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Service Leadership Programs

 

Keep sponsored youth active

 

Send us updated club information

Aktion Club

 

Poetry in service motion

 

Spanning the globe with service

 

Rest easy; Charlevoix Aktion has you covered

Builders Club

 

Pennies for Patients makes cents

 

Jersey pupils ‘sock it to’ Dakota reservation

 

Make your way around the Bloc

 

All the Builders news that fits, we print

Circle K

 

Cheap cuts an invaluable fundraiser

 

Simon says: Give kids alternative to TV

 

District leaders ready for LeaderShape

Key Club

 

‘Operation Restoration’ builds foundation for kids’ success

 

Share in barbecue work means share in cash success

 

Key Club focuses summer service on CMN

 

Administrator earns Key Club's top honor

Key Leader

 

Key Leader shapes youth in South America

 

Let the summer of leadership begin

 

Margaret and Don go to Key Leader

Kiwanis Kids

 

These kids have a heart—a big heart

 

When projects mesh: three programs in one

 

Read all about K-Kids in action

 

Extra! Extra! Send us your news

 

Bracelet sale spreads service

 

‘BUG’ invasion hits schools

Bracelet sale spreads service

The Sappington Elementary K-Kids club knows no borders when it comes to helping others. The service reach of this group of second- through fifth-grade students stretched this school year all the way from its St. Louis, Missouri, community to the small country of Malawi in southeast Africa.

Sappington K-Kids sell bracelets to raise money for Project Peanut Butter.
Sappington K-Kids sell bracelets to raise money for Project Peanut Butter.
Some young K-Kids marketers put up a billboard advertising their fundraising project.
Some young K-Kids marketers put up a billboard advertising their fundraising project.

An active group, the K-Kids club strives to perform at least one service project a month. The club didn’t putt around, for example, after its organizational meeting this past October. Rather, members pitched right in to work on a variety of projects for a Clubbing for Character golf tournament, decorating thank-you cards for community sponsors and creating thank-you posters to display at gift tables during the tournament.

The club maintained its busy pace during the year, joining the student council in a Thanksgiving food drive and a collection for Nurses for Newborns in December; decorating hallways as part of the school Veteran’s Day commemoration; selling lollipops to raise money for the National Leukemia and Lymphoma Society; providing dessert, busing tables, and greeting guests at the school’s spaghetti dinner; raising almost $300 for UNICEF, and working on other projects.

In January, the club spread its altruism internationally, undertaking a fundraising campaign for Project Peanut Butter. Founded by Mark Manary, professor of pediatrics at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, the project helps thousands of malnourished children in southeast Africa by providing them nutritional peanut butter.

Sappington K-Kids raised more than $500—enough to help 500 children—by selling Project Peanut Butter bracelets.

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