● About
Why YMAN?
Most youth organizations grow by serving more kids. We grow by going deeper with fewer — and turning what they build into resources that reach thousands. Our programs are intimate. Our outputs are public. Young people aren't the audience for our work; they're the authors of it.
● Our Mission & Philosophy
Our Principles
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Voice is the Strategy
Scale doesn't come from bigger programs. It comes from louder young people. Every decision we make runs through one filter: does this serve, elevate, or amplify a young person?
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Programs Stay Small
We do a few things with great depth, then let the methodology travel. The curricula, the EP, the podcast, the report — that's the scale engine. The cohorts stay small so the work stays real.
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Pipelines, Not Islands
OutLoud feeds the Mental Health EP. Townhall participants feed the internship. Report relationships feed next year's cohorts. Every program has a clear next step for the young person who completes it.
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We Recruit Like Organizers
We show up at schools, clubs, libraries, and rec centers weekly. Before we need anything. That's not outreach. That's how relationships get built — and how young people trust you enough to actually show up later.
● Our Story
How YMAN Started
YMAN was built by educators who had spent decades watching the same story play out: brilliant young people, underestimated classrooms, and mentorship that never quite caught up to who those young people actually were. With over 75 years of combined classroom and educational leadership experience, our founders set out to build something different — an organization where young people weren't program recipients but co-producers of the work itself.
Today, YMAN lives that mission in the Inland Empire through a connected system of mentoring, creative production, research, and wellness programs. Young people here write the research, record the music, shape the curricula, and lead the townhalls that become our flagship Youth Report. What started as a small experiment in taking young people seriously is now a regional platform for their voice — and a model other organizations can use to do the same.