UMass Lowell students spread 'Love of the Game' with community
Former DifferenceMaker project proves a winner for people with developmental disabilities
Charlie Connolly, a junior mechanical engineering major from Braintree, is trying to teach Jacob Wilson how to shoot and score in floor hockey. But at the moment, Wilson is more interested in talking about electronics like computers, phones, cameras and alarm clocks.
鈥淗e鈥檚 been giving me advice on my next computer,鈥 a grinning Connolly says as he and Wilson pass a small rubber ball back and forth at the Campus Recreation Complex tennis courts, where the student organization is holding its first sports clinic of the year for people with developmental disabilities. 鈥淲e鈥檙e talking about upgrading from Windows Vista to Windows 10.鈥
Wilson, a 24-year-old from Wilmington who lives in a group home, has never played floor hockey before, but he appears to be a natural.
鈥淗ave you seen how many times I was hitting the ball in the net?鈥 he says confidently. 鈥淚t鈥檚 easy.鈥
鈥淵ou make it look easy!鈥 says Connolly, the club鈥檚 community outreach chair and social media manager. 鈥淵ou haven鈥檛 missed a shot today. You鈥檙e killing it!鈥
At the edge of the court, Wilson鈥檚 mom Niki looks on with a smile.
鈥淗e really looks forward to coming here,鈥 she says. 鈥淓ven if he doesn鈥檛 play a sport, it鈥檚 somebody to talk to and communicate with. Somebody to listen to him and pay attention.
鈥淎nd Charlie is amazing. He鈥檚 really into it, talking to Jake and engaging him.鈥
It鈥檚 exactly the kind of interaction that Love of the Game鈥檚 founders 鈥 &苍产蝉辫;鈥19,&苍产蝉辫; 鈥17 and Jessica Dion 鈥16 鈥 were hoping for when they created the organization in 2015 through the .
Since winning the $4,000 first prize in the DifferenceMaker鈥檚 Significant Social Impact category five years ago, Love of the Game has become an official student club funded by . Several times a year it holds clinics on sports such as basketball, soccer, softball and field hockey, inviting athletes from the university鈥檚 Division I and club teams to volunteer a few hours of their time to work with participants.
鈥淚t鈥檚 cool that other students want to keep pushing it along,鈥 says Schmith, who earned his bachelor鈥檚 degree in business administration (with a concentration in marketing) last spring and now works as a software solutions consultant at 360factors Inc. in Austin, Texas. 鈥淚 think it really speaks to the value of it and how meaningful it is.鈥
As Drew Bernier, a high school freshman from Dracut, arrives at the floor hockey clinic on the overcast Sunday afternoon, he鈥檚 warmly greeted by Allyson Dillon, a junior exercise physiology major from Braintree who is serving as Love of the Game鈥檚 president this year.
鈥淲ant to play?鈥 Dillon asks Bernier as she helps him choose a floor hockey stick.
Bernier, who is nonverbal and on the autism spectrum, doesn鈥檛 hesitate to join in. Decked out in a Tom Brady jersey, he warms up with the group by doing jumping jacks, stretching and jogging a lap around the court. Then it鈥檚 time for drills like weaving the ball around cones and taking slap shots at the net.
鈥淚 love seeing him be so independent,鈥 says Bernier鈥檚 mom, Karen. 鈥淭ypically, I don鈥檛 get to see him interact like this without me being with him. It鈥檚 just nice to see him follow directions. He does have some words, but to those who don鈥檛 know him, they probably wouldn鈥檛 understand him. It seems like these students are doing a great job understanding him.鈥
Dillon, who is minoring in disability studies, hopes to grow Love of the Game this year through fundraising, community outreach and volunteer opportunities beyond the clinics. There are already two more events lined up this fall: a basketball clinic on Nov. 24 and a soccer clinic on Dec. 8.
The club, which has about a dozen members and is advised by Psychology Prof. , partners with local schools and organizations such as Best Buddies to draw participants.
鈥淚 really enjoy being around this population of people and helping them. They鈥檙e all so energetic and happy,鈥 Dillon says while managing the floor hockey clinic, which drew a half-dozen participants 鈥 most of them returners from previous sessions.
鈥淚nclusion is such a huge thing, especially within sports,鈥 adds Dillon, a member of the women鈥檚 club soccer team. 鈥淭ypically, athletics is an area where a line is drawn. But this is a way we can all come together and enjoy different sports.鈥
Graduate student Matt Short of Newburyport, who served as Love of the Game鈥檚 president last year while completing his undergraduate degree in physical therapy, is happy to see the club鈥檚 membership expanding to North Campus majors like engineering and business.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 just what you want to see,鈥 says Short, who volunteered with the Special Olympics while in high school and jumped at the chance to join Love of the Game as a freshman.
鈥淭here鈥檚 really nothing better than getting to interact with this amazing population of people. It鈥檚 awesome,鈥 Short says in between high-fives with participants. 鈥淭hey get to feel the energy of the campus and participate in a college sports type of experience. It鈥檚 a really neat thing.鈥
Midway through the two-hour clinic comes everyone鈥檚 favorite part of the day: the halftime dance party. As the 鈥90s dance tune 鈥淢acarena鈥 plays over speakers from a student鈥檚 phone, the guests show off their moves.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know you could do that!鈥 Karen Bernier beams while watching Drew cut loose. 鈥淗e won鈥檛 dance at home with me.鈥
鈥淭he dance parties are the best. Jake really gets into it,鈥 adds Niki Wilson, who for the past 15 years has run a similar program to Love of the Game in Wilmington called Beyond TOPS.
鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to have that buddy concept 鈥 someone that鈥檚 willing to get up in the morning on a weekend and give that time and effort back to children who can appreciate it,鈥 she says. 鈥淛ake鈥檚 older than some of these kids, but he fits in. It鈥檚 so nice to have programs like this.鈥