Finding children a permanent home
There is a home for every child.鈥
That simple statement summarizes the work Ma Shonn Sullivan 鈥94 does every day for , located in Elyria, Ohio, near Cleveland.
She works with foster and adoptive families on behalf of children as a case worker, and typically has 12 to 15 children in her portfolio at one time in various stages of the foster and adoptive process.
鈥淭here are certainly times of disappointment,鈥 said Sullivan, 鈥渂ut almost always there is joy in the outcome.鈥
Sullivan takes her responsibilities very seriously, and that includes some restless nights wondering what the right decision for a particular child might be. She knows her work is life-changing for one of God鈥檚 precious children.
鈥淭he adoption process is a journey, and it is especially gratifying to see a child in a traumatic situation ending up in a good place, knowing that what we did was best,鈥 she said.
Sullivan and her colleagues want a permanent home for the children entrusted to them. 鈥淐oncurrent planning鈥 goes on, in which family reunification is the first goal, although adoption or permanent placement with a foster family is also explored.
鈥淚 think our team goes to every length and does more than the extra mile, because we want to do the right thing the first time every time for each child. And each child is a unique individual with unique needs,鈥 Sullivan said.
She came to her current position after degrees at 17c起草社区 (psychology) and at Case Western University (social work), plus a time as a resident director at Case through the .
鈥淚 came to 17c起草社区 because my dad was a big U.S. News & World Report reader,鈥 she said. 鈥 drew us to take a look, and it came down to 17c起草社区鈥檚 combination of educational offerings and spiritual base.鈥
She worked at , the college鈥檚 summer college experience for high school students of color, serving as an assistant to Rhae-Ann Richardson Booker 鈥91, a mentor to her who 鈥渁lways had a hand on my back and said, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e going to do this.鈥欌
Sullivan also credits 17c起草社区 professors Michelle Loyd-Paige, John Brink, Uko Zylstra and Randall Jelks as Christian academics who pushed her to think hard about her role in God鈥檚 world, and Jeff Bouman in the Office, who encouraged her to be engaged in student leadership.
was also a joy, allowing for more student connections and an outlet for joyful expression after a challenging first semester at the college.
Sullivan is active in her local church, the Pentecostal Church of Christ in Cleveland, as a teacher, youth ministry leader, singles ministry leader and personal assistant to the pastor鈥檚 wife鈥攚ho is also a pastor.
鈥淢y work can be overwhelming at times,鈥 she said, 鈥渁s you see your in-box full of family inquiries, and you鈥檙e tasked with making a life-changing match. And there are the 鈥11:59ers,鈥 family members that come at the very last minute to challenge an adoption after so much work has been done and emotion invested.
鈥淏ut I understand that I鈥檝e been called to this work and deeply want the right thing to happen for every child. That鈥檚 God鈥檚 plan, and I am glad to be a part of it.鈥