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Edward
H. Cantor '61 is president of the Yale Club of New Haven.
AYA
Contact: Information
on the AYA and its programs is available by sending an e-mail to
aya@yale.edu, writing to Rose
Alumni House, Box 209010, New Haven, CT 06520-9010, or phoning (203)
432-2586.
This
space is made available to the Association
of Yale Alumni by the Yale Alumni Magazine.
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News From the AYA
A Model Club Program: Sharing Alumni Expertise with
the Job Corps
December
2002
by Edward H. Cantor '61
The vast knowledge and
experience of Yale alumni is undisputed. The Yale Club of New Haven
has turned this resource into a treasure-trove for the students
at the Connecticut Job Corps by bringing in judges and doctors,
radio station presidents and journalists to share their time and
expertise.
Two years ago, the
YCNH teamed with Dwight Hall to place Club members with community
service organizations. One group recommended by Dwight Hall was
the Connecticut Job Corps. During the first year of this affiliation,
five YCNH members participated. By the second year, the number rose
to 23. The YCNH also enlisted 11 members of the non-Yale community.
The Job Corps, which
is located in New Haven, serves 200 men and women between the ages
of 16 and 24 who can be described as "youth at risk." To complete
the voluntary program, a student must earn a GED, learn a job skill,
hold a job for one year, or enter higher education. Remarkably,
the success rate is in excess of 85 percent.
Club members have volunteered
in a variety of ways. Some have provided one-on-one tutoring to
help students prepare for GED exams. Others have arranged for students
to visit real working environments, including an architect's office,
a radio station, construction facilities, Yale dining halls, and
the local newspaper.
Club members have spoken
to the students on topics ranging from medical issues concerning
teens to careers in home health care. Leslie Wilson '99PhD invited
students to his commercial printing company and spoke to them about
starting a small business. "Many of these kids have had little opportunity
to look beyond careers in custodial work," says Wilson. "I hoped
that by showing them my own business, I could offer them ideas for
other possibilities in their future careers."
Dr. Alan Lovins '57,
a psychologist, chairs the project for the YCNH. He describes the
Job Corps project as the perfect match for the Club. "If an alumnus
wants to tutor a student, it can be accomplished on a regular or
an as-needed basis. If an alumnus can only come once to talk to
the kids, we can adjust to his or her schedule," says Lovins. "We
can bring our life experiences to bear on the kids' education and
truly make a difference in their lives."
To reinforce its relationship
with the youth-at-risk program, the Club also placed an AYA Community
Service Summer Fellow at the Job Corps. Naomi Massave '03 worked
on a number of Job Corps projects, including developing mentoring
programs and bringing in health services programs. Massave enlisted
the Yale Community Health Education group, which counseled Job Corps
students on issues of domestic violence, healthy relationships,
and sexually transmitted diseases. She also surveyed the students
to assist the staff in finding areas that need improvement. "Job
Corps challenged me in ways that I never even thought I could be
challenged," says Massave. "Working at Job Corps has made me a more
responsible citizen."
Kathleen Wimer, a Job
Corps manager, says, "We view the Yale Club as a representative
of the University in the community. When Yale Club members devote
a little bit of time to the staff and kids at Job Corps, they are
sending a message that they care about the kids -- and so does Yale.
The Job Corps is a federally funded program with centers in every
state. The program could easily serve as a model for other Yale
Clubs around the country." 
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