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The Friends Program’s youth-mentoring service, The Junior Senior Friends Program, was founded in 1975 to address juvenile delinquency. Since then it has evolved, using best practice knowledge and research, to address a number of issues, including juvenile delinquency, school performance, school dropout rates, substance abuse prevention, and in general, positive youth development.

Currently, the program uses several different mentoring models to work with a broad range of youth who have been determined to be at-risk by a referral source. Senior Friends are volunteers, age 16 and up, that are selectively matched with Junior Friends, school age youth, in a one-to-one mentoring relationship that helps Junior Friends gain confidence and improve their behavior at home, in school, and in the community.

The Junior Senior Friends Program provides children with a supportive, non-judgmental mentor who can serve as a positive role model, who will listen to their problems, and who will provide them a window to the world outside their environment. Senior Friends help children realize that they are special, have potential, and can achieve their goals.

“A mentor can provide a young person with a positive perspective of their future and the encouragement to get them there. If we can help make that happen for more youth, then we have our own measure of success.”

Brooke Noonan
Program Manager
Junior Senior Friends