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If your interested in becoming a volunteer please email: makeba.green@gmail.com 

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OUR FEATURED Stories Girls on the Rise 

Empwerment starts with yourself. 

WELCOME

​Girls on the Rise Mentoring Program 

Tatianna Sim

18 

Chavonne Brown is CEO and President of AskChavonne Productions.

 

With a passion for media/entertainment and the arts, she is striving to help and create job opportunities for all individuals who would like to practice a career in their passionate field

(photography, graphic design, music, etc.).

 

She studied Cinematography at the Academy of Arts University, San Francisco CA and graduated from Barbican NY for Acting/Modeling, Manhattan NY.

 

She's interned with an internet-radio and broadcasting station (IBN4U) and co-hosted a community based radio show (THE INSIGHT SHOW w/ Jeff Brown) every Saturday. As a volunteer, she did film work for New Life Family Bible Church ( and is also the Creative Director for New Life Family Bible Church and a joined organization WeGotNext. ) , The American Cancer Society, Elyon Entertainment, and Cryout Ink.

 

She is personally affiliated with Insight LLC, Cryout Ink., and Allusion.

 

Tiffany Campbell , 26 

 

 

Tiffany attended Kent State University in the fall of 2008, majoring in Communications before realizing that college at that specific time was not for her. She later attended Everest Institute, majoring in Medical Assisting and graduating with honors in February 2010. At the time she had dreams of becoming an ultrasound sonographer, but put her medical dreams to the side to pursue writing for different companies full time.When Tiffany was in first grade she had difficulties reading and writing and was placed in a special learning class to develop her reading and writing skills since she was not progressing at the speed of the others in her class. Later in that year, she memorized and entire children’s book and read it before the class, pretending as though she could read on the level of her other classmates. Her teacher was amazed at her progress and ended up removing her from the class and she was able to function well with the other students without missing a beat. She shares that story because for someone who at a very young age who always had dreams of being an author, she could not read or spell well and was able to overcome her challenges at an alarming speed. Even if she had to fake until she made it initially .Tiffany can speak on the challenges she has faced when it comes to love, pursuing her dreams, allowing others to hold her back and overcoming fears. She has a relational story that can be shared to provide hopes and inspiration for others pursuing their dreams and careers. 

Tiffany’s sole purpose in life is to spread the love of God through her gift of writing and to provide hope and an outlet for others in a creative way. She believes she can reach others in a way that music, TV or movies can not and that is with her gift of wording. She creates and develops characters in a way where the reader will see themselves and see a perspective that they may not have seen before. She wants to change the lives of her readers forever and knowing that there is a person out there that she can reach through her gift is what motivates her to do what she does. She believes that somewhere out there, someone is depending on her gift to save them and she intends to do just that.Tiffany plans to release her sophomore book, Don’t Disconnect in 2016 while also speaking and traveling all over the world.

 

Chavonne , 21 
Brown 

Tatianna Sims is a recent high school graduate from Princeton, New Jersey. Although she grew up in such a prestigious town, Tatianna saw the disadvantages that minority students faced were constantly overlooked. Like her grandfather, Howard “Sandman” Sims, Tatianna always wanted to help her community through the arts. As a writer, Tatianna inspired others through her powerful poems. Through film, she empowered others to take action and be the change. 

 

            When Tatianna became president of the Princeton chapter of the Minority Student Achievement Network, a national coalition of schools that try to combat the Achievement Gap, she decided to address these issues. Tatianna was prompted to make a documentary about the Achievement Gap and the affect it has on students and educators. She uses her film to open dialogue, educate, and start the conversation about the achievement gap in order to solve this problem. “The Quest: Equalizing Achievement” debuted at the Minority Student Achievement Network National Student Conference in Michigan in October of 2014 and can be viewed on the Minority Student Achievement Network’s national website. Based on the reviews, she received an invitation to preview her film at Princeton High School, John Witherspoon Middle School, and various youth leadership events. Her film was also a finalist for the Project FX film competition and the Nassau film festival. She developed an action plan with her high school that addressed one of the main causes of the Achievement Gap, the disconnection between parents, students, and teachers. A part of the action plan was to grant underprivileged high school students computers, an often overlooked issue that results in the academic failure of many students.

 

            Tatianna is currently working with the Starbucks Corporation to film reflections of racial issues in a roundtable conversation that commenced in Princeton at the Nassau Street location. Tatianna serves as documentarian of the Witherspoon Jackson Neighborhood Stories Project, which is archiving the African American Community in Princeton. She is also in the process of starting a Youth Commission with the Mayor in Princeton as a part of the my brother’s keeper initiative.

 

Additionally, Tatianna is a Her Campus High School Ambassador, a member of the Nordstrom fashion board, a NSHSS College Student Council Member, a Walt Disney Scholar, and Princeton High School’s Poetry Out Loud School Champion. She is also in the works to premiere her new television show.

 

For Tatianna’s work, she has been awarded the Princeton Prize In Race Relations for the Central/Southern Region of New Jersey, an award presented by Princeton University to identify and commend young people who are working to increase understanding and mutual respect among all races. she was also awarded the Unity Award from Not In Our Town, an award given to recipients who promote social justice, economic justice, and educational equality for all, and the Future Arts Leader Award from the Arts Council of Princeton.

 

 

Please take the time out to see what young women around the world has to say about Girls on the Rise Mentoring Program. 

​HOURS OF OPERATION

Hours of operation:

Monday- Saturday

7:00am- 5:00pm 

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