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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
Four FLY Students Win Glow Scholarships
Scholarships
Based on Merit and Successful Completion of Financial Education Courses
MILPITAS, Calif., August
1, 2007– Fresh Lifelines for Youth (FLY), an award-winning program
that works to reduce juvenile crime and incarceration through legal
education, mentoring, and leadership training, announced today that
four of its clients have won scholarships from the Glow Foundation,
a provider of financial education, mentoring, and unmet need scholarships
for high-potential students from under-resourced communities. The Glow
scholarships will help the four students meet the financial requirements
of college, in addition to other financial aid and scholarship sources.
FLY clients who were awarded
the scholarships included graduating seniors Angelina Gallardo and Peter
Sok, who will attend San Jose City College; Michelle Urmeneta, who will
attend Evergreen Valley College; and Pauline Brown who won the scholarship
as a high school junior and will decide on a college during the next
year.
Applications for Glow scholarships
are open to all FLY clients who were graduating seniors or who had completed
their GED requirements. Applicants must also complete financial education
courses, a rigorous financial analysis of their college budgetary needs,
and apply for additional financial aid and scholarship sources to qualify
for a Glow scholarship.
“These students have transformed
their lives to become positive community leaders,” said Aila Malik,
acting executive director of FLY. “They demonstrate true commitment
to their futures, and we are thrilled that they have achieved this important
milestone. We look forward to watching them achieve their potential
over the next few years.”
The Glow Foundation offers
“unmet need” college scholarships to high-potential students from
under-resourced communities, helping them bridge the gap between the
financing needed to attend college, and that which their families can
provide. Unlike many scholarship programs that limit themselves to monetary
grants, the Glow Foundation focuses first on providing students with
the tools to proactively plan and seek the financial resources they
need for college.
FLY operates law programs for
juvenile offenders on probation, high-risk youth in local alternative
high schools, and as prevention courses in middle schools. The organization
also offers a Leadership Training Program for youth who attend the law
course and need additional help to develop their positive leadership
skills and graduate from high school. This yearlong program includes
a three-day wilderness retreat that focuses on leadership, community
activism, and monthly meetings where youth design and provide community
service. Youth receive a case manager who helps them set and achieve
education, vocation, and health goals. Approximately 85 percent of youth
do not re-offend during this yearlong program, and over 90 percent of
the high school seniors graduate or earn their GEDS.
FLY programs cost-effectively
prevent crime. Incarcerating one youth for one year in California’s
prison system currently costs $71,000 and has a 25-percent success rate.
FLY’s yearlong Leadership Program costs approximately $7,000 per youth
and has kept 85 percent of participating youth from going back on probation
for a new crime during the program. FLY has received a national grant
award for best practices, a national grant award for innovation, the
City of San Jose Human Rights Award, and each of the past five years
has been ranked as one of the top violence prevention programs in the
City of San Jose by outside evaluators.
About FLY
Founded in 1998, FLY provides at-risk and disadvantaged youth with vital information regarding the decisions they make in their lives. The organization offers mentoring, leadership skills development, and legal education to reduce juvenile crime and incarceration. FLY has helped thousands of youth learn important life skills and avoid becoming inmates of the criminal justice system. For more information, please visit www.flyprogram.org.
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