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Jonathan Jones has long had a passion for robotics and engineering, and he helped
raise money for a Tiger Giving Day project spearheaded by the Southeastern Center
for Robotics Education (SCORE). (Photo courtesy of the Jonathan Jones Next Step Foundation)
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Jonathan Jones (business admin '15) approaches each day with a purpose the same way he attacks an opponent’s pass
in the National Football League.
The 2015 Auburn University graduate and two-time Super Bowl champion cornerback with
the New England Patriots works diligently to improve access and opportunities for
marginalized children who are often forgotten. Through his Jonathan Jones Next Step Foundation, the Carrollton, Georgia, native works with organizations in multiple states to give
hundreds of young people a chance to succeed in a variety of fields.
From Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) and food insecurity initiatives
to life skills application and professional development, Jones and his foundation
work to empower the next generation through education and mentorship opportunities.
“I’ve been blessed with a lot in my life, from talent to just being in the position
I’m in now and the platform and outreach I have,” said Jones, a four-year starter
in Auburn’s secondary from 2012-15. “I just want to see other youth come up and excel,
and I think my end goal is always just for that to be full circle for the more kids
that I can get to come back and say, ‘Hey, you were part of my journey, you did this
STEM camp for me or you put on this football camp,’ or whatever the endeavor may be.
Just to say that an event I put on helped them on their journey is the goal.”
Recently, Jones partnered with the College of Sciences and Mathematics’ Southeastern Center for Robotics Education (SCORE) on a Tiger Giving Day project to raise funds to purchase robotics equipment and provide professional development
to schools that otherwise wouldn’t have the means. That partnership materialized after
SCORE representatives attended a Lower Mills STEM Week 2023 event outside Boston in
which Jones was involved. The Tiger Giving Day project raised more than $15,000, inspiring
Jones to send a message to donors.
“It means a lot to us, not only to me, but to the kids and to the lives that you’re
impacting through STEM,” Jones said in a video. “You’re not only giving robotics equipment, but you’re also giving opportunity to
see a pathway that most didn’t see possible.”
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Another chief aim of the Jonathan Jones Next Step Foundation is supporting charities
and organizations such as the Food Bank of East Alabama and the Auburn Sustenance
Project. (Photo courtesy of the Jonathan Jones Next Step Foundation)
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Jones’ foundation operates in the three communities that mean the most to him.
“When I started the foundation, the three pillars of the foundation were the places
that were part of my life, and that was Carrollton, my hometown, Auburn and Boston,”
said Jones, who still visits Auburn as often as possible. “Along my journey, I spent
my childhood in Carrollton, my early adulthood in Auburn and the last eight years
in Boston. So, those were the places and the pillars that helped me, and I want to
just give back to those places because they meant so much to my journey.”
Jones has given support through his foundation to several efforts, including many
with ties to the Plains. His foundation was honored by the Auburn Chamber of Commerce with its Eagle Award earlier this year for his involvement in the community, and Jones
supports the Food Bank of East Alabama and the College of Human Sciences’ Auburn Sustenance Project.
Jones intentionally set out to align with a diverse and balanced portfolio of worthy
organizations through his foundation.
“I didn’t just want it to be about athletics, I didn’t just want it to be about education,”
Jones said of the foundation. “I feel like help can be needed in so many ways. So,
if I can help a kid take their next step with the sustenance program and they say,
‘I don’t have food while we’re out on [summer] break, and that’s my barrier to getting
better,’ and ‘I can’t focus on my schoolwork if I can’t eat,’ I’m helping you take
your next step in that phase.
“Or if it’s, ‘Hey, I kind of have this desire to get more into STEM,’ and I can say,
‘Well, I put on this event,’ and ‘I’ve connected with this group,’ we can just help
kids generally take their next step, whatever that may be.”
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Jonathan Jones enjoys working with youth and expanding opportunities and access to
STEM-based learning. (Photo courtesy of the Jonathan Jones Next Step Foundation)
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Jones’ sense of duty and philanthropic mentality come from values instilled in him
by his mother, Sharon, and father, Stacey.
“Athletics and education were just my background, and I always say I had the perfect
yin and yang between my parents,” said Jones, who volunteered at soup kitchens and
youth track camps while in high school. “My dad loves sports and is very disciplined,
and my mom could care less [about sports]; it’s all about education, and that’s all
that mattered to her. I couldn’t go to practice if I didn’t have the right grades.
So, the things that were instilled in me growing up just carried over.”
STEM grew into a passion of Jones’ in his teen years.
“I was in an engineering program through high school, and I just loved it,” he said.
“We worked with Southwire Engineering, a company that’s out of my hometown. I’ve always
loved to see how things work and motors, with my dad being a mechanic, and just being
around things like that growing up.
“I got to college and wasn’t able to do engineering with the schedule and the workload
with that and football. So, I fell back to business, but engineering was just always
something that thrived within me.”
When he started the foundation in 2019, Jones did so with an eye on forging partnerships
with organizations that could help young people enjoy STEM-related projects that could
spark a passion for learning within them.
