Ascend Addresses Achievement Gap Concerns Through Mentoring

Aug 13, 2013 | UA News

Photo by Urban Alliance staff.

This article originally ran in the Windsor Reminder News on August 1, 2013. Article written by Calla Vassilopoulos, Reminder News staff.

For the last few years, Windsor Police Chief Kevin Searles and other community members have been concerned about the increasing education achievement gap in Windsor public schools. The group began to take into account some of the stressors from the family perspective, which could be adding to the issue.

As a result, the team of dedicated citizens worked to create a program to help low-income youth and their families establish a foundation for educational and mental health stability. Ascend Mentoring is the “best of both worlds,” according to Executive Director Ricardo Herrera.

“You can take a kid and mentor him and let him hang out with a responsible adult for a couple hours a week, but if he goes home and dad is in prison and mom can’t make ends meet, or there are mental issues or other household issues they don’t get help for, it’s going to limit what you can do for the child,” said board member Lisa Boccia.

The goal of the program is to use youth as a “portal” to working with families to resolve domestic issues and create long-term solutions, according to Herrera. Throughout the planning stages, Ascend acquired partnerships with businesses and social service organizations locally and in the greater Hartford area. Ascend, which focuses on mentoring youth, also offers services for adults in the family. Upon request, the organization will assist families with mental health concerns, employment services and financial rehabilitation.

“Those are the things that a lot of studies and research shows really impact the family in a negative way,” said Herrera. He said that kids who have experienced long-term poverty in their family often suffer from high levels of stress and as a result have issues in school.

In order to make sure the new program has services to fit their needs, each family is interviewed by assessment coordinator Jaime Ricker, LCSW. Families who have issues which cannot be adequately addressed by Ascend at this time are being introduced to the appropriate social services.

The youth who are accepted into the program are placed in one of the two tiers. The first tier is for youth at risk of dropping out of school, but not quite near expulsion, as well as those who have had interactions with police officers, but are not yet in the system. Tier two is for youth who may have been involved in the juvenile system or have more complex issues in general, according to Herrera. “This is a really big push for intervention for those youth,” said Herrera.

Mentoring will begin in the middle of August and is divided into four parts over the course of 12 months. For three months at a time, mentors will concentrate on different aspects of youth development. The first stage focuses on establishing a positive relationship between the mentor and the mentees, which will happen at small events, gatherings and general meeting areas organized by Ascend. 

Each mentor is required to go through a three-hour training, which provides techniques used for youth development. The stages following the introductory period will be determined by the feedback received quarterly from families, youth, mentors and board members.  In addition to mentoring, Ascend also plans to provide after-school activities designed to increase the youths’ educational and leadership skills.

“We really want them to be a part of this, especially the young people,” said Herrera. “If the young people feel their word has power to change things or create things here, they’re going to be more invested.”

For more information on receiving services or becoming a mentor, visit www.ascendmentoring.org.

The staff at Urban Alliance are familiar with Pastor Frank because he is a regular attendee to many of the trainings Urban Alliance provides on subjects like domestic violence, addressing childhood trauma, and better counseling techniques. โ€œThatโ€™s been so valuable to me to be able to bring that back, not only in my counseling but also in my teaching and preaching ministries, โ€œ shared Termine.

Pastor Frank was also one of the original members of the Micah group, a group of pastors that meets at Urban Alliance to discuss and strategize about challenging issues that face the church today. One of those earlier discussions on justice, incarceration, and returning citizens was particularly memorable. โ€œWe all lamented the fact that these men and women were coming out of prison into our churches and just kind of being thrown there,โ€ said Termine, โ€œWe could do better than this.โ€ That discussion planted the seeds that eventually led to the creation of Second Chance Churches – an opportunity for churches to provide support and mentoring to returning citizens that continues today.

When we asked Pastor Frank what he would say to another church that was unaware of Urban Alliance, he said, โ€œIf you are looking to get out in the community and make a difference in the community, Urban Alliance is a super way to do it. Weโ€™re a small church โ€ฆ we canโ€™t do everything. Urban Alliance is a pathway to get our people involved in ministries that are already doing it, doing it well, and just need extra volunteers.โ€

Pastor Frank Termineโ€™s story embodies many things we are trying to accomplish at Urban Alliance: supporting organizations in the communities they serve with training, resources, and opportunities to make a difference. Pastors and non-profit leaders face a wide range of challenges and, therefore, need a wide range of help and resources. Your support can help turn stories of struggle into stories like you find at Calvary Church.

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