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Edward Jones Diversity Series
by Edward Jones, IMDiversity Featured Employer
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This Edition: "Mentoring Program Helps Young
Women Believe The Sky Is The Limit"
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Ever wish you could be a kid again? That you could go back to a time when
you did not have a 9 to 5, bills and other obligations? While childhood
should be joyous and free from responsibilities other than perhaps homework
and household chores, it is not necessarily easier. Young people today are
confronted by a number of problems such as drugs, the threat of school
violence and peer pressure about things they are far too young to do. For
girls, teen pregnancy, abuse or neglect compound these issues and are
contributing factors to dropout.
One program is helping girls to steer clear of these daunting realities and
to recognize their full potential. During the past ten years, the Sky Is The
Limit program has brought together 2,250 junior high and high school girls
with highly successful women through an annual luncheon and Women in Careers
Workshop. The program is one of many youth outreach efforts of the
nationally recognized and respected Mathews-Dickey Boys & Girls Club.
Founded in 1960 by Martin L. Mathews and the late Hubert ``Dickey''
Ballentine, the Club serves more than 40,000 young men and women in the St.
Louis metropolitan area.
Let's Do Lunch
At The Sky Is The Limit luncheon, funded by various individuals and
corporations including Edward Jones, 250 young women receive words of
inspiration from women who are well-respected leaders in their fields.
Additionally, college scholarships are awarded to participants from 14 St.
Louis-area school districts. Scholarship recipients are selected not only for
academic achievement, but their commitment to positive activities outside of
school such as community service. While the guest speakers and scholarships are
integral parts of the luncheon, building mutually rewarding mentoring
relationships is the primary goal.
``We want the girls to make an impression on the mentors,'' said Barbara
Washington, vice president public relations and special events, Mathew-Dickey
Boys & Girls Club. ``These mentors have accomplished their goals, so it's up to
the young women to want to do the same. Someone can lay a path for you, but you
have to be willing to take the first step.''
The young women frequently ask their mentors about their careers and for advice
and, in the process, develop what will hopefully become long-term mentoring
relationships.
``It's a mutual relationship. Both the young women and their mentors have to be
willing to stay in contact,'' said Washington.
Some mentoring relationships initially formed at The Sky Is The Limit luncheon
have lasted for years. Barbara Washington told of one participant who was
arrested for carrying a knife to school when she was in the 7th grade.
``She was afraid of the boys who harassed her on the way to school,'' Washington
said.
Instead of dismissing the young woman as another product of tough circumstances,
the wife of the arresting officer referred her to the Mathews-Dickey Boys &
Girls Club. Washington made herself available to the young woman who revealed
that she wanted to become a lawyer. The Sky Is The Limit program paired her with
a young attorney who has kept in touch and served as a role model for five
years. A judge also stepped in and maintained regular contact with her. The
young woman is now a recipient of a Sky Is The Limit scholarship and will enter
university this fall.
There are other successes such as Kristee Ruffin, an aspiring journalist who
received a scholarship from the Press Club of Metropolitan St. Louis, Shaniece
Polk, a future pediatrician who received an Anheuser-Busch scholarship, or Megan
Temple, who is planning a career in sports medicine, received the Edward Jones
Scholarship.
The accomplishments of these and other young women have prompted Barbara
Washington to want to broaden the program's reach.
``My goal is to get it started in Atlanta, Chicago, New York and Washington,
D.C.,'' she said.
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A Committed Supporter
Edward Jones has been a committed supporter of the Sky Is The Limit program.
The firm has sponsored and hosted Women In Careers Workshops at its St. Louis
world headquarters and helped fund The Sky Is The Limit luncheon guest speakers
such as Chief Annetta Nunn, the first African American police chief of
Birmingham, Ala.
At the workshops, Edward Jones Investment Representatives Angela Banks and
Cathey Williamson have discussed how to develop good money habits. Other
workshop topics have ranged from encouraging girls to recognize the importance
of maintaining a good, professional image to offering insight into specific
careers such as communications, engineering, technology and health care.
Edward Jones also recruited several of its associates to become mentors and
volunteers at both the annual luncheon and workshop.
``The enthusiasm was amazing. It comes from management down,'' Washington said
of the Edward Jones volunteers and of Inclusion Manager, Michele Holton.
``Becoming a good corporate citizen takes more than simply funding a community
project. It takes the personal involvement of our associates,'' said Holton.
With more than 8,800 branch offices nationwide, Edward Jones is in your
neighborhood and online at
www.edwardjones.com.
View articles from previous editions in the
complete
Edward Jones Diversity Series Archives
Featured Employer Edward Jones is a Key Sponsor of IMDiversity.com.
IMDiversity.com is committed to presenting diverse points of view. However, the viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at IMD.
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