In the fall of 2009, a shy Olivia Martin moved in with her grandma and enrolled as a freshman at Dunwoody Academy, a charter school housed at North High School.
Martin, 15, was off to a poor start when she was recruited by a Dunwoody staffer to join Project Diva, a small nonprofit that brings three dozen underprivileged girls together with female business mentors every Saturday at Sumner Library to make connections that can lead to school and career success.
"I see school now as what I need to be successful, and I started to enjoy school and get better grades," said Martin, who chats and smiles more than a year ago. "I like what we do in Divas, talking about life choices, good decisions, responsibilities. And we volunteer. I'm a better member of my family and my community."
I couldn't let slip by January, National Mentoring Month, without a column about kids benefiting from a caring business mentor.
Patrice Cox, a personnel officer at RBC Financial, is a Diva "financial consultant" who spends Saturdays and more with Martin and other girls, working with other Diva volunteers to assist with personal finance education, job-site visits, internships and career programs through area colleges.
"Divas help level the playing field for some of these kids," said Cox, who also is raising her own family with her husband. "It takes a village. I enjoy watching Olivia and these other girls grow. Olivia has become a leader."
Each girl takes and discusses the "Envision Exercise," a simulation through the online "Reality Store" that focuses on the value of education and skills, disciplined money management, the staggering financial and human cost of teen pregnancy and more.
A number of these girls, including Martin, who aspires to be a doctor, will finish high school as certified nursing assistants, ready to work for $12 an hour at a health care facility. They also are prepared for community college or a four-year university.