Virginia Chase

Executive Assistant/Development Administrator
Hometown: Jackson, Mississippi
Current Residence: Jackson, Mississippi
Interests:
1) Attending social and educational events
2) Reading and responding to current events
3) Listening to and singing along with Gospel music
Most Proud of:
1) Personal relationship with Christ
2) The longevity of my marriage
3) Children/grandchildren
Why REAL?
My life experiences have helped me to be more grateful and
thankful for the way I was raised (to remember to do what I can to serve
others).
After much prayer and planning, my desire to work in a Christian
environment became a reality over 20 years ago when I joined REAL’s staff,
initially to assist the co-founders with their travel and the daily operations
of the ministry.
Today, I am thankful for the opportunity to utilize practical
characteristics, such as serving others and being dependable.
Over the years, I’ve worked to enhance practical office skills and to apply biblical principles, such as treating others the way I want to be treated and being mindful and considerate of how others feel, in any environment of

employment I found myself. Since working with REAL, I’ve been impacted by the dedication and hard work of those who are determined to change circumstances within their power in order to achieve attainable goals in life, using Christ as a compass.

QUOTE: A still small voice inside encourages me daily to stay on the narrow path for I only have a short time here.

 

REAL Spring Leadership Training

REAL Spring Leadership Training
April 27, 2019
8:00am-12:00pm
Location: Richland Community Center, 410 E. Harper St., Richland, MS 39218
Please Note: The training workshops are free to the public, however, guests must register with the REAL office to attend. Contact the REAL office for more information.

Leadership Training:
REAL annually conducts two 4-hour training workshops, one in April and the other in September, to help leaders serving Christian non-profit ministries develop both solid board and organizational structure within their organizations. The training topics cover subjects REAL’s co-founders and current leadership have seen as presenting unique challenges to Christian-ministry leaders of non-profits in rural, minority communities.

REAL Annual Fundraising Celebration Dinner

October 17, 2019
6:30pm-8:30pm
Location: Richland Community Center, 410 E. Harper St., Richland, MS 39218

Please Note:  There is a monetary cost and required registration to attend this event.  Contact the REAL office for more information.

Fundraising Celebration Dinner:
Annually, people gather from around the state to get a glimpse of our efforts in supporting those who are working in rural Mississippi communities to improve the quality of life for the underserved who live there. The dinner is an opportunity for these ministries to showcase their accomplishments, network with fellow ministry leaders, and enjoy a time of food and fellowship. Through event sponsorship donations and ads purchased in our souvenir booklet, this opportunity of exposure is made possible with very little cost to the ministries we support.

LEARN MORE HERE

REAL Fall Leadership Training

September 7, 2019
8:00am-12:00pm
Location: Richland Community Center, 410 E. Harper St., Richland, MS 39218
Please Note: The training workshops are free to the public, however, guests must register with the REAL office to attend. Contact the REAL office for more information.

Leadership Training:
REAL annually conducts two 4-hour training workshops, one in April and the other in September, to help leaders serving Christian non-profit ministries develop both solid board and organizational structure within their organizations. The training topics cover subjects REAL’s co-founders and current leadership have seen as presenting unique challenges to Christian-ministry leaders of non-profits in rural, minority communities.

LEARN MORE HERE

Movement in Quitman

Since 1977, Quitman County Development Organization Inc. (QCDO) has been serving the Northwest Mississippi area through housing, education, and economic development. Recently, I got a chance to talk with QCDO’s CEO Robert L. Jackson and ask him more about how the program is going.

Ryan Weary (RW): How are you doing today?

Robert Jackson (RJ): I‘m doing good, just battling allergies. Besides that, I’m doing okay.

RW: How have things been going at Quitman?

RJ: Pretty good. Our organization just celebrated 40 years of working in the community. The fact that we are still in business is a blessing. We’ve weathered 40 years of existence, and we hope to serve the community for 40 more.

RW: Excellent. What are some of the programs that you guys offer?

RJ: Currently, we offer an afterschool program for our elementary kids. We have operated out of the Rev. Carl Brown Center since 2005. We also work with an afterschool program held at First Oak Grove Baptist, ran by Lula Henderson in Crowder.

RW: How many kids are in your program now?

RJ: We have in the neighborhood of 40-50 kids throughout the year. Without REAL’s assistance, we wouldn’t be able to do what we do. Most foundations and funders have shifted away to give towards other things, but it’s a blessing that REAL Christian Foundation still works with us.

