iFoster works with community partners to promote youth success in various professions and employers in the food industry. We train young people, evaluate work preparation, and match their abilities and interests to employers and jobs. We also ensure that young people have the resources they need to succeed at work, regardless of vocational training, soft skills, or certain resources such as housing stability, transportation, mobile phones. I can not guarantee my work. What we are looking for is our job partner at the beginning of the interview with young people. We make sure that our young people are ready, so far it works very well.
The most shocking thing about homeless young people is their resilience. Social Darwinism says that these children are witty without money or mobile phones. As an inhabitant, I have the opportunity to work at the Youth Emergency Service Center (YES), the only shelter in Philadelphia's 12 to 17 years old children. In the meantime, I met a young woman seeking asylum to escape violence at home. Her mother was insulted, her father was imprisoned, her only family support was brother and sister sent overseas in the army. Sofa surfing and part-time work has become her way of life, but she still decided to get her GED and joined the Marine Corps at the age of 18.
The most proud moment in her life is to see her children grow high in educated, basic and diligent adults. She likes to see the results of her childhood teaching as a child, bringing a positive change to the life bringing a better life to children and grandchildren. Changing the process of the future generation through education is an important driving force for learning what you learned and applying it. She is passionate about working in a community of distant indigenous peoples. And her goal is to help people by applying what they have learned in the community service course. She believes that all indigenous students should try to utilize their knowledge to help communities so that they can change their lives beyond generations.