Archive for the ‘student voice’ Category

Stand for Tomorrow - free resources for eco-awareness

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

We are partnering with a new organization called Stand for Tomorrow that combines student leadership and ec0-awareness. Please take a look, pass along, and send to colleagues and friends so they can Stand for Tomorrow, today!

Sylvia

Do you want to take your students on an adventure to save the world’s oceans that they’ll never forget? An adventure that will empower them through knowledge and activism? An adventure that doesn’t cost a penny? Well, your holiday wish has come true! Stand for Tomorrow is an organization that will provide educational multimedia content on plastic’s impact on the ocean’s that is free to students and teachers! The best part? Your students will have the opportunity to participate virtually with researchers on expeditions, explore the oceans through the eyes of expert scuba divers, and acquire knowledge and experience that they would have never been able to access before. So what are you waiting for! Sign up for our monthly newsletter where we will update you on the latest news and keep you informed of our upcoming release of free lesson plans. Follow us online: Blog, Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, YouTube.

Stand for Tomorrow aims to create environmental stewardship through eco-awareness and education. Students are the leaders of tomorrow and Stand for Tomorrow is focusing on educational content to educate, excite, and involve students to Stand for Tomorrow that they want and deserve.

Stand for Tomorrow will create K-12 lesson plans focused on pollution and it’s impact on marine ecosystems that demonstrate the impact that pollution has on our oceans with a focus on the current failure to prevent plastic from impacting marine ecosystems. The curriculum will allow students to understand elements that contribute to this environmentally destructive issue and how they will be able to make a difference. The curriculum will incorporate critical education skills for today’s 21st century learner as well as to cover mathematics, history, geography, and science. Stand for Tomorrow will support their educational efforts with multimedia and a documentary to reach a larger audience and provide an more in depth look at the impact of plastic on marine ecosystems and subsequently it’s impact on our larger eco-system, Earth.

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Youth Risk Online - Why Engage Youth in Bullying Prevention?

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

A prevalent view of education is that young people are empty vessels and schools simply open up their heads and pour in knowledge. Unfortunately this is a vision of education that is not serving us well in the 21st century. For a few students, this clearly works, but for many, this is a futile effort — made worse by an increasing focus on testing a few subjects at the expense of high-interest subjects like art and music.

By looking at students as objects to be changed, we lose many opportunities for students to be agents of change. Our society needs change agents — people who care about others, citizens, voters, creative imaginers and leaders. Where will they come from if we don’t allow young people to explore these roles?

Bullying prevention is an opportunity to engage youth in becoming change agents for an important cause, one that impacts them directly. However, lecturing them about rules or organizing pep rallies for kindness misses the mark.

To truly engage youth in bullying prevention, we must take the risk of turning some of the power over to them and allow them to be part of the solution. For example, some students can create their own presentations about bullying or participate in peer mediation. Students listen to other students much more about these subjects than adults, and identify information from peers as more truthful. Involving youth in solutions where they DO something important allows adults to steer youth towards the right answers and good behavior, instead of just lecturing. As adults and youth work together, learning and teaching merge, and youth find new empathy for others.

This kind of engagement requires long-term commitments and caring adults with talent in youth development. However, it pays off when youth develop real skills, compassion, and responsibility.

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Next week I’ll be in Seattle presenting as part of a day-long pre-conference panel on Youth Risk Online: Issues and Solutions at the International Bullying Prevention Association (IBPA) November 15-17 in Seattle, Washington. I was asked to contribute 300 words to a handout for the participants and thought I’d share them here too!

Sylvia

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The Future of Education interview - Sylvia Martinez

Friday, November 5th, 2010

Last week I had the opportunity to be interviewed by Steve Hargadon for his Future of Education web event series. It was a great conversation (Steve is an amazing interviewer!)

We touched on a wide variety of subjects, including: “myths” of technology integration, student voice, gender issues in technology, technology literacy and of course, education reform.

Link to replay interview (when you click this, it will launch Elluminate and replay the entire event, chat window and all.)

Be sure to check out the upcoming events in “The Future of Education” series - there is something for every interest!

Sylvia

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The Digital Classroom - a podcast from ACEC 2010

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

Back in April I keynoted the Australian Council for Educational Computing (ACEC 2010) in Melbourne, Australia. After the keynote I had a tap on the shoulder from a lovely young man who works for a show called “FutureTense” on the ABC National Radio network asking if he could record a short interview for his show.

I think it came out pretty well - listen and you’ll hear all kinds of ideas about “The Digital Classroom” from me and others including Helen Otway, Chris Rogers, Alan November, Andy Penman, and Michelle Selinger. I especially liked opening the show by talking about how technology is not dehumanizing us as it’s often depicted. Rather technology allows a greater sense of community with people around the world, and how this can now include young people in an unprecedented way.

Sylvia

The Digital Classroom - ACEC 2010 (click to play)

If this doesn’t work, try this direct link to the ABC site for the MP3.

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TEDxRedmond - first TEDx ‘for kids by kids’ is a success!

