2022 Companies That Care Golf and Givers Benefit
Honoring:
When:August 19, 2022 10:00AM
Where:Arboretum Club, 401 Half Day Rd, Buffalo Grove, IL 60089
Why:To ensure ALL students have the opportunity to earn a college degree. Thousands of low-income high school students in the metropolitan Chicago area hunger for the opportunity to be the first in their family to graduate from college, yet lack many of the vital supports critical to achieving that goal.
Sponsorship Opportunities:
Please consider sponsoring the event. The best benefit of sponsoring an AIM High event is the opportunities you are giving to each of the students, and the pride and fulfillment you feel knowing YOU gave someone new life. Without your contribution, the students’ futures look bleak.
For more information on sponsorship packages, please see the sponsorship benefits.
Tickets for Golfers:Golf 18 hole scramble with shotgun start, Putting contest, Hole in One contest, Closest to the Pin contest, Raffle, Morning refreshments, Lunch, and filling Hor D’oeuvres Reception.
Tax-deductible. Register in advance. No tickets will be sold at the door.
To register and pay by Credit Card: Scroll down and use the form below.
To register and pay by Check: Contact Center for Companies That Care 312.661.1010
Fun at the Arboretum Club and Tickets for Givers:New this year in the remodeled Arboretum Club, an indoor driving range simulator! Non-golfers can enjoy games, food, sun, guests and learn to golf on a simulator, at a reduced price.
Tax-deductible. Register in advance.
To register and pay by Credit Card: Scroll down and use the form below.
To register and pay by Check: Contact Center for Companies That Care 312.661.1010
Covid Protection:For your safety, we are holding the Golf and Givers Benefit entirely outdoors. Breakfast and lunch will be provided but it will be boxed to avoid any risk from shared food. Social distancing and mask wearing are encouraged.
Agenda for the Day
10:00 Registration and breakfast boxes; Putting Green opens
10:30 Putting Contest and Welcome
11:00 Shotgun Scramble Tee-off
Boxed Lunch when you’re hungry
4:00 Prizes and Reception




Details:
When AIM High invited me to tutor students in math, I hesitated. My only exposure to inner-city students came from the media and painted a dismal picture of academic accomplishment. I worried that any student coming from Chicago Public Schools would be beyond my help. Instead, I found a group of kids who were completely normal in every way I could imagine. They talked about the same things my other, more affluent, students did, asked the same questions, had the same reactions to their failures and their successes. What I learned was that the kids living in the inner city were no different from kids living in mansions when it came to ability or desire. Instead, their problems all stem from outside factors. They go to schools that, quite literally, do not have teachers to teach so the students are expected to teach themselves. They live in homes without heat or food. They worry about being shot walking down the street.
In 2006, the Consortium for Chicago School Research at the University of Chicago published a report that shocked the many readers who learned of it from a front-page headline in the Chicago Tribune. It reported that only 6.5 percent of CPS students graduated from four-year colleges by age 25. When I shared this grim news with Marci Koblenz, the director of Center for Companies That Care, she enlisted me in helping to design a program that would attack this deplorable situation. The result was AIM HIGH, a program which admitted students in their freshman year of high school and followed them through college graduation. With the help of mentors assigned to them, they received whatever support they needed to stay the course through collegraduation.
As Board Chair for Center for Companies that Care (CTC), I would like to thank you in advance for considering a