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>View discussions about this entry Country: United States
Organization: Eta Theta Lambda Education Foundation
Year the initative began (yyyy) 2007
Positioning in the Mosaic of solutions
Describe your program or new idea in one sentence. The program features a club for 15 to 17 year olds where participants learn to cook nutritious meals while developing spiritual, nutritional, and economic awareness.
What makes your initiative uniquely positioned to create change in your community? As an organization of primarily African-American and Latino men, ETL Education Foundation members strongly believe that changes in health disparities, particularly among African-American males may occur through influencing lifestyle choices and skills. Helping 15 to 17 year old young men learn how to cook, make healthy choices, develop an internal spirituality based on morality and ethics, and visualize economic options may help reverse the trend of decreased longevity, underemployment and anti-social behavior often seen in this population. Each year the Foundation takes approximately 120 students (40% male) on a week long bus trip to approximately 14 historically Black colleges and universities (HBCU). A series of educational workshops that explore strategies for academic success, relevant historical perspectives, financial literacy, and conflict resolution precede each tour. Males are invited to participate in the Foundation’s mentoring program which includes The Young Chefs Club. The Foundation is successful in bringing together young men who have become more receptive to change through the effectiveness of its programming.
Describe how you organize and carry out your work? The Foundation draws its membership from Eta Theta Lambda chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. Founded in 1906, it is the first African-American collegiate fraternity and possesses a legacy of community service. As a 501c3 organization the Foundation is led by an executive board and meets regularly to plan, implement, and support community-based youth programs. In addition to the college tour and mentoring program the Foundation has sponsored college scholarships, and oratorical competitions. William Mills serves as President.
What is your plan to scale and expand your innovation into your community and beyond? By taking advantage of existing mentoring relationships with youths, and its affiliation with Alpha Phi Alpha, the Foundation plans to scale and expand the program in the community and beyond. Also, to further progress its goals, the Foundation has developed relationships with local high schools and community centers. These relationships will be used as additional sources for club membership. As the program continues to meet with success, there are plans to expand beyond our local community. The Foundation takes full advantage of its relationship with Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. There are over 100 chapters between Maine and Virginia. The Foundation plans to write and standardize the club curriculum and assist fraternity chapters in implementing clubs throughout this region. Expansion and local community effectiveness is predicated upon the possession of appropriate financial and material resources. Therefore, the program expansion plan includes aggressive solicitation of grant and corporate support.
What other resources, institutional, or policy needs would be necessary to help sustain and scale up your idea? Financial resources for the purchase of basic materials including pens, notebooks, aprons, cooking utensils, flatware, service sets, etc. are essential. The Foundation has already begun a letter writing campaign to local merchants soliciting materiel to meet the club needs. Financial assistance in the purchase of appropriate texts and in support of curriculum development efforts is also required. Luckily, the Foundation membership includes health care professionals, businessmen, educators, and clergymen. The Foundation therefore possesses the appropriate mix of human resources to provide for the writing of an appropriate curriculum, and the overall carrying out of its mission. As the program expands beyond the community the Foundation will require funds for travel, training, initial set-up of additional clubs, and inter-club conferences. The Foundation envisions convening region-wide club conferences providing opportunity for young men to coalesce, learn from each other, engage in friendly competition, and listen to nationally known experts and personalities in the culinary arts, business world, healthcare industry, and spiritual community.
Describe your impact in one sentence, commenting on both the individual and community levels. The program provides young men the opportunity to meet in a safe nurturing environment, learn important survival skills and demand more from themselves and community.
What impact has your work achieved to date? To date over 500 young men have benefited from Foundation mentoring and programming activity. Parents of young men in particular have related stories of how their sons have positively changed following participation in Foundation programming and have requested enhancements and additions to our programs. Approximately 35% of the young men involved in programming have completed college. Our existing programs formally address sexual responsibility, cultural awareness, academic achievement, and conflict resolution. The Young Chefs Club represents an enhancement of our mentoring program. Its genesis springs from an increased need to more specifically address health and healthy lifestyle choices in 15 to 17 year olds. Addressing these lifestyle choices, and providing these young men with culinary skills may stave off the health, social, and economic maladies that plague African-American and Latino men in particular, as well as provide unique opportunities for young men to interact and encounter positive role models.
What measure do you use to gauge your impact and why? Members hope that sponsored programs result in general behavioral changes in its participants. It is important to keep parents in the loop and to be sensitive to their needs and perceptions. The Foundation relies upon feedback from parents as to the impact of its programming. It formally queries parents using Likert-type surveys to ascertain their perception of changes in behavior and program effectiveness. Student participants are formally queried in the same manner as well as through general discussion sessions.