RW: What are some of the programs or opportunities that you guys are involved in outside of that?

RJ: We have a radio station called WCQC, licensed on FM radio out in Clarksdale. The station serves areas within 50-75 miles of Quitman, reaching all the way to Alabama. Our station plays Gospel and Blues music, and we expect to have a few talk shows running soon.

“Save the Children” is another program we have that helps assist kids in learning to read

and increasing their word association skills. It’s been going on for seven years and has been going really well. It teaches kids the importance of reading, which is the basis for a good life. Right now, “Save the Children” serves 50-75 kids in Lambert.

RW: Awesome. Have you had any issues?

RJ: The only issue has been trying to find ongoing additional funders to help us do what we do. We do housing repair and rental housing in the area along with operating a credit union. The credit union merged with Red River Bank in recent years to help us continue providing financial help to the community.

RW: That’s good. What are some of the dreams that you have for the kids, for the program as a whole, and for the community?

RJ: One of the dreams I have is for the kids to learn Black History. We’d like to be able to take them to the museums here as well as those in Washington and other areas. Our schools systems aren’t adequately teaching African American history even though it’s in the books. Our state’s history is rich, and they should definitely know about that history.

Another dream is that we can find parents that are interested with working with the program and expanding the program. We would like to see them offer ideas that they would be interested in. Most of all, we would love to identify someone who could come along and take this ministry to the next level.

My dream for Quitman is that we rise up and take on the leadership so we can provide for the things our community needs. It’s going to happen through us and by us. The ultimate dream is safer communities, jobs, and quality education for Quitman and the surrounding areas.

RW: What continues to drive you?

RJ: I’m driven by seeing the needs out there and seeing that I have some of the knowledge and energy needed to help address these issues. It’s something I don’t know if I can live without, but I’m sure God will have something else for me when the time comes for me to step back.

RW: What can we pray with you for?

RJ: Pray for us in terms of our safety, for unity. Pray that we can ingratiate others so that we can have people to help continue doing this work for years to come.

RW: We definitely will. Do you have any other needs?

RJ: Yes. We are looking for partners to help educate our youth about the Mule train (part of the poor people’s march that Martin Luther King Jr. started). He was working on that right before he got killed.

RW: I hear that. Well, thank you so much for your time, sir.

RJ: No problem, take care.

REAL Creativity

C2K Ministries (C2K) has been working with the youth in Mound Bayou as an organization since 2012, but its origin goes back further with events that could only have been orchestrated by the Lord. Phil and Kym Schank (pictured below) have worked with kids for almost 20 years through mentoring and tutoring. Initially, their work was concentrated in the Wisconsin area where they are from, a much more suburban, wealthy, and white area than the rural Mississippi town with which they both would eventually fall in love. Kym would be the first to develop feelings for Mound Bayou through volunteer work she did through her church. Phil started to visit Mississippi with her and the dream to work in and impact that community began taking root.

I got a chance to speak with Phil recently to see how things were going with C2K.

Ryan Weary: How are you doing today?

Phil Schank: I’m doing well.

RW: How have things been going at C2K?

PS: They have been going well. Right now, we are serving 20 kids. We are excited about Re:Direct (the afterschool program) and for the reading program software Fast ForWord that we have on our computers now. We just got it this year, but it has already had a big impact on the students. Three (3) out of the 20 students have increased their reading comprehension levels by two grades, fourteen (14) of the students have increased their levels by one grade and the remaining three (3) have increased their grade by half a grade. I am also excited about our staff; it’s been great. Things are going well.

RW: That is wonderful, Phil! For those who may not know, could you give me a breakdown of what goes on and who helps out at C2K?

PS: Sure. Our staff starts with Megan Munro, our Program Director. She oversees the program every day from top to bottom and handles the scheduling for all activities. Next is Linda Dorsey, our Family and Child Coach. She counsels the children on things like bullying and anything else that the children deal with that affect[s] their lives. Once a month, she meets with the children’s parents. We also have three (3) mentor specialists, Loise Fields-Fipps, LaTonya Fields and Brenda Jackson, who help out four (4) days a week to be a consistent presence in the children’s lives.

