Sentences with phrase «support job readiness»

The grant will support job readiness and career counseling programs at the Job Resource and Development Center at Martin Luther King High School in Northwest Philadelphia and is intended to help decrease high school dropout rates.

Not exact matches

Koch and many of his top donors refused to support Trump in the run - up to his election, raising questions about both his readiness for the job and his dedication to conservative principles.
Proceeds from the event support culinary arts education in California through fieldtrips, demos, classroom equipment, job - readiness training and more.
This includes $ 12 million in support grants to youth providers for work readiness training, occupational training, placement or job matching, workplace mentoring and follow up services to increase retention.
As Nicola Shipman, executive principal of the Steel City Schools Partnership in Sheffield says: «Having someone virtually full - time in school means we have the scope to support them very deeply and it makes a tangible difference in terms of their readiness for the job.
CTA president Eric Heins added, «The survey shows that teachers support high standards for all students and clearly see a need for additional support around career readiness and creating more opportunities for students who don't go onto college so they have the skills for 21st Century jobs
Launching in January 2014, the $ 100,000 pilot initiative will place 13 college juniors from private and public historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in major American art museums for semester - long paid internships, as well as support these students with career and job readiness coaching and professional development training.
Each residence has 24 - hour help for families if they need it and residence workers try to help them to get into counselling, children's programs, pregnancy support program, housing and help, workshops about housing readiness, life skills and getting a job
The Army Community Services, Fleet and Family Support Center, Military & Family Readiness Programs, USMC and USCG Transition Centers teach Ten Steps to a Federal Job ® during their transition programs.
• Qualified to interview clients to obtain employment histories, educational backgrounds and specific work requirements • Highly experienced in identifying barriers to employment such as lack of readiness, and providing clients with support in terms of preparing for interviews and acquiring required job skills • Special talent for recommending standards of performance for employment counseling purposes
Illinois» Fathers for New Futures (FNF) hosts the Power of Fathers Symposium, a statewide collaborative of nonprofits that seeks to strengthen and support low - income minority fathers in developing relationships with their children, families, and communities.77 Among its programs, FNF provides job readiness training, parent education, case management, child support information, and additional services to young fathers and men trying to reconnect with their families.78 FNF also hosts a working group of practitioners, and research and policy experts that supports outcomes for children of noncustodial, African - American fathers.79
While some fathers may take little interest in their children, the main causes include failure of the courts to award joint physical custody, failure to award significant parenting time («visitation»), failure to enforce the parenting time that has been ordered, readiness to curtail contact between fathers and children when estranged wives make any allegation, child support orders that require fathers to work two or three jobs, thus leaving no time for parenting, moveaways, and other factors.
The Parenting Matters Program is seeking a full - time, degreed Fathering Advocate to provide a combination of fathering support and job readiness services in group trainings and individual case management with fathers.
The following are average contact times for different program components - Parenting Class: 4 sessions per month, 2 hours per session (8 hours per month)- Case Management: Twice per month, 1 hour per meeting - Job Club: Weekly, 2 hour for participants seeking employment, individual meetings based on need - Child Support: 1 hour orientation for all, individual meetings (45 minutes) based on need - GED: depends on need, ranges from 4 - 15 hours per week - Interactive Skill - Building Parenting Class (early childhood development focus): 4 sessions per month, 2 hours per session - Home Visiting (early childhood, school readiness focus): 2 hours per months, from 6 - 12 months - and Family Law: 1 hour orientation for all, individual meetings, consultations, up to and including full representation (much more time intensive) based on need.
Depending on the family's needs, they may also be linked to additional services such as financial, food, and housing assistance programs, school readiness programs, child care, job training programs, family support centers, mental health services, substance abuse treatment programs, and domestic violence shelters.
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