Monday, September 20th, 2010

TEDxRedmond was a great success on Saturday, Sept 18. Over 400 young people attended and were treated to an amazing lineup of accomplished speakers all under the age of 16. The Twittersphere was lit up with praise for the inspirational messages from each and every speaker. We at Generation YES are very proud to have co-sponsored this first ever TEDx “for kids by kids.”

The event was streamed live and recorded, and as those become available, we’ll share!

Online now - Amazing Kids News Reporter Olivia sits down with Adora Svitak, host of TEDxRedmond 2010, immediately after the event.

(Click here if you can’t view the embedded video SchoolTube - TEDxRedmond: Amazing Kids Reporter Olivia Interviews Adora Svitak.)

Sylvia

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Prairie Elementary Filmmakers Save a Regional Nature Program

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

From Gail Desler (aka Blogwalker) in a school district near Sacramento, CA.

Prairie Elementary Filmmakers Save a Regional Nature Program | BlogWalker.

“I was there – at the Sacramento Board of Directors – on Wednesday, joining other concerned educators and citizens in a last minute effort to save one of Sacramento’s primo science programs: Spash.

Thanks to Splash, thousands of elementary, middle, and high school students have explored life in Sacramento’s streams and, in the process, have come to understand why taking care of our water supply is so vital to the community. However, the Board was ready to eliminate the program as part of their latest round of budget cuts.

We had our chance to speak out, each person being allotted 3 minutes to justify continued funding for the program. With Splash director Eva Butler leading the charge, I think the 12 of us who took our turns at the podium helped provide the Board members with an understanding and appreciation that for most kids, “Splash is their first experience with relevant science and things that live beyond the pavement in Sacramento’s streams and vernal pools.”

But it was clearly a team of 5th grade filmmakers from Prairie Elementary School (Lesley McKillop’s former 4th graders) who saved the program. In less than 2 minutes, their Saving Splash video (see snippets in the above TV coverage) provided a compelling argument that led to a unanimous vote to save the program.

A huge victory for students all over the Sacramento region – and a powerful lesson to our young filmmakers on the importance of taking a stand and the power of media to sway an audience.”

If you don’t know, California schools are going through some incredibly tough fiscal times. Yes, I know that’s true all across the US, but California school’s are especially dependent on property taxes, and California real estate was subject to some of the biggest bubble bursting in the country. So the fact that these young filmakers changed a decision in these times especially affirms the power of student voice.

Here’s another reason - the subject of water and the science behind it. The city of Sacramento is at the heart of the California Central Valley Delta. This inland water system is the ecological lifeblood of the state and nourishes one the richest agricultural areas in the U.S. On less than 1 percent of the total farmland in the United States, the Central Valley produces 8 percent of the nation’s agricultural output by value, most of it fed by human engineered water systems (source). Understanding water ecology is vital to Sacramento citizens. So this testimonial about elementary school students saving a science program with their media skills is no joke. This is not just media literacy, it’s science, politics, and ecology! This is certainly the “real world” that we want students to experience.

Thanks, Gail, for sharing Prairie Elementary Filmmakers Save a Regional Nature Program

Sylvia

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TEDx Redmond - for kids, by kids

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

TEDxRedmond is getting closer!

This special event for kids, by kids, is shaping up to be a remarkable day!

TEDxRedmond will feature speakers who have done amazing things. They have climbed mountains, started successful businesses, written books, raised millions for charity, and much more. Remarkable achievements - especially when you find out that all speakers and the organizing committee are under the age of 16! Moderated by Adora Svitak, author, speaker, and the youngest TED speaker, TEDx Redmond will be an event like none other.

All youth in the Western Washington area under the age of 16 are invited.

The event is on Saturday, September 18 from 2 to 7 PM on the Microsoft campus in Redmond, WA. Admission and dinner is free. This is a wonderful opportunity for students to attend a premier event that will leave a lasting impression on all who attend. Students who register in advance will be admitted, and there may be some admittance at the door if space is available. But register to be sure to get a spot.

Please pass this information along to school personnel, student groups/clubs, and to students you know. Registration, directions, and other information can be found at tedxredmond.com.

The event will also be webcast live but there is nothing like being in the audience.

Generation YES is happy to join Microsoft Bing in sponsoring the first TEDx event that is organized and delivered by youth for youth.

Check out Adora and one of the featured speakers on the local Seattle news program.

TEDx Redmond For Kids, By Kids | KING 5 TV | Seattle News, Local News, Breaking News, Weather | New Day NW.

Sylvia

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Back to school - games for collaboration and teamwork

Saturday, August 7th, 2010

Of course we want to encourage students to collaborate and work in teams - but how does this actually happen?

Here’s one idea to kickstart that idea and keep it going all year long - games. But not just any game! Games specifically designed to encourage teamwork and collaboration. Replace simple “icebreakers” with games that set the standard for positive interaction. As time goes on, introduce other games that pave the way for even deeper group work. Encouraging these kinds of habits needs to start day one, it’s not something to do after students “learn the basics.”

