The United States Congress first designated March as Women’s History Month in 1987, and since then this month has been celebrated each year to commemorate and celebrate the vital role that women play in American history. The celebration of #WomensHistoryMonth
across the nation provides a unified platform to amplify women’s voices in order to honor the past, inform the present, and inspire the future. At the Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro South, Women’s History Month gives us the chance to honor our female founders, empower the women who carry out our mission, and embolden the future generation of female leaders within our Clubs.
Looking back at the history of women within our own Movement, we proudly celebrate the three Hartford, Connecticut women who in 1860 founded the organization that would go on to become the Boys & Girls Clubs of America. What Alice Goodwin, Mary Goodwin, and Elizabeth Hammersley began as one stand-alone Boy’s Club has since grown into a national organization serving more than 4 million youth per year! As individual Clubs began to affiliate, our Movement was named the Federated Boys’ Clubs from 1906 to 1931, at which point it was renamed as the Boys’ Clubs of America. It wasn’t until 1990 that the organization officially became the Boys & Girls
Clubs of America, with our Congressional charter amended to reflect the incorporation of female members into our Movement. This year, Women’s History Month gives us the added opportunity to celebrate this landmark in female inclusion as we recognize the 30th Anniversary of girls’ full and equal recognition in our Clubs.
30 years after their official incorporation into our Movement, girls now make up nearly half of the members served at Clubs across the country and here at Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro South. As such, establishing an environment in which our girls feel comfortable and empowered to learn, grow, and flourish is central to every program that we offer. At BGCMS, we operate multiple programs tailored to the unique needs and interests of the girls which are designed to inspire #GreatFutures. SMART Girls, a discussion-based small group program for adolescent girls, helps young women explore their attitudes and values as they build skills for eating right, staying physically fit, getting good health care, and developing positive relationships with peers and adults. The program’s focus on social-emotional development helps improve readiness to learn, self-confidence, academic performance, and overall personal development. Socially and emotionally competent girls are better prepared to navigate the world around them and to succeed in the Clubs and beyond.
“One-third of girls attribute their lack of
motivation for becoming leaders to fear of
being laughed at, making people mad at them,
coming across as bossy, and not being liked by
people.” - (Change It Up, Girl Scout Research
Institute)
Girls Gym
gives girls their own time and space to feel more comfortable participating in athletics, in addition to all of our traditional co-ed athletics offerings. Through member feedback and surveys, we discovered that because the gym was so male-dominated, many girls were intimidated, felt they didn’t know enough about sports, and were too afraid of making mistakes to try new activities. Girls Gym helps girls build confidence in an athletic setting that they may not have felt comfortable doing otherwise, filling a gap in youth development programs. Since the program started, we have added girls’ volleyball and basketball travel teams and observed a steady rise in girls' participation in co-ed gym activities as well.
Our Director of Athletics & Recreation, Courtney Mosher, is one of our most visible and vibrant female mentors for our youth. She shares her time between both our Brockton and Taunton Clubhouses, so all of our members are able to learn from and look up to her. As part of her commitment to our kids, Courtney recently supervised the annual Don Leal Memorial Floor Hockey Tournament, a competition that has been running at our Taunton Clubhouse for more than 50 years.
“During the games, I was congratulated on
being the youngest and first-ever female
Athletics Director at our Clubs,” said Mosher.
“Initially, I thought to myself, ‘it doesn’t
matter that I’m a woman,’ but I’ve realized
that it actually does, and I feel honored to be a
knowledgeable, confident woman in sports.”
Mosher’s knowledge and confidence make a real difference for our girls, and as our first-ever female Director of Athletics & Recreation, Courtney is a true role model for our females.
Like Courtney, all of our Program Directors work hard to ensure that every child has the opportunity to engage in fun and enriching programs and explore new experiences. In our STEM Labs, SciGIRLS
is an innovative initiative aimed at inspiring our female members to pursue STEM careers. The SciGIRLS program launched at the start of the 2018-2019 academic year and goes beyond our traditional high-yield STEM curriculum to introduce both a historical and futuristic outlook on STEM careers. Girls in the program learn about the historical accomplishments of women in STEM, and have the opportunity to engage with women currently working in STEM industries. Learning from female role models who are leaders in their fields is another way that girls are exposed to possibilities for their future.
“The more experience youth have with
leadership roles and extracurricular activities,
the more likely they are to aspire to leadership.
However, environments in which girls can
develop and safely practice leadership skills are
scarce.” - (Change It Up, Girl Scout Research
Institute)
We are working to form the next generation of leaders, and we understand the critical importance of providing our members with strong mentors to learn from and look up to. As such, our professional staff, Board of Directors, and volunteers echo the diversity of our members so that our youth - especially our girls - have access to the experience and expertise of a diverse group of mentors. At every level of our organization, from programs to personnel, we aim to demonstrate to our members that a great future can start right here, today, by virtue of their own commitment to success. While we celebrate and empower the women and girls in our Clubs all year long, especially during this 30th Anniversary year, Women’s History Month provides for a special focus on our current female leaders, and the leaders of tomorrow.