
 
        
         
		Education 
 State mentorship program prepares  
 for fall of open schools, returning  
 students, and new challenges 
   Getty Images 
 COURIER LIFE, JULY 30-AUG. 5, 2021 15  
 BY DEAN JAMIESON 
 As schools reopen, and  
 children  and  teenagers  return  
 to  their  classrooms,  organizations  
 like  New  York  
 State’s Mentorship Program  
 will  likely  prove  more  important  
 than ever, providing  
 struggling  students with  
 the academic, social and  
 emotional support that they  
 need.  
 “Mentorship, in all capacities, 
  will be at the epicenter of  
 young people navigating the  
 pandemic and coming out the  
 other side,”  said Diane Urso,  
 Queens and Long Island director. 
  “You don’t see the end  
 result of a crisis until you go  
 through it.”  
 For  Urso,  that  end  result  
 could mean many things –  
 from  anxiety  to  academic  
 stress  to  depression.  Adolescents  
 have  been  forced  in  
 front of their screens, while  
 young  children  have  missed  
 well  over  a  year  of  essential  
 education. 
  “People think they know  
 where these kids are going  
 to  be,  but,  unfortunately,  we  
 do not,” said Urso. The Mentorship  
 Program  is  preparing  
 for all eventualities, with  
 added training for the particular  
 psychological challenges  
 these  students  will  
 face – although Urso emphasized  
 that these mentors are  
 not mental health professionals, 
  and are required to talk to  
 mentor coordinators if something  
 they can’t handle comes  
 up. This has never been more  
 emphasized  than  now,  with  
 last  year’s  added  social  and  
 psychological stresses. 
 The New York Mentorship  
 Program was fi rst established  
 by Matilda Cuomo in 1984,  
 with  the  aim  of  preventing  
 school dropouts through oneand 
 one mentor relationships.  
 “Children who succeed despite  
 overwhelming obstacles  
 do so often because of a caring  
 adult in their lives,” reads the  
 Program’s statement of purpose. 
  The results have proven  
 this: mentees are 46% less  
 likely to start using drugs,  
 and 52% less likely to skip a  
 day of school.  
  Yet these obstacles have  
 never been more severe. Some  
 students have been unable,  
 for lack of technology, to properly  
 attend online classes, others  
 have taken advantage to  
 cheat;  all  have  been  trapped  
 at home, however, and will  
 fi nd the return to live class a  
 challenge.  “There’s  probably  
 not a student who has not lost  
 something,”  said  Urso  of  the  
 pandemic and it’s after-effects  
 on public education. 
 The  Mentorship  Program  
 tailors itself to suit particular  
 school districts, with some  
 districts emphasizing adult  
 mentoring, while others emphasize  
 peer-to-peer  relationships. 
   
 In  Brentwood  School  District, 
  the state’s second largest, 
  the focus is on peer-topeer  
 support,  with  ROTC  
 and Honors Society students  
 mentoring elementary-school  
 kids. While the focus is on academic  
 performance, mentors  
 obviously provide social and  
 emotional support, as well.  
 “I  think  it’s  going  to  be  
 even more important for us  
 to build the kid’s self-esteem,  
 their  confi dence,  their  sense  
 of belonging, community,”  
 said Ann Palmer, Assistant  
 Superintendent of the Brentwood  
 School District. “It has  
 never been more important  
 for these kids to have social  
 and emotional support.” 
 The Program’s fl exibility  
 will be an even greater advantage  
 now, with  in-person,  online  
 and hybrid mentoring all  
 being employed as local mandates  
 – and case numbers –  
 require. Even at the height of  
 the pandemic, the Program  
 was trying its best to match  
 students with mentors, sometimes  
 in person, but mostly  
 online. “Even then, the connection  
 was still so valuable,”  
 said  Urso.  “We’re  talking  
 about districts where the kids  
 are just not seeing anybody.”  
 Even despite these challenges, 
  both Urso and Palmer  
 remained  hopeful.  Mentors  
 are educators and role models,  
 but also friends, people that  
 struggling students know have  
 their back. For students struggling  
 with school, or at home,  
 without sympathetic teachers  
 or parental fi gures, the results  
 can be life-changing.  
 “When you make a bad  
 choice,  it’s  like  skipping  a  
 rock,”  said  Urso.  “But  it’s  
 the  same  thing  with  a  good  
 choice.”