Friday, July 23, 2010

Learning from each other: A Story from LPS


Learning from each other is a theme for TeamMates mentor Janice Stege and her mentee Shawna. Janice discovered the mentoring program about six years ago.

Janice was actually a Book Buddy for Shawna for two years at McPhee Elementary School. When Shawna moved into fourth grade, her teacher recommended a TeamMates mentor. “It was a natural that I became her mentor,” Janice said. Read the full article by visiting the LPS website here....

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

TeamMates Mentoring Program Receives A Grant

(Omaha, NE) – TeamMates Mentoring Program announced today that it has been awarded a grant in the amount of $10,000 by the Nebraska Arts Council. This grant will support expansion of the 2 Generations: 1 Composition Project. Through a series of interactive workshops held in communities throughout Nebraska, mentors and mentees will create works of art utilizing traditional arts avenues and new digital technology.

Nebraska Arts Council’s Executive Director, Suzanne Wise commended TeamMates Mentoring Program for its programs, noting that “TeamMates does an outstanding job of providing arts activities for their mentors and mentees throughout Nebraska. It is through fine organizations like this that Nebraska’s youth receive a better education in the arts, and the quality of life is improved for all Nebraskans.”

Workshops will be scheduled in communities across Nebraska during the 2010-2011 academic years. Over 700 are expected to be reached through this project . For more information about the 2 Generations: 1 Composition Project contact Susie Nelson, Development Director of TeamMates Mentoring Program at (402)390-8326.

The Nebraska Arts Council grants monetary resources to Nebraska’s nonprofit organizations for arts projects and programs in communities throughout the state. This financial support is made possible by funds appropriated by the Nebraska Legislature, through competitive grants from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), a federal agency, and funds from the Nebraska Cultural Endowment (NCE). Nebraskans wishing to learn more about NEA grants or the NCE should visit the NAC website at www.nebraskaartscouncil.org.

Contact: Adrianne Watson, Marketing Specialist
TeamMates Mentoring Program

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Osborne asks Chamber audience to get involved


Article From The Ralston Recorder
By Adam Klinker
Recorder Managing Editor
Published: Monday, July 5, 2010 12:10 PM CDT


In 1991, Tom Osborne stood at the promontory that was his in college football and took stock of the lay of the land.

What he saw disheartened him.

Traveling from city to city across the country, meeting with young men interested in donning Cornhusker scarlet and cream, Osborne bore witness to a society under siege.

In many recruiting visits, the legendary coach was going into neighborhoods where gangs reigned and drugs were the coin of the realm.

Even in Lincoln, Osborne saw growing problems with violence, drugs and a vicious, intergenerational cycle of students dropping out of school.

Athletics was a way out for some, but Osborne and his wife, Nancy, wondered what they could do to reach out to all children who were growing up in a world fraught with complications that didn’t seem to be there even 30 years ago.

“We thought we had a valuable resource in our football team,” Osborne said. “So the next day, at a team meeting I just asked.”

The coach stopped with the Xs and Os and asked his players if any of them would be willing to meet one-on-one with a middle school student in the Lincoln Public Schools for one hour a week to provide guidance – to provide just presence, even, for a student who might be at-risk.

Twenty-two hands went up and Osborne’s Teammates Mentoring Program was born.

Last Friday, Osborne was at the Ralston Chamber of Commerce’s Small Business Council luncheon to share the story of what Teammates has been doing over the last 19 years, how it grew from a 22-pair mentoring program in Lincoln to a statewide network of more than 140 participating elementary and secondary schools, including seven in Ralston.

Addressing a crowd of about 100, Osborne began with a story from his days as a representative in the U.S. House – an office he held from 2001 to 2007. He heard a speech from Great Britain’s then-prime minister, Tony Blair, in which Blair stated, “All power seems eternal, but as Britain knows, it’s transitory. Nothing lasts forever.”

Osborne realized Blair was sending warning signals about how societies can diminish and decay from within. It was exactly the kind of thing Osborne was working to forestall with the Teammates program.

