We have long touted the value of mentoring programs; mentors provide particularly valuable support for students and graduates to get them through rough times or help them acclimate to new situations.
Last month, the United States Business Leadership Network (USBLN), headquartered in Washington, D.C., announced it had received a two-year national grant from the Mitsubishi Electric America Foundation (MEAF). The grant will support the expansion of its Career Link Mentoring Program, a collaborative project between the USBLN and the Employer Assistance and Resource Network (EARN).
This Career Link Mentoring Program assists college students and recent graduates (including veterans) with disabilities, through connections to business professionals from the USBLN’s member companies that are the mentors. During the mentoring relationship, participants engage in various activities that have a positive impact on their future employment prospects. One goal of this mentoring program is to support employers’ increasing demands for STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) professionals, as well as to encourage hiring veterans.
MEAF provides national grants focused on its vision of empowering youth with disabilities to lead productive lives through increased employment. The USBLN is a national non-profit, non-partisan, business-to-business network promoting workplaces, marketplaces and supply chains where people with disabilities are included.
Another mentoring model that has an impressive track record is that of Leadership CONNECTIONS in North Carolina. Leadership CONNECTIONS is a three-tiered mentoring program providing support to young women at risk, ages 14-17. The three tiers are professional women, graduates of the program and peers. This successful program teaches leadership basics and provides character education, as well as requiring community service from the participants.
Led by its own graduates, the work of this non-profit qualified organization has produced amazing results: 82 percent of their participants graduated from four-year colleges and universities; 11 percent hold advanced degrees; and another 6 percent went on to get some type of certification or attended community college. Not many other programs canboast that level of success. The graduate leaders of this program are available to train others who want to start similar programs.
Kudos to both of these worthwhile programs. Mentoring works and offers the greatest pipeline-building prospect for employers worldwide. The best employers are already providing mentoring. If the U.S. or any country is to be competitive on the global stage, it must embrace this mutually beneficial opportunity.