Scott Olivieri, Jack Bracher, and Emma Frazier. (Photos by Caitlin Cunningham)
Watching buses full of students leave the Boston College Campus School at the end of a recent work day, Lynch School of Education and Human Development graduate student Emma Frazier, a part-time teacherâs assistant at the school, couldnât help but smile.
âI care so much about it and the students and the staffâtheyâre just so awesome and they make it easy to care about,â said Frazier, who helps support the innovative school for young people with extensive disabilities alongside 196 other Boston College students and a full-time staff of 40 teachers, therapists, and nurses. âWeâre kind of like another team on BCâs campus, and I think thatâs something to be celebrated. Weâre part of the community, and thatâs really special.â
On Patriotâs Day, Frazier and two other members of the BC communityâMorrissey College of Arts and Sciences senior Jack Bracher and Scott Olivieri â90, M.A. â15, Ph.D. â18, director of web services in the Office of University Communicationsâwill put their love for the Campus School into action by running the Boston Marathon to raise money for the school. âI think itâs a really special way to do my first marathon,â said Frazier, âand I canât imagine doing it any other way.â
The Campus School held a pep rally in honor of the runners in March.
During the Campus Schoolâs 50 years of existence, hundreds of students, faculty, and alumni have taken on the 26-mile run for the same cause. âWe rely on the support of generous donors to help provide the therapeutic equipment and technology that our students deserve,â said Jennifer Miller, the Campus School marketing and outreach manager. âEveryone wants us to succeed, and the more awareness we can spread about the school, the better off we are in terms of donations and students who come through to support all of our efforts.â
Bracher, the Undergraduate Government of Boston College president, decided to run the marathon to support the Campus School last year, seeing it as an opportunity to help a worthy cause while fulfilling a lifelong dream of taking part in the marathon.
âThe Campus School is an organization that could use the support and also represents the best of the community,â he said. âItâs been really a privilege to be able to see the work that they do firsthand.â
For Olivieri, supporting the Campus School and its students is a family tradition. His father, retired Boston College Computer Science Professor Peter Olivieri, helped pioneer Eagle Eyes, a revolutionary technology utilized by many of the Campus Schoolâs early students, and his daughter volunteered at the school during her own time as a BC undergraduate.
âMy dad would say to me: âHey, thereâs a person in thereâthey just canât communicate,ââ said Olivieri. âSo, with Eagle Eyes, students who had severe disabilities could use a mouse to write and communicate in ways they never could have done. It has always been kind of part of my familyâs legacy. I grew up around this campus, and youâd be hard pressed to find anything about BC that is more emblematic of the Jesuit values and mission than the Campus School.â
The three marathoners were welcomed at the Campus School in March by smiling students with homemade signs for a pep rally in their honor. For the trio, now entering their final weeks of training, it was an opportunity to remember what itâs all about.
âOur little contributions are really just a way to amplify the need and the message that they have. Itâs one day, but we hope it has a measurable impact on the resources that are able to flow into the school,â said Olivieri. âThey did these little races where Jack, Emma, and I would race against the students.
âSpoiler alert: They torched us every time,â he added with a laugh.
Don Ricciato â71, M.A. â73, Ph.D. â00, who served as Campus School director for three decades before retiring in 2017, organizes credentials for the schoolâs marathoners every year. âAnything that is going to help the students, families, and our staff Iâm very passionate about, so to be involved in this event has been really important to me,â he said. âIf you hear of any graduate student that has an experience at the Campus School, they talk about it being life-altering. Regardless of whether theyâre going to work with individuals with disabilities, I believe it just helps them in terms of being better citizens. They understand the many people we have as part of our humanity, and recognize the support that this population needs, and they recognize what an extraordinary place the Campus School truly is.â
Ricciato said he canât wait to see Frazier, Bracher, and Olivieri take on Heartbreak Hill: âItâs so nice to see everyone come running by, and you know what drives them obviously is that theyâre running for everyone in the Campus School community.â
For more information on the Campus School Boston Marathon fundraiser and to donate, see
Lucas Carroll '22 / Morrissey College of Arts and SciencesĚý| April 2022
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