Dayton Daily News

Child care academy that helps families in need moving, expanding

Center aims to move into more churches in the next 5-10 years.

- By Eric Schwartzbe­rg Staff Writer

Danielle Foxx believes child care and school should be affordable to all parents without the use of government aid.

That’s why she and her husband, the Rev. David Foxx, started Creative Children of Promise Learning Center, a Christian-based academic preschool and child care center, in their Kettering home

in 2013. Moving it to Living Hope Church in Centervill­e in 2018, it became Creative Children of Promise Academy and expanded to include a private kindergart­en. Now, the academy is looking to move to First Church of the Nazarene in Miamisburg.

“We’re moving because Living Hope Church, the pastor and his board, are going to be utilizing the educationa­l wing in September,” Foxx said. “Our goal is to open in Miamisburg by June 1. That’s when our summer camp starts.”

One of the academy’s programs is a co-op that assists parents who need help until they find employment, she said.

“They’re trying to find work, they have no money, they’re trying to get their child into a child care cen- ter so they can get work and nobody else will take them,” Foxx said. “We give them a three-month scholarshi­p right off the bat, they prove to us that they’re trying to find work, show us the places that they’ve been and once they find work, we put them on a partial scholarshi­p for six months.

“We go to what their bud- get is.”

Foxx said the academy does that because it wants families “to be able to thrive, not just survive.”

The academy not only offers child care for newborns through 12 year olds, it also offers a parent advo- cacy office to support the whole family, not just the child, she said.

“We help them find work, we give them a scholarshi­p until they can find work,” Foxx said. “We also have a teen program that allows teenagers to come in at the age of 15 and volunteer and be on the premises to learn entreprene­urship, to learn good work ethics and then, when they turn 18, we give them a job.”

Creative Children of Promise Academy, which incorpo- rate heavy academics with play, draws students from Huber Heights, Xenia, Spring- boro, Sharonvill­e and other Southwest Ohio communitie­s because parents find it a welcome alternativ­e to “the alarming cost” of childcare and private schools, she said.

It treats children as indi- viduals with different levels of learning, teaching them at the speed and in the ways that they learn best, Foxx said. Each child is assessed and a individual lesson plan is created for each child.

The academy is gearing up to move into another five churches within the next five to 10 years after it moves to Miamisburg.

“We’re excited about what’s going on and how we’re going to be able to help more families,” she said. “People will have child care in their neigh- borhood that won’t cause them to go bankrupt.”

Moving into Miamisburg will be an asset for not only the academy, but for the city itself, as it will provide easily accessible day care near Mark Twain Elementary School, Foxx said.

Lowe’s on Wilmington Pike will donate mulch and chain link fencing for one of the playground­s at the new location, which is still in need of more fencing and mulch, as well as new or used play- ground equipment, she said. The academy also is looking to hire a kindergart­en teacher and pre-school teachers for the fall.

Foxx said she plans to use a new online venture, Small Branches Academy, to help individual­s learn to open their own in-home child care or preschool centers or licensed-based centers. Proceeds earned from Small Branches’ efforts will benefit Creative Children of Promise Academy.

“Every nonprofit needs a for-profit to sustain it,” Foxx said.

 ?? MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF ?? Danielle Foxx, CEO of Creative Children of Promise Academy, holds a photo of her first graduating class. Foxx is proud of all the students at the academy. The school is moving from Centervill­e to Miamisburg.
MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF Danielle Foxx, CEO of Creative Children of Promise Academy, holds a photo of her first graduating class. Foxx is proud of all the students at the academy. The school is moving from Centervill­e to Miamisburg.
 ?? MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF ?? Journee Dickerson shows her bunny that she made on Thursday at the Creative Children of Promise Academy.
MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF Journee Dickerson shows her bunny that she made on Thursday at the Creative Children of Promise Academy.

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