The History of SAIL

The Independent Presbyterian Church (IPC) Children’s Fresh Air Farm is the cradle of SAIL.  The farm provided a traditional overnight summer camp for children from inner-city Birmingham from 1922. In the Summer of 2010, after consulting with families whose children attended the Farm, IPC transformed the program into a 6-week day-camp with school in the morning and camp in the afternoon. The pilot was successful! In addition to the time-tested benefits of the Farm’s camp activities, the children made gains in reading and math.

34 rising third grade students from Birmingham’s North Avondale neighborhood comprised the pilot. The students gained an average of one month in reading and three months in math.

Sensing the power of summer learning to help close the academic achievement gap of vulnerable children, the IPC Foundation began actively promoting this concept, encouraging other programs to follow suit, and recruiting additional funders. The number of programs and funders gradually grew. 

In the Fall of 2012, six funders joined forces to form SAIL and conduct its first grant cycle.

  • ♦ The Belk Foundation
  • ♦ Daniel Foundation of Alabama
  • ♦ Mike and Gillian Goodrich Foundation
  • ♦ Independent Presbyterian Church Foundation
  • ♦ Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham
  • ♦ United Way of Central Alabama 

2013

In SAIL’s first Summer, 12 Birmingham programs embraced this new model and made strides up the learning curve.

2014-15

SAIL’s next two years saw steady growth in Birmingham.

2016

SAIL’s expansion outward from Birmingham began in its fourth year. Three programs were added in the Black Belt and one in Blount County.

In the Fall of 2016, SAIL North (Huntsville and Madison County) became the second SAIL community,  planning for programs  in the Summer of 2017.  SAIL was poised for its next phase of growth. 

2017

38 SAIL programs enrolled 1,957 students

  • ♦ Attendance 83%
  • ♦ Completion rate 86%

2018

45 SAIL programs enrolled 2,449 students

  • ♦ Attendance 88%
  • ♦ Completion rate 91%

2019

43 SAIL programs enrolled 2,545 students

  • ♦ Attendance 85%
  • ♦ Completion rate 88%

2020

34 SAIL programs enrolled 1,283 students

  • ♦ Attendance 82%
  • ♦ Completion rate 84%

2021

  • 35 SAIL programs enrolled 2,000 students
  •  
  • ♦ Attendance 84%
  • ♦ Completion rate 85%

2022

  • 33 SAIL programs enrolled 1,673 students
  •  
  • ♦ Attendance 85%
  • ♦ Completion rate 86%

2023

  • 34 SAIL programs enrolled 1,965 students
  •  
  • ♦ Attendance 82%
  • ♦ Completion rate 84%

SAIL Programs in Alabama

SAIL programs use research-based curriculum, certified teachers, and Star Assessments® to drive academic growth.

AVERAGE GAIN PER STUDENT

Reading:  1.8 months Math: 2.6 months

AVERAGE IMPACT PER STUDENT

(Considering the “summer slide” of 2+ months loss for low-income students)

Reading: about 4 months     Math: about 4.5 months