
You’re invited to Helen Keller Services’ 35th Annual Golf Classic on Monday, June 29, 2026, at the Village Club of Lake Success. Join us for a memorable day on the greens as we come together to support essential programs and services for individuals who are blind, DeafBlind, or have low vision.
When: Monday, June 29, 2026
Where: Village Club of Lake Success
318 Lakeville Rd
Great Neck, NY 11020
10:30 am – Registration & Continental Breakfast
12:00 pm – Shotgun Start
BBQ Lunch on the Turn
5:00 pm – Cocktails, Buffet Dinner & Awards
Join us in making this year’s Golf Classic our most successful yet by selecting from our range of participation options below. Whether you’re registering a full foursome, securing individual player spots, or choosing one of our impactful sponsorship opportunities, your participation directly support Helen Keller Services’ Children’s Learning Center expansion on Long Island. Each sponsorship level offers unique recognition benefits. Please complete your registration today to reserve your place on the course and make a lasting impact on the lives of those we serve.
Pay by check or credit card.
If paying by check, please make checks payable to Helen Keller Services
Mail your check and tally form to:
Helen Keller Services
Attn: Development
141 Middle Neck Road
Sands Point, NY 11050
After nearly 40 years serving children and families through our Brooklyn program, Helen Keller Services is opening two new Children’s Learning Center locations in Suffolk and Nassau Counties. The CLC is a specialized preschool for children ages 3 to 5 with disabilities and complex developmental needs, including visual impairments, autism, Down syndrome, and other conditions affecting learning, communication, mobility, and social development. Education and therapy are delivered together by a coordinated multidisciplinary team, all under one roof. This is what we’re bringing to Long Island in 2026, and your participation in the Golf Classic helps make it possible.
Carol Giaco, Speech-Language Pathologist:
I’m Carol. I’m a speech-language pathologist. I’m also an assistive technology professional. We do speech therapy sessions usually three times a week. The speech therapists are usually trying to set kids up with some form of augmentative and alternative communication, or AAC. That can look a lot of different ways. For some kids it might be an iPad or a specific type of speech-generating device that they can use to communicate, for those kids who are either non-speaking or complex communicators who are learning to speak and who just need a little extra help being understood.
Ray, Parent:
He was almost fully nonverbal before he started school here, like maybe one or two words at a time that he would use. Five months after we started here, he’s putting together sentences. His verbal abilities have just exploded since he started coming here and getting the proper therapies.
Megan McKean, Occupational Therapist:
Hi, my name is Megan McCain. I am an occupational therapist at the Children’s Learning Center. We have a lot of kids who have communication needs, sensory needs, delays in fine motor skills. We have kids that have visual impairments, whether that be full blindness or cortical visual impairment. And we have some kids that have severe and multiple disabilities, so they have more physical impairments and require physical therapy in addition to OT and speech therapy.
Rainbow, Parent:
They did so many great extracurricular activities. In the summer they did a beach day and they set up an entire beach experience for the kids in the school. They had them in bathing suits and going to the pool, a little kiddie pool indoors. I don’t think that every program has those resources, and I think that the staff here is so supportive.
Liz Gunn, Physical Therapist:
I am a physical therapist. I work in the preschool primarily. We do work with the students. They all have IEPs. They all have mandated services, but really our biggest thing is collaborating with the teachers during the day, doing a lot of collaboration with our parents to use our strategies or activities that we would use to promote them in the educational environment. PT is more the walking, running, jumping, climbing the stairs to and from the bus.
Avien Henry, Principal:
Whether it is a concern with your child’s speech and language development, a concern with their physical development as it relates to fine or gross motor, even sensory issues that your child may be going through, feeding issues, those type of things. We have the staff that are able to help you along the way.
Tamika, Parent:
I don’t want to be cliché, but I know every parent of a nonverbal autistic child is looking for somewhere for their child to rest where they know that they’re safe and they’re not going to be hurt. The people there are patient and understanding, and they know what they’re doing. I know that’s what all autistic parents want. We’re just always waiting for that moment to take a breather and we could go to work or get some chores done at home and just know our children are in safe hands. And that is what we felt coming here.
They look for the light in your child and actually try to bring that out. If you’re looking for someone to care for them as if they were at home, this is the place.
Avien:
We are so excited to be bringing our multidisciplinary model to Long Island. Our teachers of the visually impaired, special educators, and our related service providers including speech therapists, occupational therapists, and physical therapists will work together to ensure that our students are getting the best education possible.
Tamika:
I’m so happy that my daughter has found her place at Helen Keller Services Children’s Learning Center.
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For over a century, Helen Keller Services has empowered individuals who are blind, DeafBlind, or have low vision to reach their full potential. From early childhood education, a summer camp on Long Island and programs for youths, to assistive technology training, vocational rehabilitation, and specialized support for seniors with vision loss, we transform barriers into opportunities and create pathways to independence at every stage of life.
If you have any questions, or need an invoice generated for your registration selections, please email us at HKSGolf@helenkeller.org.