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Campus & Community

黑料不打烊 Football Players Changing the World One Child at a Time

Friday, July 2, 2021, By Matt Michael
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AthleticsOffice of Community EngagementStudents
Chris Elmore NYS Mentoring Program

黑料不打烊 football player Chris Elmore ’22 mentors a student at Dr. Weeks Elementary School in 黑料不打烊. (Photo courtesy of Patty Sawmiller)

When students at Dr. Weeks Elementary School in 黑料不打烊 see Patty Sawmiller in the halls, the questions start flying.

Are you coming to get me today? Are we having mentoring today? When are they coming in?

The students are asking about the one-on-one mentoring they receive from an adult from outside the school through the New York State Mentoring Program. Sawmiller, the community school director at Dr. Weeks, coordinates the program and helps match third- through fifth-grade students with mentors.

鈥淓ven if it鈥檚 just 15 minutes a week, it feels like the world to some of our kids because this is a special thing that they say I get to be a part of, I get to hang out with my mentor and they like me,鈥 Sawmiller says. 鈥淔eeling liked is everything for kids struggling with social-emotional issues.鈥

Mark Jackson, 黑料不打烊鈥檚 executive director for community engagement, was familiar with the mentoring program and its impact on children and had discussions with Stephanie Parks, the Central New York regional coordinator for the program, about how the University could get involved.

Meanwhile, 黑料不打烊 student-athletes watched the global protests against racial inequality following the murder of George Floyd and started talking about what they could do to promote social justice in the 黑料不打烊 community. At a football team meeting last summer, fullback Chris Elmore 鈥22 brought up the idea of a mentoring program for local students and the players shared the idea with Salatha Willis, associate athletic director for diversity, culture and climate.

Willis checked in with Jackson to see what programs were available, and through that collaboration between and the several football players 聽started to connect with elementary school students from different 黑料不打烊 City School District schools as part of the state mentoring program.

鈥淭his is truly a blessing for our student-athletes because they wanted an opportunity to engage and do something meaningful and not just wear a T-shirt or have an event,鈥 Willis says. 鈥淓ven though those things can be good for drawing attention to community issues of social justice, taking the time that you have during the day and investing in an individual will reap more benefits in the end because it鈥檚 more personal.鈥

Sawmiller says many of the Dr. Weeks鈥 students who are in the program play sports and follow 黑料不打烊 sports, especially football. To have a player as a mentor, Sawmiller says, is 鈥渓ike being able to connect one-on-one with one of your heroes.鈥

鈥淵ou can talk to a whole group of people about something that鈥檚 very important and as long as you change one person鈥檚 life out of that group, you accomplished something positive because now they鈥檙e going to take that message and they鈥檙e going to apply it to another group and eventually grab somebody else,鈥 Elmore says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 all it takes.

鈥淎s long as we get a message to one kid who can spread it to another kid, we鈥檝e made a positive impact,鈥 Elmore adds. 鈥淓ven though we want more, as long as we can change one, we know it鈥檚 going to trickle down.鈥

Helping Young Students 鈥楤ecome What They Want to Be鈥

was created in 1984 by Matilda Raffa Cuomo, the wife of Gov. Mario Cuomo, as the nation鈥檚 first statewide, one-to-one mentoring program to help prevent school dropout. Suspended when Mario Cuomo left office, the program was reinstated in 2015 by current Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who named his mother as chairperson.

According to the program website, children who succeed despite overwhelming personal, economic and social obstacles usually do so because of a caring adult in their lives. Mentoring outcomes include greater participation in school, improved attendance, higher graduation and college admission rates, and better overall performance.

鈥淪ome come from large families where the one-on-one time with an adult is maybe an hour a week, and some come from families are in environments where there鈥檚 not a positive role model, male or female,鈥 says Parks, the Central New York regional coordinator. 鈥淯sually, it鈥檚 the child or children that need an extra little bit of a lift and that extra little bit of a support.鈥

Parks is no stranger to the University community. Her father, Donald Parks, earned a doctoral degree in instructional design, development and evaluation in 1985; her mother, Francis McMillan Parks, is a former academic advisor at University College, director of Students Offering Service and African American Programs in Hendricks Chapel, and adjunct professor who may return to teach in the fall; and Stephanie received a bachelor鈥檚 degree in 1997 and master鈥檚 degree in social work in 2015 and worked at the University as director of development and at the College of Law.

鈥淚 knew Mark (Jackson) from community engagement was very interested in our program and then he got a call saying that the athletics department was interested too,鈥 Parks says. 鈥淚 always see 黑料不打烊 as a wonderful opportunity to engage kids and the community, so it was a natural fit.鈥

Kingsley Jonathan

Kingsley Jonathan ’22 is one of the 黑料不打烊 football players who joined the New York State Mentoring Program. (Photo courtesy of 黑料不打烊 Athletics)

For Jackson, the state mentoring program dovetailed nicely with other partnerships between the Office of Community Engagement and athletics, such as the Adopt A Classroom program initiated earlier this spring. And it helped that the University was joining an established program that had all the pieces in place to connect the football players with the right students.