How is your initiative currently being financed and how would you finance further expansion and/or replication? The Foundation’s current mentoring program is financed through a grant held by the Westbury Community Center in Westbury, New York. The Foundation is seeking additional funds for the Young Chef’s Club. Other Foundation initiatives are funded through self-financing, individual and organizational donations, and participant fees. The Foundation is aggressively seeking materiel and financial support from philanthropic organizations, local corporate and business entities, area colleges and universities, and other community service organizations.
Provide information on your current finances and organization: The success of the Young Chefs Club is dependent upon the ability of the Foundation to identify and acquire additional funds. A budget of approximately $2500 to fund the start up of the Young Chefs Club has been proposed. The largest share of the Eta Theta Lambda Education Foundation budget is dedicated to the organizing and carrying out the college tour. The tour budget is approximately $65,000. Approximately 20% of the budget is realized through donations and individual sponsorships. The remainder is realized through participant fees. The Foundation depends upon volunteers who donate time and material to organize events, facilitate workshops and provide professional services. The Foundation has begun a campaign to solicit additional resources to better fund all of its programming with a goal to decrease participant responsibility in funding programs.
Who are your potential partners and allies? The Young Chefs Club potential partners include area colleges and universities, local merchants and corporations, local Alpha Phi Alpha chapters, and area community centers. The Foundation has solicited materiel and resource support from these entities. The Foundation has cultivated productive relationships with the Westbury Community Center, Adelphi University, and local merchants. They are supporters of Foundation programming and are likely supporters of this new project.
Who are your potential investors? In addition to those already mentioned, program potential investors include all those who benefit from a community of productive and healthy young men.
What is the origin of this innovation? Tell us your story. Eta Theta Lambda Education Foundation was established in 1982 with a mission to promote scholarship and academic achievement among African-American and Latino youth. As an organization of men, its membership is particularly concerned with the development African-American and Latino young men. Foundation members include a group of men who have overcome varying degrees of disadvantage to now serve as educators, lawyers, businessmen, entrepreneurs, physicians, etc. As a collective, the membership is dedicated to its duty to shape circumstances where youth have the opportunity to match and exceed its accomplishments. The idea of the Young Chefs Club developed through conversation and formal querying of parents as well as the acknowledgement of several members' own culinary skills and love of cooking. The membership believes that the club offers an additional opportunity to connect with young men, transfer critical survival skills, impart health and nutrition knowledge, present tools and concepts for success, and continue to serve as community role models.
Please provide a personal bio. Note this may be used in Changemakers marketing material. Steven B. Skinner, PT, MS, EdD serves as the Foundation Programs Coordinator. Professionally, he serves as an associate professor at Kingsborough Community College of the City University of New York. Dr. Skinner has been active with Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc. since 1979 serving at local and regional levels. He has also been active with Big Brothers/Big Sisters and local civic organizations.
Contact Information:
Steven Skinner
Programs Coordinator Eta Theta Lambda Education Foundation (NGO) Discussions about this entry |


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http://www.culinaryschoolsprograms.com/
Hello Dr Skinner,
So.....I have been reading through just about all the entries over the past few days. Had a pretty challenging day today...so...I thought...ok, maybe I will check in on Changemakers tomorrow. Well, let me tell you, this entry has made my day!
Nutrition is a BIG issue for us at Life Pieces To Masterpieces, Inc. (LPTM) (Go to www.lifepieces.org for more info). Starting out in our early years, we would feed the boys the usual, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, chips, candy....and then....about five years ago, we had an epiphany and began to introduce more fruit, fresh vgetables, healthy organic treats. Needless to say, our nutrition budget more than doubled as a result of choosing healthier foods for our guys. When our budget was tight, we found ourselves slipping backwards and once again, sandwiches and chips. We are still struggling in this area to some degree.
We have 8 LPTM apprentices who are interested in the Culinary Arts. One of our apprentices has already been accepted into a local culinary arts school. Wouldn't it be great if you and I could put our heads together to bring some of what you are doing at ETL to LPTM! "Ding, ding, ding! I think we got a WINNER!" lol
I ABSOLUTELY LOVE your work. Definitely check out what's happening at LPTM and I am certain that there are a few things that we do that you could use at ETL as well. POSITIVELY, let's connect!
In Peace
Mary Brown
Life Pieces To Masterpieces,Inc.
I really appreciate that you all have a program specifically dedicated to parents. We have been talking about this but have not quite gotten up to speed on it. Of course this email is quite different from the one I tried to send last night. I have left things out and replaced them with others. All the more reason for us to remain in touch! Once again thanks for your comments and thoughts.
