To provide vocational arts instruction, entrepreneurship, and leadership
development training for high-risk youth in San Francisco.
"To help financially poor kids have the same expectations and possibility
for their futures as those with more resources. We work to promote equal social and economic
opportunity for all regardless of background in order to create real, economic change at a
grassroots level."
The name Turning Heads was created by a former student out of detention,
who was inspired to 'turn the heads' of those people he assumed would always see him as a
delinquent. We feel it is important to create vocational programs that are both appealing to
our target population in San Francisco, and linked to real and immediate economic and academic
pathways.
In 1999, Turning Heads began a unique program that combined vocational arts
instruction and entrepreneurship training at Log Cabin Ranch, a San Francisco
Juvenile Probation Department (SFJPD) detention facility for male youth. Turning
Heads adapted its curriculum from NFTE, the Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship,
an international leader in entrepreneurship education for youth.
Our programs at Log Cabin Ranch were featured in a 2003 New York Times article,
“Out of Trouble, Into Business.” Turning Heads’ vocational programs at Log Cabin
Ranch continued successfully until June 2009, when SFJPD adopted a new model of
operations. Subsequently, the facility no longer contracts with community-based
organizations to support its vocational education programs.
In 2005, Turning Heads launched the Sewing and Fashion Design Program for
high-risk young women of color, with a grant from Horizons Unlimited of San
Francisco. Young women who had completed the introductory class in 2005 initiated
the Sweet Dreams Business Cooperative, a successful profit-sharing business run
by the students. In 2006, the Sewing and Fashion Design Program was featured in
an article titled “The Start-Up as the First Step Up” in the Business Day section
of The New York Times. There were so many young women and community organizations
interested in the sewing classes that in 2007, Turning Heads replicated the class
at Hilltop High School (in the Mission District) and the Buchanan YMCA (in the
Western Addition), and were also able to establish our own studio in the Mission
District.
In 2009-2010, in addition to classes and Coop meetings held in our studio, Turning
Heads will provide sewing classes and business instruction at five San Francisco high
schools, and will serve over 70 young women.