Learn4Life Celebrates National Mentoring Month with HOPE, a New Program to Mentor Teenage Parents

LANCASTER, Calif., Jan. 25, 2018 /PRNewswire/ — Learn4Life, a nonprofit dropout recovery program, unveils HOPE – Helping Our Parenting-teens Excel – a program that offers mentorship and support to its high school students who are teenage parents. Learn4Life points out that in the U.S., more than 50 percent of teen mothers never graduate from high school.1 Also, students who do not finish high school have children who are more likely to drop out.2

The HOPE mentorship program focuses on teaching students life skills, child development, health, food and nutrition, and financial planning – all while they’re working toward a high school diploma. Through local partnerships, Learn4Life is able to connect HOPE students with community resources like free diapers, clothing, formula, child care and other necessities.

The HOPE program began after teacher Staci Roth noticed some of her students with very young children were struggling to attend school. Learn4Life students are allowed to bring their children to resource centers, but many mothers were not taking advantage of this policy because they felt embarrassed to bring their children into the main study area.

Staci and another teacher teamed up to bring all the student mothers and fathers together into one large, child-friendly classroom. It’s equipped with play pads, toys, soft music and books to occupy the children while their parents study and receive tutoring. The program began with 11 teen mothers and has grown to serve 70 parents and almost 100 babies at two resource centers in the San Fernando Valley region of Los Angeles County.

“Mentoring these teen parents has made all the difference,” said Roth. “They are excelling and graduating, and we are helping to break the cycle of teen pregnancy and poverty.”

As part of the Learn4Life model, every student receives one-to-one mentoring from supervising teachers or staff counselors. In addition, more than 1,700 Learn4Life students participate in one of its dedicated mentoring programs, including:

Learn4Life students who participate in dedicated mentorship programs perform better on average in terms of credit completion and grade point average than those who do not. Studies3 report a 55 percent increase in college enrollment in young adults who have a mentor. Teachers report increased confidence and improved schoolwork and attitude for students who participated in mentoring programs.


GOT NEWS? click here

possible to reach millions worldwide
Google News, Bing News, Yahoo News, 200+ publications


For more information about Learn4Life and the thousands of at-risk students who have graduated, visit www.learnfourlife.org.

About Learn4Life
Founded in 2001, Learn4Life is a nonprofit workforce innovation partner that offers a free high school diploma and job skills training program for at-risk students. Its unique model includes personalized learning, flexibility, one-on-one attention and job readiness programs that help students prepare for a future beyond high school. Learn4Life serves more than 40,000 students across California. For more information, please visit www.learnfourlife.org.

Note: Photos available upon request.

MEDIA CONTACT
Ann Abajian, Learn4Life
(844) 515-8186
[email protected]

1 StayTeen. “Stay Informed: Teen Pregnancy.” StayTeen. Accessed March 10, 2015.
2 Lee, Valerie E., and David T. Burkam. Dropping out of High School: The Role of School Organization and Structure. American Educational Research Journal, 2003.
3The National Mentoring Partnership

SOURCE Learn4Life

About the author

forimmediaterelease.net -