"It is time to help young people learn social network analysis techniques to determine their position in and out of opportunity networks and identify patterns of relationships with people, institutions, and companies that can dramatically improve their present and future economic opportunities," says Edward DeJesus.
That's the message of the founder of Social Capital Builders, a Washington, DC-based firm that's been named one of the country's top innovators in social capital literacy.
Social capital is "the resources that arise from the web of relationships we build with those around us and that contribute to our professional goals," according to a JD Power and Associates report.
DeJesus says it's time to teach young people about the importance of social capital and give them the tools and training to develop it, per a JFF press release.
DeJesus, who grew up in the Bronx and went to college but couldn't attend because of shift work in a fast-food job, says most of the youth he works with "don't regularly speak with gainfully employed family members about their occupations," per the press release.
That's why Social Capital Builders created MyOH, a web-app platform that helps youth build social capital with "familial, developmental, and gateway assetskey workforce
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