Sara, Lifelong learner and future educator, LDA program participant

Don’t diss our abilities! We are people just like everyone else, no matter what.”

Sara, Lifelong learner and future educator

Sara Stapleton is getting ready to graduate from Fanshawe College this year. Like a lot of 20-year-olds, she’s not completely sure what she wants to do, but she finds it rewarding to work with children.

Sixteen years ago, a doctor told Sara’s family that the effects of cancer treatments on her brain meant she was unlikely to ever earn a high school diploma. Sara turned that prediction upside down. She did it through hard work, determination, and help from a United Way-funded agency: the Learning Disabilities Association of London Region (“LDALR”). Last year, Sara graduated with a 90% in English and entered the Early Childhood Education Program at Fanshawe College.

Like United Way, the LDALR is committed to making sure every student has a fair shot – that they have the tools they need to succeed. For Sara, that help came in the form of tutoring, camps, and having someone in her corner when the going got tough.

In grade seven, Sara was hitting a low point at school. “I felt like an alien…like I wasn’t worth it.” Luckily, LDALR was able to help Sara’s teachers better understand her needs, and equipped Sara with the tools to advocate for herself.

Now, as a college student, when she meets a new teacher she says, “I’m Sara Stapleton. I have a learning disability, and these are the things that I need.”

Sara channels her positive memories while she is learning to be a teacher herself. “If I can help little kids be stronger and believe in themselves that’s such an amazing thing. I totally want to give them the same feeling that I had coming out of tutoring.”

Sara got her fair shot at succeeding in school because of the Learning Disabilities Association of London Region. United Way believes that everyone – from students to seniors to single parents – deserves that kind of chance. That’s why United Way advocates for and invests in the LDALR.

Learning Disabilities Association of London Region program participants with teacher

Here’s the impact that support from donors like you made in our community last year:

32,751
people accessed basic needs like food, clothing and shelter to help move from poverty to possibility

15,092
people received support to improve their well-being including programs for families, seniors and people with disabilities

12,136
children and youth got help to reach their full potential though healthy living, mentoring and more

In all,102,590 people received support through a United Way funded program.

Dakota HalfpennySara