Press Release
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Former DECA member uses motivation to change lives After being abandoned at birth by his 17-year-old mother at an Oklahoma City hospital, Josh Shipp went through years of abuse. For 14 years Shipp was in and out of about 10 foster and group homes where he was neglected, mistreated and felt worthless because no one wanted him. In just a few short years Shipp went from not being wanted, to being high in demand by taking his own advice, “don’t be average.”
“I joined DECA because I heard it was easy, there were girls, free cookies and you got to get out of school an hour early,” Shipp said. He an for chapter reporter as a joke and won. But, he had no idea the impact DECA would make on his life. When Shipp was 18 he was arrested and jailed for having $10,000 worth of hot checks. When his foster parents of four years picked him up, their reaction surprised him. “They sat me down at home and said ‘Josh, we don’t see you as a problem, we see you as an opportunity.’ I laughed thinking that we looked like a scene from the TV show Full House,” Shipp said. Shipp’s foster parents changed his perspective with that phrase, helping him turn his life around. He realized that before this he saw his past as a problem- not an opportunity.
Shipp credits DECA for helping him discover his true passion and turning his life around. That is why he is being recognized as a CareerTech champion, according to Phil Berkenbile, CareerTech state director. “CareerTech Champions are alumni of the system’s programs or student organizations who attribute much of success to their CareerTech experience,” Berkenbile said. Each year Shipp speaks with an average of 100,000 teens. Along with personal appearances, he uses modern-day communication vehicles such as MySpace, podcasts, e-books, Web sites and blogs. One of Shipp’s newer projects is a Web site called Heyjosh.tv where he gives teens advice, and responds to questions. DirecTV has purchased 10 of these episodes to air nationally in 15 million homes. Shipp attributes his personal growth and success to the support of a great foster family, dynamic teachers and DECA. “Success is finding something in life you love so much that you would do it for free, but you do it so well that you get paid to do it,” Shipp said. He has now written a book, “Don’t Be Average,” and helped coauthor three other books: “The Best of Success for Teens,” “The Making of an Unshakable Character” and “Forty Voices.” Shipp has also hosted a reality show called “Prom Date” and is in the process of working on a pilot for MTV. In the future he plans to continue speaking to teenagers and working on more media-related projects that inspire and entertain at the same time. “It doesn’t matter why you get involved, what does matter is taking the step to get involved,” Shipp said. “CareerTech programs, such as DECA, can change your life. It changed mine. ” For more information on Josh Shipp go to http://www.joshshipp.com/ Posted April 19, 2007 |
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