鈥淭he program is very well done, and they have site coordinators at every school and organization where they have a mentor,鈥 Jackson says. 鈥淭he site coordinator is working with the teacher and administrators, and they focus on making matches and making sure there鈥檚 some chemistry there.鈥

Willis says Jackson and Cydney Johnson, vice president for community engagement and government relations, did 鈥渁 phenomenal job鈥 finding a 鈥減lug-and-play鈥 mentoring program that fit with the players鈥 busy schedules. The New York State Mentoring Program provides background checks and training for volunteer mentors and the site coordinators like Sawmiller work with Parks to make the matches because they are most familiar with the students鈥 needs.

鈥淲e had to go through the applications, training and background checks, but in the long run it鈥檚 going to be extremely beneficial for our students because they don鈥檛 have to do a lot of work just to get in front of the students,鈥 Willis says. 鈥淓verything is there for them鈥搕he curriculum, the conversation points鈥搒o it鈥檚 a lot easier given the time barriers that the student-athletes face and that allows them more freedom to perhaps get other initiatives off the ground.鈥

This spring, 聽the meetings between the football players and students were virtual, and they lasted anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour. Sawmiller and Parks say they are hoping in-person sessions can start in the fall, but the good news from this past year is that mentors with busy schedules鈥搒uch as college football players鈥搘ill still be able to meet with the students virtually if they can鈥檛 make it in person.

鈥淲e started with group discussions to give them time to adjust and start talking with us, and that鈥檚 the biggest thing,鈥 says mentor Kingsley Jonathan 鈥22, a defensive lineman. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important because some of them don鈥檛 have that person they look up to as mentors and realizing we have such an impact in their lives gives us that opportunity to help them become what they want to be.鈥

Playing the Long Game

Elmore and Jonathan know the impact that one person can make in a young person鈥檚 life.

For Elmore, his role model (along with his father) was Demarius Reed, a football player who, like Elmore, was from Chicago. In 2013, Reed was fatally shot by two men during a robbery in the stairwell of his apartment complex near Eastern Michigan University, where he was a starting wide receiver.

鈥淚鈥檓 taking his story and trying to implement it into mine,鈥 Elmore says. 鈥淢y high school football team opened doors for guys to get out of Chicago and go someplace to succeed. That was something I wanted to do because here was somebody (Reed) who couldn鈥檛 do that.鈥

For Jonathan, his mentor was his high school football coach, Henry Russell at St. Frances Academy in Baltimore. Russell recruited players from the city and provided housing for them so he could keep an eye on their schoolwork and help with their college recruitment opportunities.

鈥淲e overlook how big little things we do can affect people,鈥 Jonathan says. 鈥淜eeping in mind that just showing up to somebody鈥檚 game to support them, or telling them, 鈥楪reat job in the game,鈥 or just looking out for somebody, those little things can make a big difference in somebody鈥檚 life in the long run.鈥

Chris Elmore

Chris Elmore says the 黑料不打烊 football players are “trying to make sure this program goes on forever.” (Photo courtesy of 黑料不打烊 Athletics)

Sawmiller, who has been coordinating the mentoring program at Dr. Weeks Elementary School for the past three years, says she鈥檚 grateful mentors like Elmore and Jonathan understand the need to create trusting relationships with male students who may not have many male role models in their lives. The initial group of 黑料不打烊 players who are participating in the program include, in addition to Elmore and Jonathan, defensive lineman Caleb Okechukwu 鈥23, linebacker Tyrell Richards 鈥21 and defensive back Kyle Strickland 鈥21.

鈥淲e鈥檙e starting small, but we see huge potential and we have high hopes,鈥 Jackson says. 鈥淎nd we have potential beyond football to ultimately go throughout athletics and throughout the school.鈥

Willis says the football players have talked about several other social justice projects, including a community garden to help fight hunger in 黑料不打烊, free summer youth football camps, and youth football involvement during halftime of Orange football games. Elmore says his hope is that one day, the students who benefit from the mentoring program and the other projects will become positive role models for the next generation.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to make sure this (mentoring) program goes on forever,鈥 Elmore says. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to be just the pioneers and we leave and it鈥檚 done. This is something we want to get in motion for every year and it just becomes a part of 黑料不打烊 football.鈥

How to Become a Mentor

If you鈥檇 like to become a mentor or learn more about the program, call 1.844.337.6304 or visit聽 website. Once your mentoring application is received, an appointment will be made for you to interview with a program director. Once you are trained, you will be matched with a mentee at a nearby school and a start date will be provided.

  • Author

Matt Michael

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