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Monday, September 15, 2008
Keeping Long-Term Commitment to Disadvantaged Kids
By tutormentor2 @ 2:24 PM :: 456 Views :: 0 Comments :: Program Articles, Testimonials to tutoring/mentoring

What does it mean when we say we want the kids who join us in 7th grade to "be in a job or career by age 25?"

Below is the front page from the October 15, 1992 Chicago SunTimes.  This editorial was created in response to the shooting of a 7  year-old boy in Cabrini Green.  We started Cabrini Connections, and the Tutor/Mentor Connection in the weeks following this tragedy.  In the editorial, the SunTimes demands action. They say "it is everyone's responsibility". 

We believe that. 

I look at this every week. Unfortunately, in the 16 years since, I've added additional stories like this to the tragedies claiming inner city kids. 

This year more than 35 Chicago Public School students have been killed. More have been shot. Any who live in inner city neighborhoods are terrorized.  The media don't do a front page story for most of these. They only cover this story occasionally.  During the lull, those of  us who have made a commitment to end the violence and hopelessness of poverty by providing paths to jobs and careers, are left on our own to find the help needed to sustain our programs.

We need more than random acts of kindness. We need a vision strategy that connects kids with school based and non-school learning, starting in elementary school and continuing through college and until a youth is working.  While parents, teachers and mentors are PUSHING kids to make good decisions, work hard on their studies, and stay away from drugs, sex and gangs, we need the workplace to support this process by encouraging volunteers to be tutors/mentors, and to support the infrastructure of tutor/mentor programs with talent and dollars.

Furthermore, we need leaders from business, politics, religion, media, sports, etc. who will make a concious effort to keep the focus on this vision every week, or month, throughout the year, and through the next decade.

That's because it usually takes 12 years for a first grader to finish high school.  That's in the best circumstances.  Kids in inner city war zones are not growing up in the best circumstances, or with the best schools.

In the links library at http://www.tutormentorconnection.org we have many articles on poverty, high school drop outs, workforce development, etc.  These show that kids in the highest, most segregated neighborhoods are without hope, and without lifelines, connecting them to the outside world.  Volunteers in tutor/mentor programs can create these lifelines, not only providing help in building aspirations and study skills, but in helping kids get into college, and get into jobs following college, or even following jail or a GED.   Most kids living in poverty will never have this type of lifeline, because there are very few programs like Cabrini Connections in most high poverty neighborhoods, and few with the long-term vision that we outline when we make a commitment to "do all we can to help kids be in jobs and careers by age 25."

In order to keep that commitment Cabrini Connections, and other tutor/mentor programs, must find ways to obtain the daily bread we need to operate. However, we also must turn our volunteers and supporters into learners and advocates, so that there are an army of people writing what I'm telling you, spreading the Gospel of tutoring/mentoring throughout the city and throughout the country.  Only then will be get the attention of CEOs, media and presidents, who need to become the owners of this vision and this strategy.

Each week during the year I will write articles about this vision and the needs of tutor/mentor programs like Cabrini Connections in my blog at http://tutormentor.blogspot.com. Other members of the Tutor/Mentor Connection (Nicole White and Mike Trakan) are also writing blogs that talk about the citywide need for tutor/mentor programs. Links to their blogs can be found on my blog.

El Da'Sheon Nix is the Administrative Coordinator for Cabrini Connections, and the primary writer of the http://cabriniblog.blogspot.com . This will focus on the activities of Cabrini Connections.  On the Cabrini Blog page you'll also find links to Chris Warren's blog, and the Tech and Writing Club blogs. You'll also find a fund raising blog written by Cassina Sanders.

We encourage volunteers and their students to keep their own blogs, as a journal of their time with each other and with Cabrini Connections. We created an internal community for students and volunteers, called SVHATS.

As a result of how we share information, we feel that leaders from around the country, who want to operate a program with similar goals and similar structure, can visit the Cabrini Connections web site to not only design their program, but to find ideas to support their students and volunteers each week.  You're invited to use the information. Just let us know you are doing this and join with us in on-line forums where we share what we do and collaborate to build visibility and funding for all of us.

As volunteers journey through the weekly sessions and the 2008-09 school year with Cabrini Connections and the Tutor/Mentor Connection, we hope to expand the understanding of the responsibilities we all have to keep the memory of kids like Dantrell Davis alive, and to keep building a path to jobs and careers as a result.

We hope this helps you and look forward to hearing from you.


Contact El Da Sheon Nix or Dan Bassill
Cabrini Connections, Tutor/Mentor Connection
800 W. Huron, First Floor
Chicago, IL 60642
Phone: 312-492-9614
Fax: 312-492-9795


Please read the blogs .............
http://cabriniblog.blogspot.com
http://tutormentor.blogspot.com

 

Thursday, May 15, 2008
Friends First Spotlight: Mike & Kedar
By Katie Smith @ 10:28 AM :: 504 Views :: 0 Comments :: Program Articles, Testimonials to tutoring/mentoring

In the more than 20 years since Mercy Home for Boys & Girls established the Friends First volunteer mentoring program, we have matched more than 1,000 Chicago area boys and girls between the ages of 9 and 17 with caring adults who have become reliable friends and role models.  The following is a story about how one of our mentors has made a difference in the life of his mentee and how these two people have decided to spend their time together through giving back to their community.

Read More..
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