Tag Archives: Tag: Education

Since 2002 Greg Dillon has quietly made a difference in the lives of eight young men at Notre Dame High School in West Haven through his work with Shepherds. A 1974 graduate of Notre Dame, a former police officer and supervisor of a Gang Unit, Greg had seen young men flourish and fail in greatly different circumstances. He witnessed what could happen as teenaged boys struggled to find their way in life and how poor decisions could set them on a path of underachievement. Unsure how he could help to stop the cycle, he noticed, clipped and put aside advertisements about Shepherds before he finally took the plunge and called to volunteer his time as a mentor.

The rest is history. Now mentoring Jared, his eighth Shepherds student at Notre Dame, Greg has seen first hand the impact that the program can make on young men and their families. Last spring, Kyle and Kobe (Greg’s 6th & 7th students) graduated and are off to college – Kyle at the University of New Haven and Kobe at Southern Connecticut State University. Says Greg, who still keeps in touch with all of the young men he has mentored – Xavier, Dimitri, Shawndel, Anthony and Karim, “There is tremendous satisfaction in seeing a boy enter NDHS, full of doubt and indecision, maybe lacking confidence or unsure of their goals, and leaving NDHS as a mature, poised young man, brimming with potential, with a plan and a bright future.”

http://www.thewestonforum.com/73907/shepherds-celebrate-mentorship-month/

January is National Mentorship Month — a month dedicated since 2002 to promoting youth mentoring programs in the United States.

For 18 years, Connecticut’s Shepherds has partnered with Kolbe Cathedral High School in Bridgeport and Notre Dame High School in West Haven to provide tuition support and mentorship to at-risk youth.

Currently, Shepherds has 71 adult mentors working with 60 young men and women in the greater New Haven and Bridgeport area.

Mentors come from all walks of life and all professions; they share a common commitment to serve as role models, confidants and cheerleaders for their students.

For more information about mentoring a student or contributing toward a student’s education, visit shepherdsmentors.com.

January was designated as National Mentoring Month in 2002 by President George W. Bush. The month is set aside to promote youth mentoring in the United States. Connecticut’s Shepherds provides 71 mentors to 60 young men and women at two area college prep schools – Kolbe Cathedral in Bridgeport and Notre Dame in West Haven. Shepherds is planning Mentor Appreciation nights later in the month at both high schools. Contact Amy Chickles at achickles@shepherdsmentors.org for more information.

Shepherds Senior, Angel Chavez, is a star on and off the track. A three-season varsity runner and outstanding student, Angel is actively involved in community service at Notre Dame High School. Says mentor, Rich Coyle, “He is an intelligent and mature young man with the heart of a lion.” It’s a heart full of compassion too that extends to some of the world’s poorest inhabitants. A student leader, Angel is president of CSMC (Christian Service Student Club) and treasurer of Interact – a club that promotes community service in collaboration with the Rotary Club. Angel played a significant role in this year’s “Harvest Pack” a volunteer effort to provide hunger relief in Haiti and in the greater New Haven area as well. The CSMC and Interact joined the school’s Minority Student Club, Halsey Associates and the Rotary Clubs of West Haven, New Haven and Orange, for this year’s largest “Harvest Pack” to date – packaging a whopping 40,000 meals to feed the hungry.

Mentors and students from Kolbe Cathedral volunteered together for The Exchange Club of New Canaan’s Christmas Tree Sale. The club transforms Kiwanis Park into a Christmas village each year with over 1,200 trees including Fraser Firs and Balsams – as well as wreaths, roping, tree stands and other seasonal merchandise. Proceeds go to awareness and prevention of child abuse and many other local charities like Shepherds. Kolbe students received community service hours through the project.

Congratulations to the recipients of Kolbe Cathedral High School’s “Work Hard & Be Nice” Students of the Month Award. The award honors students who embody the Kolbe values –  caring for others in the spirit of Christianity, sharing knowledge, skills & talents for the good of others, and strength of character.  Junior Dudjanceslyta Anty is mentored by Martha Turner who says, “I am so proud of Du! Dudjances has shown admirable determination and steadily improved her academic performance over the past three years. I am impressed with how seriously she takes her studies, especially with her recent A’s in Physics and Entrepreneurship.”

Pictured are: Senior Luckario Alcide (R), Junior Dudjanceslyta Anty (C), and Sophomore Julia Pham (L)
Freshman Tajara Bennett is not pictured.

Shepherds and Razoo have been a winning team this month. The online fundraising site has allowed us to spread the word that thirty of our students cannot afford a Ti-84 graphing calculator, an essential standard for high school students preparing to go to college.  They are used for higher-level math and science courses. This is one of the only devices allowed to be used at the PSAT, SAT and ACT tests.  Students who do not use a calculator for standardized testing are at a disadvantage for achievement.

With the help of many generous donors, we can purchase 24 calculators. Can you help us to purchase the remaining 6?We want to have these calculators in the students’ hands as quickly as possible in their school career to help in our mission of Changing Lives…One Student at a Time.

Contribute at : https://www.razoo.com/us/story/L9ixqf

DARIEN — The events of Sept. 11, 2001 affected people in different ways. For Darien resident Tammy Taylor, it made her want to give back, starting in her own community.

