WeSeePeople

Thursday, December 06, 2018

Today We See Jason Jones, A Recent Graduate Of The Last Mile, Beating The Odds.

Jason Jones, an incarcerated individual who selected the right path. Instead of being one of the incarcerated number, he decided to join, The Last Mile, a program for successful re-entry to the job market through business and technology training.  This was at the San Quentin State Prison, where he was imprisoned for 13 years.
Appreciating the value of the program, Google.org announced today, a $2 million grant to The Last Mile. With this gift, the program will progress even further, across the United States. Also in the target is to establish its first program in an Indiana juvenile facility, Pendleton Juvenile Correctional Facility. There will be more Jason Jones.
Jason wrote a letter to future students of the program. Here is the letter in it's entirety, Thanks to Google Blog.



Dear students,

My name is Jason Jones and I am a software engineer; however, that wasn’t always the case. For the majority of my life, I was whatever stereotype that public opinion thought would fit: at-risk, system impacted, low-income; the list goes on. I’m 35 years old and recently released from prison after 13 years.
I come from a broken home, where gangs became family and the streets became my household. In 2014, while incarcerated at San Quentin State Prison, I entered The Last Mile program with no understanding of the opportunity it presented. It gave me a home and my new family. No one could have told me that this one decision would turn my life around.
Before The Last Mile, I had no idea what coding was or how technology worked. I had no real plans of rehabilitation or changing my mind set. Through coding, I was able to redefine how people perceived me. I became part of another underrepresented group: a person of color in tech with a non-traditional background.
Through the program, I found classmates, instructors and volunteers who were genuinely invested in my education and in me as a person. We spent thirty-two hours each week learning skills like JavaScript, web development, team collaboration and how to navigate the workplace. I discovered mentors and positive role models who I could go to with problems or for advice.
Since graduating from the Last Mile, I signed a contract with a tech company that was interested in my success, and I relocated to a better place for growth and prosperity. And just two months out of prison, I’m able to travel on a plane for the first time in my life, visit parts of the country I’ve never been, and do things that I thought were out of my reach.
This process has been anything but easy. It takes a lot of hard work, commitment, discipline, focus and sacrifice.
I’ve faced a lot of adversity in my life, but coding gave me a different approach to solving problems. It taught me how to break down the larger problems into smaller, workable ones and create a workflow that leads to a solution. I’ve learned better communication skills and how to collaborate successfully on a team. I’ve learned how to break down some barriers that were stunting my growth and learned how to ask for and accept help. But most of all, I’ve learned how to take control of my life and set the direction in which it is going.
All of you have the opportunity to reimagine what you want your life to look like—always be your best self and believe in the process. This keeps me on a positive path.
Yours truly,

Jason Jones

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