the group.
Some of the teens in the college-prep program remain
on campus as late as 8:30 p.m. for help with homework
assignments or preparation for SAT tests. They all hear
about the graduates who are studying at Stanford, Sonoma
State, Cal Poly and Pomona College, and they know what
the possibilities are. “Not all of them go to
college, but some do,” says Kesha Weekes, EPATT’s
academic director. “And we’re proud of all
of them, no matter what they end up doing.”
Weekes has been serving balls and collecting progress
reports at EPATT for six years. She helps students conduct
debates on pressing California political issues and
hands out a Jamba Juice certificate to each one who
finishes reading an entire book. She also recruits many
of the undergraduates who assist with the program. “It’s
challenging work,” says Weekes, ’97. “They
didn’t prepare me for this at Stanford.”
Launched by former Cardinal tennis player Jeff Arons,
’83, EPATT began as a summer program at Ravenswood
Middle School in 1988. Area donors helped build eight
tennis courts on the campus, and EPATT became an after-school
program in 1991, using three classrooms after hours.
But in 1997, the Ravenswood school district erected
portable classrooms on the courts and EPATT had to find
new quarters.
Head men’s tennis coach Dick Gould brokered an
agreement with the Stanford athletics department for
EPATT to use 3,500 square feet of then-bare, unheated
space in the new Taube facility. Four classrooms and
a long connecting hallway that overlooks an indoor court
now hum with Macintosh iBooks, running feet and constant
chatter.
“Are you gonna marry Kobe Bryant?” a fourth-grader
asks Weekes as she stops to read his latest report card.
“He has enough problems, honey,” she replies,
then jogs to the next student’s desk.
Most of EPATT’s $450,000 budget is supplied by
local donors. Bay Area clubs provide racquets, balls,
wrist bands and T-shirts to the program, which is a
division of San Francisco-based Youth Tennis Advantage.
EPATT’s emphasis on improving both athletic and
academic skills seems to be working. Dozens of participants
compete in USTA Junior League competitions with players
from the Alpine Hills Tennis and Swim Club. EPATT provides
scholarships that enable seven teens to attend private
schools, including Menlo School, Pinewood and Sacred
Heart. “Some of these schools have become tennis
powers because of these kids,” says Gould, ’59,
MA ’60, noting that in 2002 EPATT was named the
third-best community tennis program in the country by
Tennis Week magazine. And there’s a certain
serendipity in housing the program on the Stanford campus.
“These kids get to watch the best college teams
in the country play,” says executive director
Dave Higaki. “Before, college might not have had
much meaning. Now it’s a place they come to every
day.”
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