“9/11 really rattled all of us,” said Taylor, an Illinois native who moved to Darien with her husband in 1991 after he got a job in New York City. “I thought you live in this insular community and I had no idea people could hate so much and that really affected me.”

Shortly after the terror attacks, the president of Kolbe Cathedral High School presented at Taylor’s church and mentioned the Shepherds program. Shepherds is a nonprofit organization that partners with Kolbe Cathedral, as well as Notre Dame High School in West Haven. Shepherds pays for inner-city students to go through high school at these schools and provides them with a mentor and academic support to help guide them through their four years there.

After the service, Taylor went up and asked for more information on the program, before going home with the idea of being a mentor in mind. “I thought ‘OK, I can’t do anything about hatred in the world, but I can do a small thing at home in my own backyard,” she said. “Bridgeport is right here. People don’t realize how poor of a city it is and how many people there are struggling.”

So Taylor got involved as a mentor with Shepherds at Kolbe Cathedral. She took her first student in the fall of 2002 and is now mentoring her fourth student. She meets with her student once a month and connects with them once a week through phone, email or text. She’s also gone above and beyond and done things like taken her students to visit colleges where they’ve been accepted.

“You’re supplying them with another set of eyes and ears,” said Taylor. “You’re a cheerleader. If they’re struggling in class, the mentor’s role is to find out why. Much like you do with your own kid, [you] see that they seek the necessary ways to get help, teach them how to advocate for themselves. If they’re not doing well in a class, it’s the rare kid that will stay behind — at thirteen — and say to the teacher ‘I didn’t really understand, can you take some time and explain it to me?’ It really takes an adult saying ‘you don’t understand? You need to go to the teacher, you need to ask the questions, you need to advocate for yourself, you have every right as a student to understand what’s being taught.”

Taylor’s experience raising three of her own kids and volunteering at their schools helped prepare her for this. But her personal history played a role in her mentoring as well. Taylor was the first woman in her family to finish college, graduating from Boston College with a degree in english/communications. Like many of her students, Taylor had to pay her own way for her degree and felt a lot of pressure to succeed.

“I had to take out loans and work after school and so did my brothers,” Taylor said. “We were expected to get good grades. Our family was determined that we would all go to school. At times, I was very frustrated because my parents would be greatly disappointed if we didn’t put in 100 percent in school,” she said. “Like many of the students, I was annoyed. It was annoying to have these expectations. I know that part of it.”

But unlike many of her students, Taylor has never felt the pressures of growing in poverty or in a new country. Taylor’s students have faced problems like homelessness and losing family members to gang violence and almost all live at or below the poverty line. Many come from single family households where the parent works several jobs, or the student works after school to contribute to family expenses. Her job is to hear them out and to make sure they have an adult in their life who’s listening. When one of the students she was mentoring was bouncing around from home to home, Taylor called the school to let them know and eventually, the student’s coach took her in. It’s situations like this that epitomize the reality of what the teenagers in the program are dealing with daily.

“A lot of other programs look for the students that go on to Harvard or Princeton or the stories you see in the movies,” she said. “Shepherds wanted to serve the B,C student, the middle of the pack or a slightly struggling student who has potential to do well if put in the right setting. Those are the kids that fall through the cracks. A lot of times the superstars make it anyways. But like with anything, the average Joe or the slightly below average Joe struggles the hardest. The mission of this was to take that kid who isn’t a superstar, but has this potential, has disadvantages in their lives. Those are the kids that they serve.”

So far, the mentors make a difference. Taylor has seen her students go on to college and some even grad school.“Overall, I think at the end,when you see those kids walk up and get their diploma and cheering, many of them are the first in their families to go to college, first to graduate high school…it’s worth it,” said Taylor.

ekayata@hearstmediact.com; @erin_kayata

 

 

Darien’s Tammy Taylor was introduced to Shepherds shortly after 9/11 and was inspired to try and do some good in her own backyard by helping a young person get to college. She began mentoring Curtia, a wonderful young woman who has since graduated college and is working on her Master’s degree to work with autistic children. Next came Chiniki who is now a nursing student at Dominican College.  This year, Tammy began mentoring Ugonna, a junior who aspires to become a doctor.

Although her students have all struggled, each kept on working through the highs and lows and that’s what keeps Tammy coming back each year.  “These kids want to succeed, they have the same hopes and dreams that all of us do… they just need a program and a mentor to work with them and keep them focused on what it takes to make those hopes happen.” Tammy is often asked to speak to mentors and students and below are excerpts from a recent address at Kolbe to start the new school year.

“If someone who was unfamiliar with our program walked into this room tonight… he or she would see a group of people who appear to be very very different … We have people who are new to this country… and some who have lived here their whole lives. Some of us do not speak English, for some of us English is a second language, and for some… it is the only language they know. We have different education and economic backgrounds too. On the surface, it would seem we might have very little in common. But here is where they would be very wrong… we have a very strong belief in education and the wonders of learning. We are all here because we know that a strong education set up you… our young people for success.”

 “… when I look at at everyone here… I see dedication and commitment.   I see students that want to excel and mentors that are willing to put in the time to help them.   I see friendships that have blossomed as students and mentors have gotten to know each other.   I see mentors that have learned a thing or two from their students.   I see understanding and with understanding comes hope and slowly the differences between us begin to melt away.”