Social work and management students collaborate to tackle pressing social problems
When foster kids age out of the system, many lack the knowledge, skills and resources to live independently. One-third will experience homelessness by age 26, studies show.
In summer 2017, UB graduate students Cheyenne Ketter-Franklin and Jonathan Puma worked with a housing agency to develop a sustainable program to help foster kids transition to independent living. The students researched the population, met with other agencies and conducted a focus group of foster youth. Then they went to work on a solution: a business plan, new policies and procedures, connections to potential partner organizations, a resource guide, goal checklist and marketing collateral.
Puma and Ketter-Franklin formed one of eight teams of students from the schools of management and social work. Each team worked at a mission-driven organization to find solutions to pressing social issues and make a lasting impact on the community.
In addition to housing and economic challenges, student teams confronted issues in gender equity, health care, food waste and community development. Fellows worked with organizations including Child and Family Services, Erie County Medical Center, GObike Buffalo and the Western New York Women’s Foundation.
This is just one of the many programs made possible in part by UB’s Blackstone LaunchPad, a hands-on learning program supported by the Blackstone Charitable Foundation that introduces entrepreneurship as a viable career option to all UB students. The program was offered again in 2018, thanks to the support of the Charles D. and Mary A. Bauer Family Foundation.