Like most college juniors, Ashley DuBose is looking forward to what life has in store when she graduates from St. Catherine University next year with a bachelor's degree in mathematics. At some point, she'd like to fulfill her dream of becoming a middle-school math teacher, but recently the field of actuarial science has attracted her attention.
It is not only Du Bose's future on her mind, but also the future of her little girl, Camrynn, 18 months old. Shortly after her daughter's birth, Du Bose, 21, was accepted into the Jeremiah Program and the two now live in a two-bedroom apartment on its St. Paul campus.
While Du Bose is taking classes (she currently has a 16-credit course load and is maintaining a 3.8 GPA), Camrynn is enrolled in the on-site child development center at Jeremiah.
"My daughter gives me purpose each day," said Du Bose, who is also pursuing a singing career. "As her mom, I want to point her in the right direction and give her the love, guidance and positive influences she needs in her life."
The Jeremiah Program opened its Minneapolis site in 1998 and the St. Paul campus in 2007. All of the single mothers accepted into the nonprofit program must be enrolled in either two-year or four-year postsecondary education and on a career track; most also work part time. Their children must be under age 5 when they enter the program -- the average stay at Jeremiah is three years and most mothers are in their early to mid-20s.
All of the women are at or below the poverty line (they pay one-third of their monthly income for rental of their on-site apartments), and many come from unstable family backgrounds.
Empowerment for moms
Nekey Oliver's first two years as a mother to son Giovanni, now 4 years old, were often chaotic. When Oliver, 23, became pregnant during the first month of her first semester in college, she left school and worked overnight shifts at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. After Giovanni's birth, she re-enrolled in college, but they moved between the family home of the baby's father and the home of Oliver's father. Finding stable child care was a challenge.