Turning Points for Children, 2018 recipient of a Giving Circle grant, is one of the largest organizations serving children in Philadelphia. The grant was specifically for helping one of their programs, LifeSet, get off the ground.
LifeSet, a program conceived and started in Tennessee, serves children aging out of foster care. Turning Points connected with LifeSet in Tennessee and started Philadelphia LifeSet in 2017. Roughly 800 youths in Philadelphia age out of foster care each year. A way to close this gap was needed. How dire that need was is exemplified by the fact that when LifeSet was set to open here, on the very first day there were two clients already sitting on the steps ready for support before the doors had even opened. According to Monika Kreidie, Senior Development Associate for Turning Points, of the 800 teenagers leaving foster care, 250 have no support and 40% will be homeless. LifeSet steps in with trained social workers (called specialists) with limited caseloads (8-10 clients), to be the support and help they need. The specialists connect them with education, job training, housing, life skills support, etc. Their record of success is amazing.
The key to the success of LifeSet is that youth participants set their own goals at in-take and have a meeting with their LifeSet Specialist at least once per week, and more frequently if necessary. Weekly case reviews happen at the team and supervisor level, and no one goes unnoticed. Program discharge happens when the Specialist, participant, Supervisor and Clinical Director all agree that goals have been met. A permanency plan and packet are created for each youth before graduating the program. Before leaving the program, Ms Kreidie said the graduate must identify two people who can serve as supports for the rest of their lives (as parents are to their children).
Ms Kreidie cited one example of a youth who had always dreamed of being a pilot. Everyone told him that would never happen, he was not someone who could become a pilot. At his intake meeting for LifeSet, a stated goal of his was becoming a pilot. Within months of that meeting he was enrolled in aviation school. He eventually discovered being a pilot was not for him, so LifeSet helped him enroll in CCP where he is training to be a social worker. It can be just as important to learn what you don’t want to do, as it is to learn what you do want to do. Setting out on the path that’s right for you is the objective and LifeSet helps their clients do just that.
LifeSet youth can re-enroll in the program at any time. They are contacted 6 months and 12-months post program to make sure that they are still employed, housed, and using their permanent connections to live successfully as adults.
The Giving Circle gift in 2018 not only allowed LifeSet to hire a second team of specialists and thus double the number of clients being served, the program was making a difference and noted by DHS as they doubled their LifeSet program from the previous year. In that way, the Giving Circle funding was multiplied and helped LifeSet really take off. It is now one of the premier programs of Turning Points, serving 100-120 youth annually with 3 teams of specialists and an on-site clinical specialist.
LifeSet Philadelphia continues to be connected to the model program in Tennessee, still adhering to the model and jointly assessing outcomes every month. For more information, click here.
contributed by Janet Weinstein