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Your world. Your chance to make it better. Notre Dame Mission Volunteers - AmeriCorps
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Are you interested in Notre Dame Mission Volunteers's newest program?

 

CHIP

Mentoring Children of Incarcerated Parents

AmeriCorps Service Sites

Facts about Children of the Incarcerated

Why Mentor?

Bill of Rights for Children of Incarcerated Parents

Resources

 

To volunteer, find out about a mentoring program near you,
or for more information

contact Ursula Hill at uhill@ndmva.org or (410) 532-6864 x19

 


 

AmeriCorps Service Sites

Friends Outside, Watsonville, CA - Program Assistant

Friends Outside is a volunteer-based organization providing resources and support to people in jail or prison, and their families. The main goals of Friends Outside are to reduce the trauma of incarceration, encourage positive community reentry, and reduce the likelihood of returning to jail for adults in Santa Cruz County.

The Program Assistant will be responsible for:

  • recruiting, training, and coordinating volunteer mentors who provide direct services to children of incarcerated parents 
  • recruiting children via parents to be mentored 
  • maintaining volunteer and client records
  • coordinating periodic volunteer mentor evaluations
  • preparing monthly reports for the program manager 
Activities will also include attending advisory board meetings to consult about issues and working with other community programs for trainings and to coordinate services. 

www.scvolunteercenter.com/friendsoutside/

 

Covenant to Care for Children, Hartford, CT - Mentoring Outreach Program Coordinator

Covenant to Care for Children mobilizes and channels the generosity of caring and faithful people to advocate for, mentor, and provide direct assistance to Connecticut’s children and youth who are neglected, abused, or at-risk. Reach One Youth and My Mentor and Me (M3) programs match youth with loving mentors. These programs create partnerships between youth, mentors, congregations, and the broader community by providing opportunities to nurture and cultivate the resilient spirit found in all youth. M3 specifically works with children whose parents are incarcerated to provide support needed for these at risk youth.

The Mentoring Outreach Program Coordinator will be involved in outreach, program operation and management, recordkeeping, and other program activities. The coordinator will:

  • actively recruit mentors through faith-based and community organizations
  • work collaboratively with diverse faith-based organizations and individuals 
  • educate and provide resources to faith and community groups on topics such as child welfare, abuse, neglect, foster care, and adoption
  • take part in ongoing management of mentoring programs
  • track and evaluate program activities

www.covenanttocare.org

 

Saint Katherine of Siena School, Baltimore, MD

NDA members have worked at Saint Katherine School as teachers' aids in the lower and upper schools. Through this work, NDA has recognized the need for mentoring. The CHIP member at Saint Katherine School will develop a mentoring program.

 

Baltimore Rising, Baltimore, MD

Check back soon for more information!

www.ci.baltimore.md.us/government/baltimorerising/programs.php

 

Families and Friends of Louisiana's Incarcerated Children, New Orleans, LA

Check back soon for more information!

fflic.org

 


 

Facts about Children of the Incarcerated

Approximately two point four million children in the United States have at least one incarcerated parent.
 
Seven million children have parents under correctional supervision: in prison, in jail, or on probation or parole.
 
Children whose parents are in prison are at risk for low performance in school, teen pregnancy, and drug abuse.
 
A tenth of these children will be detained before they turn eighteen, and about half of the boys whose parents are incarcerated will be incarcerated themselves.
 

 

Why Mentor?
 

All children need positive and supportive adults. Children with incarcerated parents are especially in need of caring adults in their lives because of the trauma they have experienced. Good mentors can help children improve social and cognitive skills by building trust and strengthening personal relationships. Mentors can be role models, confidants, and emotionally supportive advocates.

All it takes is one hour, once a week, for one year.

 

Bill of Rights for Children of Incarcerated Parents

  1. I have the right to be kept safe and informed at the time of my parent’s arrest.
  2. I have the right to be heard when decisions are made about me;
  3. I have the right to be considered when decisions are made about my parent;
  4. I have the right to be well-cared for in my parent’s absence;
  5. I have the right to speak with, see, and touch my parent;
  6. I have the right to support as I face my parent’s incarceration;
  7. I have the right to not be judged, blamed or labeled because my parent is incarcerated;
  8. I have the right to have a lifelong relationship with my parent.

 

Resources

Bernstein, Nell. All Alone in the World Children of the Incarcerated.  New York: The New Press, 2005. 
Rhodes, Jean E. Stand By Me: The Risks and Rewards of Mentoring Today’s Youth. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2002

“Partnership Between Corrections and Child Welfare, Part Two: Collaboration for Change,” Annie E. Casey Foundation, March 2002: 8

“Understanding and Supporting Foster Children with Incarcerated Parents.” Jordan Institute for Families, January 2002.  http://www.practicenotes.org/vol7_no1/support_children_incarparents.htm.

 

Notre Dame Mission Volunteers - Americorps
403 Markland Ave.
Baltimore, MD 21212
Phone:(410) 532-6864 - Fax: (410) 532-2418

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