Ashley Rhodes-Courter
Atlanta, GA USA
"Don’t dwell. Do. Figure out how to move forward."
Career Roadmap
Ashley's work combines: Non-Profit Organizations, Politics, and Upholding a Cause and Belief
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Advice for getting started
I made a point to not get into trouble or get involved in activities that could potentially derail my life. I focused on school and knew that that would help me get to where I wanted to go in life.
Here's the path I took:
High School
Bachelor's Degree
Business/Corporate Communications, General
Eckerd College
Bachelor's Degree
Drama and Dramatics/Theatre Arts, General
Eckerd College
Bachelor's Degree
Political Science and Government, General
Eckerd College
Bachelor's Degree
Psychology, General
Eckerd College
Graduate Degree
Social Work
University of Southern California
Life & Career Milestones
My path in life took a while to figure out
1.
Was born to a single teen mother and was put into foster care at the age of three, where she spent the next 10 years living at over 14 homes.
2.
Many of the foster care homes she lived in were mentally and physically abusive environments—she later learned that 25 percent of her caregivers either were or became convicted felons.
3.
School became her sanctuary and it helped her cope with and transcend her circumstances—says “nobody could beat my knowledge out of me.”
4.
She was eventually adopted from a children’s home when she was 12.
5.
Says all of her experiences growing up “created a platform of passion” and a desire to advocate for others—as a teen, she got directly involved in lawsuits that changed foster care laws.
6.
At age 17, she won a writing contest with an essay about her life and was granted a book deal—her first book, “Three Little Words,” became a New York Times and international bestseller.
7.
Earned a full scholarship to Eckerd College, where she majored in communications and theater and minored in political science and psychology; she also holds a master’s degree in social work.
8.
She is now a celebrated speaker, advocate, nonprofit founder, author, and foster parent working to change policies surrounding the foster care system and provide support to children and parents.
Defining Moments
How I responded to discouragement
THE NOISE
Messages from Society in general:
You are just going to be another statistic.
How I responded:
I made a point to not get into trouble or get involved in activities that could potentially derail my life. I focused on school and knew that that would help me get to where I wanted to go in life.
Experiences and challenges that shaped me
I was born to a single teen mother and by the age of 3 I was in Florida’s foster care system where I spent almost ten years in and out of 14 homes. Some of these home environments were very abusive and the constant moving around took a toll.
I excelled in school because education was the one thing that nobody could take away from me and I wanted to be able to advocate for other children who had grown up under similar circumstances.