Live Life Together Volunteer Mentor Interest Form

Open Opportunity

About

The LLT mentoring relationships meet for an average of four hours or more per month.  Our vision it to connect community leaders, business professionals, and individuals living a faith-based lifestyle in strong mentoring relationships with our youth.  Those relationships will promote the following achievements: retention in school, regular advancement in grade level to graduation, individualized career plans, soft-skills, post-secondary education, enrollment in occupational trades leading to certification, employment opportunities, and/or encourage a faith-based lifestyle free from a life of crime.  

Type of Mentoring Program: Community and Site-Based


Mentors Requested: Males and Females


Intake Process: 

Application:  Live Life Together (LLT) Application

Training:      Grizzles Foundation New Mentor Training and Mentoring Central Online Training

Screening:   Interview, background check, and verification of references

Approval
Organizer will approve registrants
Age Limit
21 and up
Social
         Website
Requirements
Background check, Fingerprinting, Training
Requirement Details
Must be at least 21 years’ old Must complete our application and background check process. Must be willing to adhere to all program policies and procedures. Must be willing to make a 12-month commitment. Must complete at least two training modules.
GivePulse
16 Positions Filled | 7 Impacts | 17 Hours

Wall

Keusi Donald wrote on February 23rd, 2018

“STOP COMPLAINING AND DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT”


THESE ARE THE WORDS ECHOED BY MANY OVER THE PAST SEVERAL YEARS WHEN CONFRONTED WITH HEARING COMPLAINTS FROM SOMEONE WHO HAS BEEN IMPACTED BY NEGATIVE OUTCOMES FROM BAD DECISIONS/CHOICES BY OTHERS.
Becoming a Mentor is one way to “Do Something About It”. Mentoring leaves probably the single greatest impact on the lives of youth than any other opportunity, program, or preventive factor that can be offered. Youth who are mentored are 130% more likely to hold leadership positions themselves. Now that one statistic alone says a lot about what we [as a society] would like to see happen in the lives of any youth who has been deemed “High-risk”, “troubled teen”, or criminally connected to the Juvenile Justice system.
What we also hear from those who have been challenged to “Do Something About it”, is “I’m just one person, ‘What can I do!” My answer to that is, “what’s the difference between empathy and sympathy?” Well, sympathy is saying, “What can I do! I’m only one person.” Where empathy is saying, “WHAT CAN I DO?” I’m here to help, sign me up!” The answer is in the difference between the exclamation and the question; those who ask a question verse give an exclamation, are the ones who will generate the most impact. So, it reminds me of this quote by an unknown author, “To the world you might be one person, but to one person you might be the world.” NOW, “DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!” SIGN UP TO BE A MENTOR AND “BECOME THE DIFFERENCE”! GHANDI ONCE SAID, “We must become the change we seek!”
-MENTORING MATTERS IN REAL LIFE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Written by Keusi Donald, Program Manager of JIFF’s Live Life Together Mentoring Program

Keusi Donald wrote on February 23rd, 2018

“STOP COMPLAINING AND DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT”


THESE ARE THE WORDS ECHOED BY MANY OVER THE PAST SEVERAL YEARS WHEN CONFRONTED WITH HEARING COMPLAINTS FROM SOMEONE WHO HAS BEEN IMPACTED BY NEGATIVE OUTCOMES FROM BAD DECISIONS/CHOICES BY OTHERS.
Becoming a Mentor is one way to “Do Something About It”. Mentoring leaves probably the single greatest impact on the lives of youth than any other opportunity, program, or preventive factor that can be offered. Youth who are mentored are 130% more likely to hold leadership positions themselves. Now that one statistic alone says a lot about what we [as a society] would like to see happen in the lives of any youth who has been deemed “High-risk”, “troubled teen”, or criminally connected to the Juvenile Justice system.
What we also hear from those who have been challenged to “Do Something About it”, is “I’m just one person, ‘What can I do!” My answer to that is, “what’s the difference between empathy and sympathy?” Well, sympathy is saying, “What can I do! I’m only one person.” Where empathy is saying, “WHAT CAN I DO?” I’m here to help, sign me up!” The answer is in the difference between the exclamation and the question; those who ask a question verse give an exclamation, are the ones who will generate the most impact. So, it reminds me of this quote by an unknown author, “To the world you might be one person, but to one person you might be the world.” NOW, “DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!” SIGN UP TO BE A MENTOR A “BECOME THE DIFFERENCE”! GHANDI ONCE SAID, “We must become the change we seek!”
-MENTORING MATTERS IN REAL LIFE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
-
by Keusi Donald, Program Manager of JIFF’s Live Life Together Mentoring Program
Contact me at 901-846-1055, keusi@jiffyouth.org