51ĀŅĀ× Pratt Center: Fostering Success, Leadership and Hope

Creating Familial Support, Outreach and Opportunity for Youth Aging Out of Foster Care
When someone ages out of foster care, adjusting to life as an adult can be an unusually steep uphill climbāespecially if they want to attend college. Personal and financial support are just the tip of the iceberg. For some, the idea of pursuing a degree feels overwhelming, if not completely out of reach.
Thatās where The Pratt Center at 51ĀŅĀ× comes in. Part of Campus Engagement, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, the center has been open since 2017.
, assistant vice president for inclusion and multicultural engagement at 51ĀŅĀ× and founding director of 51ĀŅĀ×ās Sullivan-Deckard Scholars Opportunity Program, the center offers a to ālean inā and circumnavigate college together.
Located in Rhodes Tower, the center is reminiscent of other āsimilarly missionedā student success centers at campuses across the country. The Pratt Center recognizes the value an on-site integrated space to support academic growth, leadership, development and retention for those of who have lacked a traditional support system.

The centerās āFostering Success and Leadershipā programs are designed for youth who are aging out of foster care (or have experienced foster care) and aspire to pursue an undergraduate degree. Prattās trained Student Navigators specialize in a variety of academic related subjects, all to aid 51ĀŅĀ× students with high quality support.
The center also has scholarship offerings, created initially through gifts by the Sullivan and Deckard families, which served as the catalyst to increase post-secondary opportunities and help with books, resources, meal plans, gap tuition assistance, transitional supports and more.
The Pratt Center Meets the COVID-19 Era
As if the challenges described above werenāt difficult enough for the Center and its students, the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic threatened to derail stability. Itās hard to lean in and social distance.

Strategic planning to preserve the interpersonal connection between student, mentors and programs began almost immediately, including hundreds of hours of remote teaching, virtual coaching and tutoring, wellness sessions, graduation celebrations, leadership training and more.
The Center also extended their outreach models in other waysāincluding a coordinated effort in 16-week remote dining plan with 51ĀŅĀ× catering, as well as biweekly care packages including grocery cards, hygiene products, cleaning supplies, sheets, towels and more.
Then there was the development of a three-credit hour course that promoted the exploration of daily living in occupations of emerging and young adults. The course provided an alternative set of resources for scholars unable to physically meet in the Pratt Center for similar services as a result of the pandemic.
Although Vikings have returned to campus, much of the Pratt pivot that happened over the last 18 months resulted in outreach models that continue, including the recent āOperation: Grab & Gobbleā initiative that took place around Thanksgiving.

A New Kind of Thankful
āAt the end of October, Sullivan-Decker scholars that meet biweekly to check-in discovered that the traditional statewide dinners for transition-age youth were canceled due to COVID protocol,ā said Jarrett Pratt, M.Ed., director of Student Success at The Pratt Center and son of Dr. Charlyese Pratt.
āFor a young person who is in foster care, these are already not the happiest times of the year. And with the residence halls being closed during holidays, the net effect is that a lot of students watch their peers pack up and go home to be with families,ā Pratt said. āAnd they donāt have that.ā
He knew that he and his constituents had to act.
āThose [dinner] get-togethers are so important when it comes to nurturing community and fellowship. We knew we had to do somethingāeven despite social restrictions and distancing,ā said Pratt. āWhen decisions like that are made, for those who are already distressed, you can imagine what the ripple effect isāand because of the pandemic, it continues to multiply.ā
Thus, āOperation: Grab & Gobbleā was born. A sort of āniche intervention of hope, so to speak, that protects and serves the community at the very same time.ā
Experiential, Engaged Learning
One of the tenets of the center is āservice learning,ā and in that vein, students created care packages for 50 foster care recipients which were distributed on Saturday, November 20. Hot meals, letters of hope, encouraging messages, and applications to the program were also distributed, along with a range of cold-weather gear. Though not a replacement for what was lost with dinner cancelations, there was immense value on many levels for recipients at a pivotal moment.
Pratt Center students āsaw the immediate impact on people who are not far removed from situations that they mightāve found themselves in,ā said Pratt. āIt just so happens that 31 of those 50 happened to be identified by Cuyahoga County as either homeless or āhousing insecure,ā some of the neediest persons out there.

āWe want them to know that somebody is thinking about them,ā Pratt added. āThe message is, āYou can still graduate and thereās a place for you here.āā He believes there will be similar initiatives to āOperation: Grab & Gobbleā every winter going forward.
It Takes a Village
Pratt was struck by immediate buy-in from the regional community, the state, Ohio Reach, Ohio Youth Alliance, Adoption Network, YMCA Cuyahoga County, National Council of Jewish Womenāessentially all the partnerships that help make the center so incredibly effective at what it offers.
Struck, but also grateful, pleased and not entirely surprised. After all, none of what The Pratt Center does happens in a vacuum, he said. And it shouldnāt be that way for those who are in foster care, either.
āFamily is the connection that they desperately need to reestablish,ā he said.
āIn that sense, 51ĀŅĀ× and our partners really are, and can become, that family for those transitioning out of foster care. We are that delicate balance between offering help and not āgetting in the way,ā and we are grateful that the community sees what we are doing.ā

That only reinforces the message that āNortheast Ohio really has something special going on,ā Pratt said.
āWeāre never going to be able to completely dissolve the need for what we provide. But if we can get to the eighth, ninth and tenth grader, get familiar with what theyāre curious about, help them understand that theyāre not hopeless or lost, and we can help them see that there is community for them that knows where theyāre coming from? Where theyāre at? That kind of intervention offers promise,ā Pratt finalized.
āWe all want to see them graduate and succeed.ā