You are currently viewing What College Campuses can do for After-School Programs

What College Campuses can do for After-School Programs

Victoria Bosman, AmeriCorps VISTA at Dwight Hall at Yale
Mark Fopeano, Program Manager at Dwight Hall at Yale

Our 8th grade students in the Jones-Zimmermann Academic Mentoring Program (J-Z AMP) just wrapped up their last year with their Yale student mentors that they’ve been with for three years! Twelve years and four cohorts later, we’ve successfully navigated our way through the inevitable growing pains of implementing an afterschool program and have forged strong partnerships with our schools and funder. Sometimes there was chaos behind the scenes, but the lessons we have learned along the road have paid off and allowed our mentors and mentees to have positive experiences and grow. As the “university” in the J-Z AMP partnership, we want to share what value we think university partnerships can provide for other afterschool programs (aka why we are important too!).

• Volunteers! And a lot of them. Students come to us to learn about ways to
become involved in their new community, and if we have a relationship with a school, we know an opportunity to connect them exists and can help fill a need at the school.

“During my first year on campus, I joined every service organization imaginable: Yale College Council, Freshman Class Council, UNICEF, Black Men’s Union,the Leadership Institute, and many others. Despite the on-campus impact of these organizations, I could not shake the feeling that there was a community beyond the Ivy walls of Yale, yet still within New Haven, that I was failing to engage with.”
-Joel Bervell ’17, Student Coordinator of J-Z AMP

• Relatable mentors and role models. Due to age, college students get to occupy the space between teacher and friend. Our mentors frequently let us know how their mentees think of them as “buddies” but still remain an authority figure.

“What I love about J-Z AMP is that I get to be the best version of myself. I get to accomplish what I want and be who I want, without anyone telling me otherwise.”
-Rianna, J-Z AMP Student

• Program evaluation, data collection, and research. J-Z AMP Mentor Cathy
Zhu ’17 examined four research topics for her senior capstone to evaluate and suggest improvements for our program.

o How effective has J-Z AMP as a process been over the past three years, in terms of mentees’ academic achievement and social-emotional development?

o What should be the future directions of J-Z AMP and similar programs regarding funding, curriculum, and leadership?

• Increase community ties and leverage university resources. We are able to share information, collaborate, come up with new ideas, and contribute our own resources to help expand programming.

o J-Z AMP mentees were able to build relationships with Yale students and learn about the university in their own city.

o J-Z AMP mentors used us to learn about enrichment opportunities in the community to offer to mentees, such as field trips to local museums.

o New funding and programming opportunities may open up after collaborating with a college, like with J-Z AMP.

Exploring ways to utilize community assets can make a huge difference for students, and we hope connecting campuses and local schools can be a piece of that puzzle.

This Post Has One Comment

  1. Kate

    What a lovely collaboration. Great work!

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.