“Sometimes we take for granted the things we know, we think they’ll be there forever,” he said. “I’m not here to say that it’s Armageddon, I’m not here to say it’s all doom and gloom. But all cultures can be one generation away from disintegration. The question is: what do you do about it?

“There’s one thing we’ve hit on, and it’s not a silver bullet, but it does work: mentoring.”

Teammates mentoring involves an adult and student pair who meet for one hour a week. They can talk, share a meal or take part in other activities.

All the mentor really needs to do, Osborne said, is be present in the child’s life. A mentor, he said, is someone who cares unconditionally and provides affirmation and a vision for the child’s life and future.

“If an adult, with no other obligation but to just spend time – one hour a week – with you, for the student, it really means a lot,” Osborne said.

Osborne said some 35,000 students in the metro area could benefit from a mentor. Currently, about 3,000 students are paired with mentors.

“Unless people are interested in these kids, we’re going to keep waking up to three or four shootings and continue to see the 40 percent dropout rates,” he said. “That causes society to become unsustainable. We certainly need financial support, but what we really need is mentors.”

It costs about $470 per mentor-student match, per year, Osborne said. Most matches last about three years.

“It’s cost effective,” he said. “The money is a pretty good investment when you consider someone who drops out of school, on average costs us $200,000 over their lifetime.”

Teammates has also employed Gallup to study the effectiveness of the program and discovered 85 percent of its mentored students show marked improvement in attendance.

A mentored student also shows an average 50 percent improvement in academic work, generally.

There is also a 75 percent drop in disciplinary incidents among mentored students.

“It works,” Osborne reiterated. “We hope you might consider being a mentor.”

At the conclusion of the program, the Small Business Committee presented Osborne with a check to the Teammates Foundation for $750.

The Ripple

We are looking for you! Someone who cares about youth, who is willing to give 1 hour a week to making a difference in their life. Mentoring a child is like starting a ripple in a pond. As Scott Adams said, “Remember there's no such thing as a small act of kindness. Every act creates a ripple with no logical end.”

Visit TeamMates.org to start your application!

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Pamida Supports District 29 TeamMates


Pamida Supports District 29 TeamMates


The Auburn Pamida Store and the Pamida Foundation awarded the local TeamMates chapter a $500 grant to cover the costs associated with group activities plus those attached to transporting TeamMates students and their mentors on field trips.

During the 2010-11 school year, two group activities are planned. On October 2, District 29 TeamMates will participate in Peru State College’s Homecoming Festivities. They will walk in the Homecoming Parade, attend a PSC Tail Gate and cheer for the PSC Bobcats during the homecoming football game.

In November, TeamMates students and mentors will travel to Omaha’s Quest Center to take in a Creighton Basketball game. Each year, one of Creighton’s home games is designated as a TeamMates Day, a day in which TeamMates adults and students are admitted free of charge.

Susan Reynoldson, a PSC intern for Elaine Hanson, discovered the Pamida Foundation is committed to improving the lives of citizens in the communities in which Pamida stores are located by awarding grants to support community projects. With the assistance of Nancy Fuller, secretary of District 29 TeamMates Advisory Board, Ms. Reynoldson wrote and submitted a grant proposal.

Lisa Jones, manager of Auburn Pamida, announced the grant application had been approved. Jones presented a $500 check to two TeamMates advisory board members. Jones stated, “Pamida is committed to supporting Auburn and in this case, the TeamMates Mentoring Program.”

The TeamMates Mentoring Program was founded in 1991 by Dr. Tom and Nancy Osborne. TeamMates is a school based mentoring program that matches adult volunteers from the community with students in grades four through twelve. Mentors meet one hour per week to provide support and encouragement to youth. The TeamMates Mentoring Program serves more than 4,000 youth in 114 communities across Nebraska and Iowa. To become a mentor in the District #29 TeamMates Mentoring Program, contact Dianne Peterson at Calvert Elementary School at 274-4129.

Picture ID: Lisa Jones, manager of Auburn Pamida, presents $500 to District 29 TeamMates Advisory Board members, Barb Billesbach (left) and Elaine Hanson (right).