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Mentors Needed to Guide Children in Foster Care

On any given day in Central Florida, there are close to 2,000 children in licensed foster care. They are all looking for positive role models to influence their lives. Embrace Families, the leading nonprofit agency overseeing foster care, adoption and child welfare services in Orange, Osceola and Seminole counties, is looking for approximately 100 mentors who are willing to give their time and attention to a young person in need.

It’s one of the easiest ways to make a real difference in the life of a child in foster care.

Research shows that children with a mentor are 55 percent more likely to go to college, 52 percent less likely to skip school and 46 percent less likely to use drugs compared to youth without a mentor.

“By mentoring, you’re changing an adolescent’s life just by being there,” Christie Hyde DeNave, a mentor with Embrace Families, says. “I usually find myself in a teaching moment whenever I’m with my mentee, Phrankie, whether planned or not.”

DeNave explains that mentoring can be as simple as sending a text to see how your mentee is doing or hosting a pizza and movie night at home.

“What matters most is showing this young adult that you care and are someone they can trust and confide in,” she says.

There are four requirements to become a mentor through Embrace Families. Mentors must:

  • Be at least 25 years old
  • Have transportation
  • Pass a background check
  • Have the willingness to give their time and attention to a young person in need

Young people are more likely to confide in someone sharing the same cultural background. Embrace Families works to strategically match mentors and mentees based on a questionnaire to find the best fit. There is currently a great need for male mentors, specifically from the African-American community.

Embrace Families hosts an orientation for mentors before they are matched to a child in foster care.  

To learn more about the Embrace Families mentor program or to fill out an application, visit www.embracefamiliesfl.org or call 321-441-2060.

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