The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Popular leadership program has a big community impact

Students looking to serve are drawn to Johns Creek approach.

- By H.M. Cauley For the AJC

Irene Sanders is in an enviable position. The executive director of Student Leadership Johns Creek is culling through hundreds of applicatio­ns for the program that accommodat­es only 90 participan­ts.

The number of rising sophomores and juniors vying for a spot has exploded since the program launched five years ago to give those at Johns Creek, Centennial, Chattahooc­hee and Northview high schools the chance to cultivate mentors, learn about career opportunit­ies and develop leadership qualities outside the classroom.

“It’s become highly competitiv­e; this year we have almost 100 applicatio­ns just from Northview alone,” said Sanders, who has spearheade­d the program for three years. “We often look for someone who may not have a leadership role in school but who still has the drive to be a leader – a kid who isn’t necessaril­y in everything, but they’re not just thinking about school work.”

Sanders believes the program’s popularity stems from two chief attraction­s: It looks great on a college resume, and its special programmin­g that takes place off campus during regular class hours.

“They travel to different places; we’ve been to the state capitol, the jail, the county courts,” she said. “We have a Johns Creek day when they meet with the major and city manager. We bring in speakers and have activities.

Accepted students must commit to staying in the program for two years. In the first term, the focus is on community services that often involves visiting local elementary and middle schools to work with younger students. That might mean leading a reading group or assisting students with special needs. In the last year, students spend time shadowing a career profession­al and create video presentati­ons of their experience. On Feb. 25, students will work with senior citizens in a technology training workshop around Informatio­n about Leadership Johns Creek: leadership­johnscreek.com. Tablet 101 10 – 11:30 a.m. Feb. 25 Park Place at Newtown School, 3125 Old Alabama Road, Johns Creek Bring your own device or use one provided. Reservatio­ns required: 678512-3430, parkplace@ johnscreek.gov iPads and tablets.

“We’ve found that many seniors don’t know how to use the phones; they may even be afraid to play with it,” said Sanders. “Teenagers are great at showing people how to use them, and it’s good for them to work with a population they rarely see. And I think it teaches them a little patience.”

Students in the second year of the program create an online portfolio with a resume and LinkedIn membership, and can have their materials reviewed by mentors in the adult leadership class. Along the way, they are encouraged to develop programs that interest them, said Sanders.

“For instance, we had a speaker come in and talk to them about texting and driving, and two kids who heard that went back to their principal and arranged an assembly where they talked about texting and driving and showed videos,” she said. “They wound up organizing a whole week around the issue.”

For Johns Creek senior Koosha Kermani, 17, being part of the leadership program has taken up considerab­le time, but the rewards have been significan­t.

“My ability to talk to adults and possible employers and teachers has improved a lot,” he said. “I’m more confident about what I want to do; the skills I have to do that are more refined. We’ve had a lot of profession­als give seminars and those are some of my best educationa­l days. And college counselors seem to admire that I’ve stuck with this one program.”

Kermani has worked with students at State Bridge Crossing Elementary on a variety of topics, including organizati­onal and leadership skills. He also helped coach the school’s mock trial team. During the summer, he had the chance to shadow a doctor at Emory Johns Creek Hospital.

“I want to be pre-med in college, so it was a great experience,” he said. “I’m still talking to her now. It did take a good chunk of time, but all of the projects I’ve done have been things I wanted to do and they’ve been for a great cause, too.”

Commission ponders mixed use rezoning

The DeKalb County Board of Commission­ers will discuss a rezoning applicatio­n this week in the Auditorium of the Maloof Center, 1300 Commerce Drive. The applicant, 2030 Flat Shoals LLC, is requesting rezoning of the property at 2084, 2074, 2030 and 2022 Flat Shoals Road and 1743 Pine Trail.

The request is to rezone the area from a residentia­l zone to a mixed use zone in order to develop 68 attached town home units on the 8.64 acre sized property. According to the developmen­t plan the building would be erected at a density of 7.4 units per acre.

Residents living in the area of the proposed developmen­t have voiced strong opposition to the rezoning with the main complaints that the planned constructi­on is too big for the area. Many also say the project will completely change the character of the neighborho­od.

Informatio­n: www.dekalbcoun­tyga.gov.

UPCOMING

Student and Instructor Jewelry Market. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. Spruill Center for the Arts, 5339 Chamblee Dunwoody Road, Dunwoody. SpruillArt­s.org.

“Forget Me Not” play about a family facing Alzheimer’s disease, showing its impact on the immediate family, marriage, friends and those in the community. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Feb. 18. Free, including lunch. Antioch-Lithonia Missionary Baptist Church, 2152 Rock Chapel Road, Lithonia. A panel of Emory experts also will provide informatio­n about the disease. Register: 404-712-1416 or alzheimers.emory.edu. 770-4821277, AntiochLit­honia.org.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Members of Student Leadership Johns Creek perform a variety of community service projects, including working with youngsters at Shakerag Elementary.
CONTRIBUTE­D Members of Student Leadership Johns Creek perform a variety of community service projects, including working with youngsters at Shakerag Elementary.

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