Dear Ms. Brown,
I don't think my first response from last night got through. Thanks for you kind words about our program. I am glad we were able to make your day. You are right it is easy to forget about the importance of nutrition. Early on in our mentoring program sessions the greatest highlight for the boys and young men is the pizza we serve at the sessions' end. They love it and it meets our budget restrictions. However, it is important that we send the right signal about health and nutrition--always. As you know, habits develop over time and habits are only broken when there is real recognition that the habit may be detrimental to your well-being. Obviously there are many reasons why eating habits may be poor and we try to address many in the program. Clearly, the health risks, and the health statistics say we should do something about it early.
For us, the kitchen serves a metaphor for constructive change. Upon reflecting on my early experiences and the experiences of my friends, so much occurred in our family kitchen. Not only did we learn to cook there, we did homework there, had family discussions there, played board games there, entertained there. In my house as a child the living room was the museum room--seldom used and always looking perfect--but the kitchen was the spot. That's why we believe our program is much more than a cooking class and how the philosophy was developed. We hope we can develop the program more and then help spread it around!
I had an opportunity to check out your organization's web site. You are right. We do have some commonalities. We are working now to take our homework helper project--which was telephone based--to a web-based format. We are of course continuing with our mentoring activities and the College Tour.
Hello Dr. Skinner,
Thank you for this response and YES, "The kitchen, a metaphor for constructive change". As you described your family experience, again, I feel that we have MUCH in common. Our kitchen was the "hub" as well. My sisters and I would help my mom prepare meals as my Dad would relax and read his newspaper and the boys in the family would scurry around completing their after school chores before the entire family settled down to enjoy our meal TOGETHER.
This was an every day happening in my life growing up. Oh...and "the living room as a museum"! lol The stories I could tell about my mom, who we called "Mommie", saying, "Girl, take yo shoes off before going in ma living room and what you doin' in there anyway. lol I Defintely can relate!
Dr. Skinner, at the end of the day, I think it is actually THIS that I am trying to replicate in the lives of our boys and young men - that feeling of being safe, healthy, happy, secure. You have TRULY inspired me to broaden my committment to the concept of "healthy" and for that I truly thank you.
POSITIVELY, let's continue this dialogue .
In peace
Mary
Hi Steven Skinner
I like your project title "Young Chef’s Club" as it provides something which I could also do at the Children's Village and Vocational Centre (Kenya, http://www.changemakers.net/en-us/node/3940). To be launched in 2010 (pending funding), CVVC will have a business/conference center where food catering is one of its business activities. In preparation of this (CVVC still does not have cooking facilities yet), I am thinking of sending youths to intern at restaurants. The only requirement I need from restaurants that the students are given meals when they are at work and some pocket money for their transport between CVVC and the restaurant. I think the initial exposure will be useful so that the youths (probationers and foster children above 16 yrs old) can be aware of the many duties in managing a restaurant.
Could you comment of this approach ?
What are the things I should watch out for ?
I also remember the WCiC tour group (http://www.globetree.org/pdf/studytour_5-17may2007.pdf) where we had lunch with the Mayor of Skellefteå Mr. Bert Öhlund at the University restaurant. The meal and service for the lunch was organised by students of the chef course. I think the support given by the municipality is really great and I could see the pride in the students for doing an excellent job (and also being congratulated by the Mayor and the tour group).
regards
jacky foo
Children's Village and Vocational Centre (CVVC), Kenya
http://www.changemakers.net/en-us/node/3940
I think the application of the Young Chefs Club to your program is excellent. It is interesting that the concept resonates even when cultural, economic, and social conditions differ. Here in the States our participants are arguably in a different cultural/survival place than your participants in Kenya. That being said, thriving is relative and the importance of garnering skills that serve as leavens to a healthier and more prosperous life cannot be understated. I believe if you can indeed partner with restaurants that your students will not only develop the culinary survival skills but will be able to immediately associate those skills with economic empowerment--what a bonus!! I think the only concern is the careful selection of restaurants. These institutions would really need to buy into your concepts. You don't want facilities to ultimately consider your students a source of cheap labor or a nuisance of sorts.
I also agree with you that there is something special about kids having the opportunity to take pride in their efforts and receive accolades from others. Having participants go through the process of selecting menus, preparing guest lists, preparing meals, serving, etc, is surely a self-esteem booster--still another ingredient to living a healthier and more prosperous life. Thanks for the comments and good luck with all of you worthwhile programs.
I am sorry for this delayed message to tahnk you for your response.
I have not figured out how to receive notification for messages from other entries.
(Let me know if someone has the info)
>I think the only concern is the careful selection of restaurants.