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Each summer, Jonathan Jones hosts a football camp for children at his hometown in
Carrollton, Georgia. (Photo courtesy of the Jonathan Jones Next Step Foundation)
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“A few years back, the first partnership that I did was with [Unruly] Splats, and they do mechanisms that kids are able to use to bring play indoors and connect
it in with coding,” Jones said. “That was up my alley, and it was to two things that
I love — being outside playing and coding and the interface of that.
“I always say technology is the future, and it’s important to give kids an opportunity
to get involved in that early and to be a part of the future of technology and see
what that has to offer. Engineering is a big word, but when you break it down at a
smaller level, it’s what you do when you play with Legos as a kindergartener.”
Jones was a gifted athlete who took notice when members of the Carrollton community
went the extra mile to provide opportunities for children in his area.
“There was a guy in my hometown who donated a lot of money for us to be able to go
and participate in a lot of sports,” said Jones, who conducts a football camp at Carrollton
High School each summer. “That was kind of my opening to the world to get outside
of my hometown and go travel, play football, run track and do sports. I always wanted
to give back and make that come full circle and be a part of somebody else’s journey
and help them fulfill their dreams.”
Jones did not hear his name called in the 2016 NFL Draft, signing with the Patriots
as an undrafted free agent. He worked hard to not only make the team, but emerge as
a starter who now has two championship rings in a nearly decade-long career.
That feeling of being initially overlooked, however, helped ignite Jones’ desire to
use his platform to help others who may feel forgotten.
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Jonathan Jones helped host a Girls Flag Field Day with the Play Like a Girl organization,
an event that featured a panelist, flag drills and STEM activity. (Photo courtesy
of the Jonathan Jones Next Step Foundation)
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“I always considered myself the left-out guy, the guy nobody saw or [in a situation
where] it wasn’t supposed to be me,” he said. “There’s a lot of people out there who
feel like that who may say, ‘Ah, STEM’s not supposed to be for me,’ whether it’s females
or people who come from underprivileged places, who may feel like, ‘Ah, that’s not
supposed to be me.’ So, I’m using my story as an example to say, ‘Hey, all you need
is an opportunity, and once you get that opportunity, make the most of it.’”
Jones calls himself a “forever learner,” and last summer he added the title of licensed
pilot to his resume after developing a new passion for aviation.
“It’s easy for young kids to grow up saying, ‘Hey, I want to be an NFL football player,’”
he said. “That’s the glitz and the glamour, but even now, I just picked up aviation
and got my pilot’s license. That’s just because those things still drive me and just
[a love for] learning.
“My friends make fun of me. They say, ‘If you want to know what Jonathan’s into, just
go on his YouTube channel, and whatever the videos are about, that’s his next endeavor.’”
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Signed as an undrafted free agent, Jonathan Jones is now an eight-year NFL veteran
who has won two Super Bowls with the New England Patriots, in 2017 and 2019. (Photo
courtesy of the Jonathan Jones Next Step Foundation)
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His daughter, Skylar, is also a major motivating factor for Jones, who, in 2023, became
the Play Like a Girl program’s first male national ambassador.
“Being a girl dad, I had the opportunity to try to link with these programs and open
doors for a lot of young females, including my daughter, and so that definitely is
a driving force,” he said. “A lot of these spaces are male-dominated, from athletics
to STEM and aviation, a lot of the things that I’m involved with are very male-dominated.
So, just giving females an opportunity to step through that door — being a minority,
I understand what it’s like to have barriers to entry — so that’s empathy I have on
their behalf and is something that I’m always going to advocate for so that, as she
grows and as she gets older, doors are already open.
“You look at the NCAA women’s tournament this year how it had more viewership than
the men’s. That’s just a testament to all the people coming together and putting the
driving force behind women’s sports. In aviation, there’s a lot of women you see now
making that career take off. I definitely want her to have as many opportunities as
she can as she gets older, and that’s definitely a driving force.”
Jones has had a busy offseason, marrying his fiancée, Andressa, in the Florida Keys
and undergoing a right knee scope to clear out debris from the wear and tear of the
NFL in March.
Jones’ off-the-field efforts earned him a supreme honor this past season, as he was
selected as the Patriots’ nominee for the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award. That distinction validated the work he and his colleagues are doing to make a difference.
“It meant a lot. It meant that the things that me and the team are doing are making
a difference,” he said. “You don’t do it for awards, but that’s just affirmation that
you’re in the right direction and you’re doing the right things. It’s just motivation
to continue to keep going and do more and help more people.”
After his football days are done, Jones wants to continue to impact the lives of others
in meaningful and lasting ways.
“I want to continue to play as long as I can and use the opportunities in the platform
that I have to build up the foundation so that, once I am done playing, I’ll be full
time with the foundation and helping kids make their journey and to be a part of their
journey,” Jones said.
“I consider myself a forever learner, and I’m always trying to learn. I want to make
that contagious and show other people and kids that, when you graduate high school
and when you graduate college, learning doesn’t end there. There’s so much more in
this world that you can learn.”
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Through his Jonathan Jones Next Step Foundation, the Auburn alum is working to increase
access to STEM education for young people in several states. (Photo courtesy of the
Jonathan Jones Next Step Foundation)
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