All parents hope that their children will grow up healthy, happy, and productive. They aspire to have children who have the skills to contribute to their own well-being and to the well-being of their families and community. There is no magic bullet for developing these capacities in children. Literally thousands of programs have been developed to support families in their efforts to help children to become competent, confident, caring young people who have positive social connections and good characters.
Children have the potential to succeed in life and contribute to society. However, not all children get the support they need to thrive. By all estimates, an astounding 17.6 million young people – nearly half the population between 10 and 18 years of age – live in situations that put them at risk of not living up to their potential. Without immediate intervention by caring adults, they could make choices that undermine their futures. The presence of caring adults offering support, advice, friendship, reinforcement and constructive examples has proved to be powerful tools for helping young people fulfill their potential.
Mentoring is a structured and trusting relationship that brings young people together with caring individuals who offer guidance, support and encouragement aimed at developing the competence and character of the mentee. A mentor is an adult who, along with the parents, help young people bring out strengths that are already there. They are good listeners, compassionate and teach children how to live an honorable life. A mentor is not a foster parent, therapist, parole officer, or cool peer. The role of a mentor is not to “fix” young people but rather to help them achieve their full potential. Enforcing competence, confidence, connection, character, caring, and contribution to self and society, help develop a child into a productive and respectful adult in later years.
A mentor’s main purpose is to help a young person define individual goals and find ways to achieve them. Since the expectations of each child will vary, the mentor’s job is to encourage the development of a flexible relationship that responds to the young person’s needs. Using influence and resources as a decision maker, adults can bring new hope to young lives through the power of mentoring. A mentor encourages positive choices, promotes high self-esteem, teaches respect for oneself and family, supports academic achievement, and introduces the young person to new ideas. Youth who meet regularly with their mentors are 46% less likely than their peers to start using illegal drugs and 27% less likely to start drinking alcohol (Public/Private Ventures study of Big Brothers Big Sisters). About 40% of teenager’s waking hours are spent without any companionship or supervision. Mentors provide children and teens with a valuable place to spend free time. Children learn to make thoughtful choices, fulfill their commitments, acknowledge their mistakes and account for their actions. By taking control of their lives, children realize they can achieve more than they ever dreamed possible.
I encourage you to think of the mentors in your own life – a coach, teacher, or another caring adult, and take a few minutes to consider all the contributions they have made in your life during your developing years. I know throughout my own adult life and business career, I have been greatly rewarded by years of mentoring children and young adults into productive, happy individuals that are successful in life. Children need someone to believe in them. Often times, children lack the attention needed to reinforce morals, values and self esteem on a daily basis. It makes all the difference in the world during times of indecision in their lives to have that reinforcement. Mentoring develops children into young adults who have confidence, determination and self-awareness.
Mentoring is recognized throughout the US as an important part of a child’s life and some states have already proposed legislation to the Senate. The Coalition of State Mentoring Partnerships has worked closely with Capitol Hill staff and Senators to advocate this legislation. The Mentoring for All Act 2008 (S. 3200) is one of the most significant legislation actions to benefit mentoring. Please call; send emails or letters to your Senators urging support for the bill.
Watch the video related to youth mentoring
Today the world has lost a friend, a brother, a son, a youth minister, a musician, a mentor, a world changer and a man of God. It is with much sadness we announce that Steven Bobo Burns is no longer with us. His love of people touched hundreds if not thousands of lives. Bobo, you will be missed. This is a video of Bobo the last time he did the boogaloo at Summer Festival in 2008.
Help answer the question about youth mentoring
My job is to mentor Young boys getting out of a youth correctional facility, how do i approach them?now most of these boys are African American, and I am a white female, I am wondering about how I should come at these boys. I know they probably do not think I can relate to them and probably think that I am there to judge, I just want to know how to talk to them without coming off offensive because i am there to help and that is all I want to do, I cannot do that if I cant even approach them properly.
About Author
Denise Dema is a Business and Life Management Coach who has over 20 years experience empowering individuals, entrepreneurs and business owners to attain self-defined success in their professional & personal lives. To learn more about the author and her practice please visit http://www.denisedema.com
Tags: Bobo, Boogaloo, Summer Festival, world changer
take it easy XBOX360Nigga, I’m sure they took it out first
harry potter looks young
This video was funnier than hell lol wow wouldn’t that be awesome.
good stuff ahah
use the internet!
I used Copernic Agent Professional to research your question. Although I didn't find a specific mentoring program, I did find The Family Resource Center (2nd link) which is supported by the United Way of Greater St. Louis. Even though they deal primarily with child abuse and neglect, they may be able to assist you in finding a mentoring program. I hope this helps.
That girl at 1:44 is a bitch
Haha, pretty funny. But Ozzy made it a whole lot better. Good taste in music.
not based on your name
asshole, sorry your other videos are good but this , this video sucks.
“what are you doing”….”ughhh i’ll tell u when u get older”…LOL
Talk to your county office. { Kindship } is a county/state sponsored program here where I live. And it is very large. It"s about matching adults with kids that have only par rent. Seek it out, and good luck. Just maybe it is available in your area.
Big Brothers Big Sisters
Good luck with your term paper!
A very great idea. At my son's elementary school we started a Dads Club which promoted fathers coming to school more often and having lunches, class readings, and things like that. It worked out great for everyone.
Be sure to talk with the principal to get input and ideas for you'll need all the cooperation you can get. The PTA there may be able to chip in some money for art supplies or the such, or maybe you can get some stores to donate some things.
A lot of time you can help by just getting after school sports going. Baseball, football, basketball really don't take much expertise to teach, and sometime the rough and tumble activity helps the kids lots.
You need to have it on a very regular schedule and over a long period of time for it to be effective. It will be very time consuming but I bet very rewarding.
There are no online mentoring programs that meet your criteria. For instance, most online mentoring programs still require mentors to come *onsite*, meet with staff face-to-face, undergo a criminal background check, etc. Most online mentoring programs also recruit their volunteers from one source — a corporation, for instance, willing to assume all liability, criminal background checks, online supervision, etc.
If you are looking for online volunteering, here are some suggestions:
Project Gutenberg is always looking for online volunteers to proofread texts which are made freely available to the world. Volunteering for Project Gutenberg is something you can do from your home.
http://www.gutenberg.org/
LibriVox is a nonprofit effort that mobilizes volunteers to record chapters of books in the public domain. LibriVox then publishes the audio files on the Internet, via its web site. The goal is to record al books in the public domain! Volunteering for LibriVox is something you can do from your home. You can listen to free audiobooks recorded by volunteers, or volunteer to record yourself reading a chapter of a book in the public domain to share with everyone, by going to the LibriVox web site:
http://librivox.org/
The Online Volunteering service (http://www.onlinevolunteering.org) has opportunities with organizations focused on the developing world. Tasks require a certain level of expertise, however (web design, translation, online research, editing, writing, etc.).
xbox360nigga, it’s not real…
You might variously want a BSW (Bachelor of Social Work) degree or an early childhood education degree or a psychology degree