91爆料

MODELS Academy Team Wins the A. Wade Martin Award

MODELS Academy at 91爆料 (PTC) has been chosen as this year鈥檚 recipient of the SC Technical College System鈥檚 highly esteemed A. Wade Martin Innovation Team of the Year Award. MODELS Director Steve Coleman accepted the award at the SC Technical Education Association鈥檚 annual conference on Feb. 16. 

Stevie Coleman with the Wade Martin award
While their formative years ought to be fun and footloose, young African American males already feel the weight of stereotypes and biased expectations placed on them from all factions of society. It might not be obvious behind the playful joking and boundless, carefree energy they exude, but it exists nonetheless. Last summer, about 70 young men participated in the MODELS Academy Summer Institute, a two-week program designed to help them channel their exuberance into well-informed life choices and personal success through transformative experiences, inspired leadership, knowledge, and mentorship. 


An acronym, MODELS stands for Men of Distinction becoming Elite Leaders and community Servants. Coleman, director of community outreach at PTC, oversees MODELS Academy, which works in area schools to increase the success rate of young African American males in grades 4-12. 

MODELS Academy Group Picture
When the program started in 2017, about 25 young men participated in the Greenwood-based program, which met every other Saturday. Since then, MODELS Academy has grown into a year-round presence serving more than 500 young men in 40 schools across seven counties. Coleman instills in his charges a sense of responsibility as well as respect for themselves and others.


鈥淥ur curriculum helps them understand that you must do your absolute best. We tell them the world doesn鈥檛 owe you anything other than opportunity,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou have got to take that opportunity and build on it. We want to be their 鈥榦pportunity accomplices.鈥 We want to help them move forward.鈥


Rico Salliewhite, principal at Brewer Middle School in Greenwood, says his son is a graduate of the program. 鈥淭here are lots of things our young men can get into in today鈥檚 society. MODELS Academy is helping build community,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y son thinks the world of Steve Coleman. Steve still calls and checks in on him. My son now is attending a four-year university and is doing very well.鈥


Coleman says he and MODELS mentors Courtney Smith and Chris Thomas are constantly seeking innovative ways to reach out to young men, both in person and using technology. Smith is a former law enforcement officer who teaches in the Criminal Justice Program at PTC. Thomas is director of the Dr. Benjamin E. Mays Historical Preservation Site in Greenwood. 


Dr. Mays was a minister, educator, and longtime civil rights leader who advised the likes of Martin Luther King Jr. and multiple U.S. presidents. He served as president of Morehouse College in Atlanta for 27 years. 


鈥淒r. Mays鈥 vision was to give young African American men a broader vision for themselves,鈥 Thomas said. 鈥淲e also want these young men to see something bigger for themselves.鈥


Many young African American men do not hold a positive association with law enforcement or the legal justice system. Smith hopes to dispel any associated negativity. 


鈥淲e want these young men to see the positive side of law enforcement. We are human as well. We make mistakes, too,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淲e want them to see the profession firsthand through my own experiences, from stories that are real and not make-believe. They can learn how to avoid harmful situations.鈥

The MODELS Academy Gala


Dr. Alicia Williams, assistant principal at Bettis Academy in Edgefield County, finds MODELS Academy鈥檚 mission in perfect alignment with her institution鈥檚 purpose to inspire students to pursue STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) learning and prepare them to become tomorrow鈥檚 successful leaders. 


鈥淭he MODELS mentors have been there. They are, themselves, Black men,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey understand what the struggle is. They have actually lived it, and they are the best ones to show young men coming in what to do, where to go, and what not to do.鈥


Yolanda Pendergrass鈥檚 son, Ahmad, is a former MODELS participant. She is very pleased with the support he received in the program.

Steve Coleman prepares with students
鈥淪ome of the boys just need a little bit of extra guidance,鈥 she explained. 鈥淵ou see the greatness in them. They just need a little extra push, a little extra support, and MODELS Academy provides that.鈥


Ahmad found that much of the knowledge he acquired during his time in MODELS was reinforced again and again in real life: 鈥淪ome of the things that you learn at MODELS, you will see again later in life and think, wow. I learned that when I was just 12 or 13!鈥 


As executive director of the Boys and Girls Clubs of the Lakelands, Sabrina Miller witnesses daily the lasting imprint of MODELS Academy. She watches the young men on her campus become empowered beyond their highest expectations.


鈥淭he academic impact that we have seen has been tremendous, but one of the greatest things to see is the increase in self-confidence these young men have in their abilities,鈥 she said. 鈥淢ODELS is a very different kind of program with a very specific purpose. It鈥檚 tremendous how focused it is, how intensive it is, 鈥 to see the time and attention that is poured into these young men.鈥


Every summer, MODELS Academy holds a gala event for the young men and their families to celebrate their achievements. It is more than a party or even a graduation. It serves as a singular tribute to the young men in the presence of their loved ones.


鈥淲ith the gala, we create an experience outside the realm and the norm of their daily lives. We even teach them basic things like how to tie a tie,鈥 Thomas explained. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an opportunity for them to shine. They are the stars of the night.鈥


Coleman builds strong relationships with his charges over the course of the program. And he often, very sincerely, tells them he loves them. As a father himself, Coleman knows how important it is for young men to hear this, especially from a person outside the family. 鈥淲e are not saying 鈥業 love you鈥 because we think nobody else does. We say it because we want them to know that somebody else cares about them at an elevated level and simply wants to see them be successful.鈥


Smith gets emotional thinking about the incalculable rewards of being a MODELS mentor.


鈥淚t will bring tears to your eyes to see a boy who literally had no hope, 鈥 to see them blossom into what they are today,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hese are kids who never thought they would go to college, kids who are the first ones in their family to go to college, the first ones to get a degree. We see, and they see, that they can do it.鈥


For more information about MODELS Academy and to view a compelling program overview video, visit www.ptc.edu/models.

PHOTOS:  
鈥    Steve Coleman and PTC President Dr. Hope E. Rivers celebrate MODELS Academy鈥檚 winning the coveted A. Wade Martin Innovation Team of the Year Award.
鈥    Last fall, a group of MODELS Academy participants were treated to a football game at USC鈥檚 Williams Brice Stadium in Columbia. 
鈥    Every year, MODELS Academy holds a celebratory gala to honor the achievements of its participants and graduates. 
鈥    MODELS Academy Director Steve Coleman prepares his young charges to take the stage at the 2023 gala. 

BONUS IMAGES

Ahmad Pendergrass

 

MODELS Academy Members wait to introduce themselves

 

A young MODELS member introduces himself

 

 

Models Founders Christopher Thomas and Steve Coleman