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    Contractingbusiness 3357 Acestudents

    ACE Mentor Program Predicts Greater Enrollment

    Sept. 21, 2015
    • 63% of ACE seniors were minority students vs. the national average of 44.3% • 98.6% of ACE high school seniors graduate from high school vs. the national average of 80%

    The ACE (Architecture, Construction, Engineering) Mentor Program of America, a leading workforce development organization encouraging youth to pursue STEM-related careers, is poised to enroll and mentor even more students during the 2015 - 2016 school year.

    This is the 21st year of ACE offering opportunities for students to prepare them for college and beyond and is in the midst of making exciting new changes. ACE has launched a re-designed website, hired a new President and CEO, added new national sponsors, welcomes a new affiliate in Utah and is supported by the broadest group of distinguished design and construction firm leadership to-date.

    “The ACE Mentor Program attracts students to its 35-40-hour after-school program who want to reach beyond textbooks and understand real world applications of their studies,” stated Thomas Gilbane, Jr., Chairman of the Board, ACE Mentor Program, and Chairman & CEO, Gilbane, Inc.

    According to Jack Kalavritinos, named President & CEO of ACE in January, quantitative results from two 2015 ACE studies show that:
    • 63% of ACE seniors were minority students vs. the national average of 44.3%
    • 98.6% of ACE high school seniors graduate from high school vs. the national average of 80%
    • 92% of ACE seniors entered college directly from high school vs. the national average of 66%
    • z70% of college-bound ACE seniors major in architecture, engineering or construction management.

    “Survey results reveal and validate the important work ACE is doing through its extensive network of affiliates and mentors across the U.S.,” says Tony Guzzi, ACE vice-chairman of the board, and president and CEO, EMCOR Group, Inc.

    “The data helps define the immense value of this unique program for high school students many of whom might not otherwise pursue a college education,” Guzzi says.

    “The secret of the ACE Mentor experience is that students and construction and design professionals work as a team to develop a realistic project that often relates to an actual site. This is possible thanks to the myriad design and construction industry companies supporting ACE,” adds Peter Davoren, ACE Vice-Chairman of the Board, President & CEO, Turner Construction Company.

    To register for the ACE program — or to become a mentor — visit acementor.org.