Check out this article - “Why Play Games When There’s Work to Do? by Adam Fletcher of The Freechild Project.

Games can be a catalyst for deeper goals. They can bring both cohesion and energy to any group, and are a welcome addition to a teacher’s “bag of tricks”. Playing games with students and youth groups encourages teamwork, models constructive, collaborative behavior, and develops a shared sense of mission.

Two categories of games are especially helpful in setting a tone of collaboration and teamwork for students.

Cooperative games emphasize participation, challenge, and fun, rather than sorting out winners and losers. These kinds of games teach teamwork, empathy, and trust.

Initiative games have players attack a problem and solve it. They teach leadership, problem solving, and collaboration.

I encourage you to read “Why Play Games…” It’s full of practical suggestions and fun game ideas, but is much more than just a list of games. It includes time-tested information about how to choose them, how to introduce them, how to create reflective activities that further magnify the impact of the game itself, and tons of additional resources.

Teachers who lead student tech clubs know that the success of the group depends on much more than tech skills. Teamwork and a sense of mission result in the “we” being more than the “me” and can take a student tech team to the next level.

This isn’t just for student clubs either. If you want students to unlearn the competitive habits that have been drilled into them and work cooperatively, these games will work in classroom situations too. Collaboration and communication may be “21st century skills” but having students play them out in game situations is a timeless idea.

Give this short article a read and I guarantee you will learn one new thing today! “Why Play Games…” By Adam Fletcher

Selected additional resources (there’s a lot more if you click on the article link):

  • Free guide, So, You Wanna Be A Playa? The Freechild Project Guide to Cooperative Games for Social Change by A. Fletcher with K. Kunst. “This insightful new guide will help community workers, teachers, activists, and all kinds of people find fun, engaging, and powerful activities that promote teamwork, communication, and social justice.Click here for a free download.

Sylvia

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Amazing speaker lineup for TEDxRedmond, all youth ages 10-16

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

TEDx Redmond is shaping up to be a great event!

Generation YES is a proud co-sponsor of this first ever TEDx event created, planned, and run by youth for youth under age 16. TEDx Redmond will be held September 18, 2010 at the Microsoft Campus in Redmond WA.

Check out this list of speakers, all accomplished young people:

  • Jessica Markowitz - created a non-profit helping Rwandan children, especially girls go to school.
  • Brennan LaBrie - the youngest reporter at the 2010 Winter Olympics and a seasoned journalist at ten years old.
  • “The Pink Polka Dots” Maddy Berkman, Sierra Alef, and Kelsey Josund - Founded ”The Pink Polka Dots Guild” to raise money for pediatric brain tumor research at Children’s Hospital in Seattle after losing a friend to the disease. Over the past four years, they’ve raised over $250,000 for the cause.
  • Jordan Romero - the youngest person ever to climb Mt. Everest as part of his “7 Summits” project-the goal of climbing the tallest summit of each continent.
  • Maya Ganesan - a published author, blogger, and poet, also competes in spoken word competitions.
  • Alec Loorz - founded Kids vs. Global Warming, an organization dedicated to encouraging other kids to speak up about climate change. Alex has given over one hundred and fifty speeches, presentations, and keynote addresses and serves on advisory boards for several organizations.
  • Priya Ganesan - varsity tennis team member and pianist is not only skilled in mathematics (she’s received awards at statewide and regional math competitions), but is also a prolific blogger and writer.
  • Austin Gutwein - founded Hoops of Hope in 2004. Hoops of Hope has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars through basketball free-throw marathons. Hoops of Hope funds emergency relief in Haiti, provides backpacks for children and mosquito nets for houses, and building schools, clinics and water systems in countries ranging from Kenya to India.

Moderated by Adora Svitak, author, speaker, and the youngest TED speaker, TEDx Redmond will be an event like none other.

The planning committee, speakers and attendees are all youth less than 16 years old. There are still spaces available - more information and signups are on the TEDx-Redmond website.

Please share this information with the youth of Washington State!

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Do you sleep with your cell phone? Pew Study on Millennials

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

cell phone graphic

Generations, like people, have personalities, and Millennials — the American teens and twenty-somethings who are making the passage into adulthood at the start of a new millennium — have begun to forge theirs: confident, self-expressive, liberal, upbeat and open to change.

They are more ethnically and racially diverse than older adults. They’re less religious, less likely to have served in the military, and are on track to become the most educated generation in American history.

Their entry into careers and first jobs has been badly set back by the Great Recession, but they are more upbeat than their elders about their own economic futures as well as about the overall state of the nation.

from The Millennials: Confident. Connected. Open to Change. - Pew Research Center

The latest Pew Study on “Millennials” (people born after 1980) is part of a Pew Research Center series of reports exploring the behaviors, values and opinions of the teens and twenty-somethings that make up the Millennial Generation.

These youth say that “technology” is the defining characteristic of their generation. And it’s not just use of gadgets, it’s the social aspect of how technology shapes their lives.

The obvious question is: How has school responded to this demographic shift?

Take the quiz: How Millennial Are You?

Sylvia


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