>These institutions would really need to buy into your concepts.
>You don't want facilities to ultimately consider your students a
>source of cheap labor or a nuisance of sorts.
I thought "free labor" would be a strong approach to get restaurants to receive my students ?
Unemployed university graduates are turning up at OVC NGOs (who care for orphans and vulnerable children) and Children's institutions for volunteer work in exchange for food and accomodation or for meals and transport money. So I am not in a better bargaining position with restaurants and can only monitor "over-exploitation" of labor. See case in http://www.changemakers.net/en-us/node/3668#comment-3286
One thing I can insist is a defined number of working hours and meals (and maybe even transport money).
From the technology side for CVVC, I am thinking of solar ovens and solar cookers (for some Kenyan recipes e.g. pre-cooking beans).
Have you used these before ?
regards
jacky foo
Children's Village and Vocational Centre (CVVC), Kenya
http://www.changemakers.net/en-us/node/3940
Hello Mr. Skinner,
Have you set up any kind of job placement program for after the young men learn culinary skills? It would be great if you could somehow work towards incorporating an income generating system!
Dana Frasz
Changemakers
As you can imagine we are excited about this new program. Young men from our College Tour and the community have begun to sign up and we will convene our first meeting very soon. We have begun to look into establishing relationships with culinary schools and with the Food Program at Kingsborough Community College (where I am on the faculty in Biological Sciences). This program is in the Department of Tourism and Hospitality. We hope the relationship will lead to educational and perhaps intern/job experiences for the young men. The job placement piece certainly is in line with the portion of our program focusing on economic awareness. We are also exploring an entrepreneural link to the food industry. We have a member/mentor who is a faculty member at Hofstra University in the Business/Entrepreneural Studies Department. It would be great if we could eventually have the young men involved in the development of their own business (perhaps running a concession stand at little league or community youth basketball games or something like that). I like the notion of incorporating an income generating system. It clearly merits serious exploration. Thanks for the idea.
As we move closer to starting this program I am reminded of my own upbringing. In my childhood house, the living room was the showpiece/museum room. Only on special occasions did my parents actually entertain there. Most of the casual entertaining and conversation occurred in the kitchen. Conversing, strategizing, and growing occurred in the kitchen at the same time that something scrumptious was being prepared. This is the operating metaphor for the Young Chefs Club. Not only are culinary skills learned and practiced, but other life skills are transmitted and explored in a non-threatening and supportive atomosphere. We look forward to our "kitchen" playing a positive role in these young men's lives!
I love it! Yes! I too would love to hear some stories of the impact the cooking program has had on young men. Thanks!
Dana Frasz
Changemakers
Mr. skinner,
I really like the alternative and constructive environment you are creating for young men. I think cooking gives people an oppurtunity to enjoy their success very directly, in a very personal way. Is there any way you might connect the program with professional culinary schools, or other culinary outlets? It'd be great to hear some anecdotes about the young men's successes.
Thanks,
Robert
Robert,
Thanks for the suggestion. We are indeed looking for ways to establish relationships with culinary arts programs. We have initiated preliminary plans to establish a relationship with the Food Program at Kingsborough Community College. We like the idea of developing relationship with community college and other academic institutions when we consider that only few of the young men might consider a culinary career--however the "kitchen" may serve as a portal to higher education and all of its associated benefits that include better health, more income, etc. Thanks for your suggestion. We are looking forward to the start of this program. Young men have begun to sign up and there is a buzz in the community. Given that this is a brand new part of our mentoring program, we don't have any anecdotes to share as of yet. But we are really excited about getting started!
>..... the "kitchen" may serve as a portal to higher education and
>all of its associated benefits that include better health, more income,
very true. esp. with regards to more income.
In Sweden, many school children organise their "school bazaars" to raise money for various purposes. Some children and their parents take the opportunity to make their own food/bakery specialities. In Malaysia, "night markets" (a street is closed for activity) offeres opportunities for people to make their "fast foods" at home and then sell them at such "night markets". There are many cases where such night markets were the starting point of small food businesses that are now operated by housewives and turned into family businesses. In Western Samoa, Sunday is a day for making some extra money from chicken BBQs as many people look forward to a big meal after church services.
"Young Chefs Club" (or in the case of my project youths from "Children's Village and Vocational Centre") may find a place in such events of schools and public events. For many youths probationers in Kenya, the experience of the "hard work" of running a business will also allow them to experience the feelings of loosing their goods to "snatch" thefts who raid food stores.
regards
jacky foo
++++
Children's Village and Vocational Centre (CVVC), Kenya
http://www.changemakers.net/en-us/node/3940