MAJORS
MINOR
Learn by Doing
- Lourie Center for Children's Social & Emotional Wellness
- Radcliffe Creek School
EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES
- EROS, Vice President
- Drama Productions (Acting, Prop/Set Design, Dramaturgy)
Arts Therapy for Children
Kelly Young
Class of 2020 • Severna Park, MarylandMAJORS
MINOR
Learn by Doing
- Lourie Center for Children's Social & Emotional Wellness
- Radcliffe Creek School
EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES
- EROS, Vice President
- Drama Productions (Acting, Prop/Set Design, Dramaturgy)
The summer after her sophomore year, Kelly interned with the Therapeutic Nursery Program at the Lourie Center for Children’s Social & Emotional Wellness in Rockville, Maryland. In the classroom, she helped model and teach proper emotional skills for a vulnerable population of children, while they gained new skills for tackling their various emotional and behavioral disorders. With minimal training, Kelly’s experience was entirely hands-on, allowing her to build relationships with the kids and learn quickly on the job.
After this first internship, she recognized that she could integrate her excitement for education, psychology, and theatre into her post-graduation plans through theatre and arts therapy for children.
Continuing on the human development track, she spent her junior year interning in an arts classroom at Chestertown’s Radcliffe Creek School— shadowing a class of 5-year-olds and another of 5th- and 6th-graders.
When senior year hit, Kelly had a reprieve from the classroom, as she took the director’s seat for the production of Small Mouth Sounds, her Senior Capstone Experience (SCE) for the Department of Theatre & Dance. Chronicling the journey of six adults on a silent retreat, the mostly silent performance tracks the growth and healing that humans are capable of when they come together after a trauma.
“In a world full of suffering and scary things, human connection is what allows us to truly heal,'' remarks Kelly.
Upon crossing the finish line of her theatre thesis, Kelly was just toeing the starting line of the next—her human development SCE. Following research with local community theaters, she plans to incorporate the healing aspects of theater into their daily programs.
Whether she’s designing props, building a set, acting, or directing, Kelly knows she has a home in the drama department at WC. From her very first acting class to her senior capstone, she continues to tell stories that aren’t usually heard, understand the unique character process, and be a part of powerful productions.
Kelly begins graduate school in Fall 2021 at Lesley University, where she will be pursuing a masters in Drama Therapy.
“I am very passionate about finding a way to make drama and creative arts therapy accessible to more kids,” she says, “I don’t know exactly what that will look like yet, but I’ll find out.”