Third grade is not too early to learn to tie a tie, discover a love of math and direct a young life on the right path.
āWe want to be part of the solution,ā said Kevin Harrison, community engagement coordinator for the Office of Military, Veterans and First Responders at ¾ÅÉ«ĢĆ. āWe believe there are no bad kids. There may be some kids who have made some bad decisions. There may be kids who have been in bad situations. We want to see if we can help kids change that trajectory.ā
Wichita Stateās Office of Military, Veterans and First Responders is organizing Tenacious Men, a program designed to provide mentoring and STEM education for under-represented students in Wichita Public Schools. The program, which will begin in January, will serve 10 third-graders and 10 fourth-graders and is sponsored by Textron Aviation.
āItās essential to the future of our business that we foster a thriving, diverse community where everyone has the opportunity to be successful,ā said Maggie Topping, senior vice president of Human Resources and Communications at Textron Aviation. ā¾ÅÉ«ĢĆ is a driving force in educating, empowering and mobilizing the community to foster and sustain an inclusive campus, and itās been an honor to work alongside them to grow their efforts.ā
Wichita State and Wichita Public Schools will recruit mentors to work with the students, emphasizing adults with backgrounds and stories that the children can identify with. Topics will range from mentors discussing a successful business to learning how to tie a tie or dinner etiquette.
āItās going to be character, the way you present yourself to other people, the way to present yourself in a professional manner,ā Harrison said. āHopefully, pairing them up with these types of mentors will have an impact.ā
āPutting your best foot forwardā is one of the programās tenets.
āThat has a double meaning,ā Harrison said. āOne, is that you always have to be your best, so you need to always be prepared for any situation. The other is that you also have to look the part. You donāt have to have a million dollars in the bank to have nice looking shoes. It just takes some time and it takes some pride in what youāre doing. We want to use that as a template to get kids in the mind-set of being the best they can be.ā
STEM education is also an important part of the program. Harrison wants Tenacious Men to encourage the students to consider science, technology, engineering and math, and defeat stereotypes by exposing them to interesting activities and concepts. He plans for students to create their own avatar early in the program as a way to introduce them to coding skills.
āWeāre hoping we can generate an interest that will continue,ā he said. āKids convince themselves early on that āIām not good at math.ā Itās just not true. We make it true if we continue to tell ourselves something.ā
While details are under discussion, the program may bring students to Wichita Stateās campus for some activities.
āI canāt expect you to aspire to go to college if youāve never walked on the college campus thatās right in your own neighborhood,ā Harrison said.