On any given day, the students have Fast ForWord (reading comprehension computer activity), a healthy snack, Bible time, rocket math (a math assessment activity to help keep track of student progression), homework time, an art activity, and/or a STEM activity.

Arts and music have a way of expanding creativity in the mind of a child. We have partnered with the Delta Arts Alliance for about two (2) years to help us with that goal in mind. We are in the process of working on a music aspect to our program. The Grammy Museum in Cleveland, MS, is including us as part of a pilot program they want to implement.

Beyond that, we have volunteers that help us from local colleges through Reformed University Fellowship, and the fraternities Alpha Phi Alpha and the Pikes.

RW: Wow! The students are definitely blessed to be in your program. What are some of the programs or opportunities that you guys are involved in outside of the classroom in Re:Direct?

PS: For our outside of the program experience, we make everything that we do incentive-based. For instance, we have a “money management” program called Re:Direct dollars. Students earn “dollars” for behavior, grades, participation, and etc. They have to balance out their “checkbooks” and make a deposit each week.

We have a store that opens every week where they can buy items from it. They have to

write “checks” and balance their books in order to buy anything. It teaches them basic financial principles. In the store itself, there are “certificates” that they can buy for field trips (such as the one shown on the left). There is a price attached to it, and they get to bring a friend if they purchase one. We want them to understand the value of something and let them make decisions based on those values. We have taken them on group trips as well, but they still have to buy a certificate for that type of trip. There is an attainable amount that they have to raise. The importance is on creating incentives for them.

RW: Indeed. I really like that angle with having field trips with tangible values. With all the awesome things happening there, has the ministry dealt with any issues lately?

PS: The only two issues we have had are needing to have better communication with the parents and a need to expand to accommodate our students. Although we remind our parents that we need to be informed if they change a phone number, sometimes it can still fall through the cracks. More often than not, this leads to other issues.

We also have a waiting list of 15 students. A lot of families would love to have their children in the program; at the moment, we just don’t have the space right now to serve all of the students.

RW: That’s understandable. What are some of the dreams that you have for the kids, for the program as a whole, and for the community?

PS: That 100% of the students that come through the programs will grow up to be solid, productive Christians in the community. The dream is that they would be mentors and take those principles on throughout the rest of their lives.

We also would like to get some land and create a youth center so that we can expand the program and increase the capacity.

RW: We pray those dreams will become reality. What continues to drive you in your work with C2K?

PS: The drive comes from seeing a lot of social inequality. That’s not how God designed it and we are called to do something about it. Every one of these kids deserves opportunities.

RW: Amen. What can we pray with you for?

PS: Pray that we continue to hear well what God is saying, follow it, and for property to be able to expand and accommodate the waiting list we have.

REAL Success

Jefferson Davis Outreach Ministries (JDOM) has been serving the Jefferson Davis County area since 2001. Over the years, JDOM President Bettie Drummond [pictured on the right with students] has seen the Lord bless the lives of the youths and families in the Prentiss community who have participated in or volunteered with the ministry. They offer an afterschool program called Log In For Transformation (LIFT) that works with students in grades K-6th, helping them with homework, improving their reading comprehension, and teaching them biblical principles. This past year they averaged 15 to 18 students a day who attended along with 3 to 4 high school students who volunteered to help the younger kids with their work.

In conjunction with the afterschool program, JDOM also has a robotics team [some of its members are pictured on the left] that helps give the children an introduction to engineering in a fun way. Their robotics team participated in the Mississippi Robotics competition at Nissan Canton Assembly Plant back in May. The children in the robotics team were thrilled to win a few ribbons, tour the facility, and get a chance to see some of Nissan’s car making process. Through both the LIFT and robotics programs, the students’ math skills have improved.

JDOM offers a summer program every year around the beginning of summer. This year, the summer program had 12 students a day that had the privilege to learn and have fun. They learned a lot about art, the books of the Bible, multiplication and division skills, and dictionary skills. The children had the opportunity to put together a book, visit the African American Military History Museum in Hattiesburg, and make a visit to Gattitown for food and fun.

Aside from REAL, JDOM is supported by parents, local individuals, businesses, and churches in the area [JDOM’s building in Prentiss is shown on the right]. You can help support the work of their ministry by donating to REAL and by praying for their ministry. Pray specifically for the students, the local school system that is going through changes right now, for a van to pick up students from school next year, and the ability to purchase one large robot so their robotics program can work with advanced students.