Originally published on December 4, 2020
For Nicole Lynn Lewis,聽聽鈥06, completing her undergraduate degree as a single mom not only opened doors of opportunity, but symbolized how far she had come despite the challenges involved.
With an overwhelming desire to help other young parents earn their degrees, but finding no organizations in the Washington, D.C. area with such a mission, she founded聽聽in 2010.
Since then, the organization has reported helping more than 200 teen parents in college and their children with mentoring, emotional support and financial resources, providing more than $800,000 in tuition assistance, and celebrating 93聽college degrees.
For her impact, the 亚洲AV alumna was recently named one of 31 inaugural awardees of the聽Black Voices for Black Justice Fund, an initiative championed by actress Kerry Washington, philanthropic leader Wes Moore, among others, that draws on $10 million to聽invest in Black leaders across the United States working on issues of racial justice.
鈥淚t means everything to have someone say, 鈥榃e see you and we honor the work that you鈥檙e doing and what your vision is for the world,鈥欌 Lewis said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a validation of [teen parents鈥橾 experiences and how important it is that we support their dreams for their futures, because that is so connected to the journey that we鈥檙e on as a country for racial equity and justice.鈥
About 90% of the students Generation Hope works with are students of color, said Lewis, who has also been named a CNN Hero, a Minority Business Leader by Washington Business Journal and a 鈥淭op 40 Under 40鈥 by Washingtonian. Funds from the award will be used to support Generation Hope鈥檚 mission and continue to tell the story of why teen parents鈥 success matters.
鈥淸Teen parents] have so much to offer their communities [and they] tend to have higher GPAs than their peers, but there are so many systemic barriers and hurdles to their success,鈥 Lewis said. 鈥淎s we talk about higher ed, as we talk about solutions to poverty, and as we talk about racial equity and justice, we have to be talking about helping this population thrive.鈥
In her professional career, Lewis said she still draws on the skills she learned at Mason.
鈥淎 big takeaway for me was understanding the unintended consequences of legislation,鈥 Lewis said. 鈥淎s students, we were encouraged to uncover and ask the right questions and that鈥檚 been really helpful in the work that I do now when we鈥檙e thinking about free college efforts, financial aid reform, or how do we increase SNAP benefits to cover college students and be more accessible to college students.鈥
鈥淣icole is changing lives for the better every day,鈥 said Schar School Dean Mark J. Rozell. 鈥淲ith her ability she could have chosen any other path professionally and made a lot of money, but instead she followed her passion to help people.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 gratifying to see people who never sought personal reward be recognized for doing good,鈥 Rozell said. 鈥淚鈥檓 very proud of her. She represents the best of Mason.鈥
Schar School fact: The Schar School has achieved remarkable racial and ethnic diversity, with 36 percent of students coming from minority backgrounds. 亚洲AV is a majority-minority institution.