New York Center for Interpersonal Development
Exchange Online 

September 2011 

Greetings!  

 

With so many people looking for work, urban young people -- dropouts and those at risk -- challenged by lack of a diploma and work experience have the highest unemployment rate. Fortunately, you have helped us offer some of them the opportunity to overcome the odds. Thank you.

Because of the support we receive from you and our funders, these young people can enroll in four NYCID programs where they have a second chance at success. We're currently hiring staff with a calling for youth development work, and also recruiting businesses and individuals to mentor and offer internships once again this year.

Do you know someone who should be reading this? Someone who can help? Or someone who needs another chance?

 

 

Below, you'll read about Farrah Athias who has turned her life around. And, there's some exciting news about Marcus Browne who you have read about here in the past.

 

Lost in Transition: Farrah's Story  

How many of our dropouts, like Farrah, got lost in transition?
 

Farrah got lost between middle school and high school. Before that, she was an excellent student. Then, she lost her way.

Sarrah's photo

Farrah Athias

 

When she didn't show up in her high school classes, no one seemed to notice or care, so she didn't care either. She hung out with friends. Made fewer and fewer classes. If this was high school, she was having a pretty good time. She didn't think about the consequences until her spiral into failure was well underway.

 

"I'd always been a very confident student. Failing grades brought me down. My mother was disappointed and confused. And, I couldn't explain to her why I wasn't going to class. Things just kept getting worse."

 

Finding her way  

At 17, a counselor advised Farrah that it would take two or three more years before she'd have enough credits to graduate. She wanted out of high school sooner, not later.

 

Then, one of Farrah's friends told her about Olympus Academy. Farrah made a deal with her mother. If she could go to Olympus, she'd commit to going to classes. Why was Olympus different?

 

"The difference is humungous," Farrah told us. "It's small. The teachers and counselors-- even the principal-- knew me. They called home if I didn't show up in class. They made me feel like I belonged. And that they cared."

 

"90% of success is just showing up." -- Woody Allen

Once Farrah attended classes again, she became an academic star. Then, she started an internship.  

 

"Oh, boy, I loved the internships. I never knew anything about applying for a job or working."  

 

Over her year and a half at Olympus, she completed four successful internships -- at a hospital, in an after-school program, as a teaching assistant at Olympus and in retail at GameStop. 

 

Within two weeks of completing her last internship and graduating -- using her great references and all she'd learned about searching for a job -- Farrah found a permanent job. She has enrolled at CUNY's Medgar Evers College. She wants to become a nurse. Or maybe even a doctor.

 

Farrah's Reflections

Farrah says she didn't want to be a "problem kid." Until Olympus, she didn't like high school. Failure can really bring you down.

 

Her advice to other kids? Just what her Olympus counselors taught her. Stay on task. Change your attitude. Find a school that's about the students, where people care. That's what she did and she's a confident, successful young woman once again.

 

If you know a young person who needs a second chance, recommend that they consider one of our schools or programs. You can read about Olympus Academy, the Staten Island Young Adult Borough Center, the GPS Program at Port Richmond High School and the ACE Program on our blog.   

 

Marcus Browne Makes the  

U.S. Olympic Boxing Team  

Congratulations, Marcus!

Like Farrah, Marcus got lost. He'd been boxing since he was thirteen -- a champion in the making. But in high school he drifted into trouble.  

photo courtesy of Staten Island Advance/Bill Lyons

Then his friend died in a car accident.  

 

His friend had already made a decision to focus on success by enrolling at ACE. To honor his friend and succeed at his goal of boxing on the Olympic team, Marcus enrolled at ACE.

 

Now, ACE alumnus Marcus Browne has earned his GED, won three Golden Gloves championships and qualified for a spot on the U.S. Olympic team for the 2012 Summer Games!   

 

To read more about Marcus' boxing success, click here.

To hear more from Farrah and her peers, check out the video below:

Changing Lives ... a 40-Year Tradition

Changing Lives ... a 40-Year Tradition


Everyone deserves a second chance to succeed


Donation link

 

News in Brief

  • Read about NYCID job openings here.
  • Interested in NYCID's After School Programs? Enrollment is currently underway.  For more info, contact Ivy Bilotti or Robert Busan
  • Congratulations to Dina Molina, Olympus Academy's new Program Director!  Read more about it here.
  • Farewell to long-time YABC Personal Advocate Joseph Skinner.  Find out more here

 

   

 

In This Issue
Farrah's Story
Marcus Makes the Olympic Team
Farrah's Video excerpts
Dom's Wanderings

 

Your donation

helps change lives


Donation link

Dom's Wanderings

Dominick Brancato

 

Jobs for Urban Youth 

 

In his recent jobs speech, President Obama said "We shouldn't be in a race to the bottom, where we try to offer the cheapest labor and the worst pollution standards. America should be in a race to the top. And I believe we can win that race."

 

Salvaging the talent wasting away in our schools and on our street corners will help us win the race to the top.  

 

Senator Gillibrand recently reported that while nationally unemployment hovers around 9%, youth unemployment is 25%. Unemployment for urban African American youth is 39% and urban Hispanic youth 36%.

 

Last year, 148 of our participants completed their degrees. Sixty of them have enrolled in college and five in trade school. Twenty-seven have full-time jobs and 17 part-time work.  Great outcomes! 

 

This year, through your donations, government funding, volunteers and   internships, NYCID can offer a second chance to 731 young people.

 

Your support helps them learn that the American dream can be their dream.   

Marcus, for example, is halfway there. He made the Olympic boxing team. (Bravo!) Now, he wants to win a medal. (see article).  

 

Others' dreams may be more modest, but no less important.They can hold down jobs and raise families. They benefit from a community of supportive adults who care about them. Not just while they're with us, but as they climb the "ladders out of poverty."  

 

Not only do the NYCID youth programs get students back on track, they provide full-time jobs for 33 staff and part-time jobs for 150 more. (90% of NYCID's staff works in youth development.)

 

Thanks to you, our 40th anniversary event in June raised $45,000. Farrah, Marcus and the other NYCID program participants thank you for your support. As do I, our board and staff.  

 

Will you continue to support students like Farrah by volunteering to share your work experience in a seminar, offering an internship or making a donation?

 

You can also refer young people you know who need a second chance. And, encourage adults you know who are called to youth work to apply for our job openings. 

 

America can't afford to let these kids get lost.

 

With gratitude,

Dom Brancato signature

Dominick J. Brancato

Executive Director 

 

 

P.S. To read about the four programs NYCID offers young adults, click here.

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