(...)
full article
Every day is a play day for Sandy Wax, president of the 24-hour children's channel PBS Kids Sprout.
Sprout, which targets preschoolers, was launched in 2005 and films each weekday in Philadelphia with almost 40 employees. It's a joint venture between Comcast Corp., London-based HIT Entertainment, the Public Broadcasting Service and Sesame Workshop.
Wax, a former senior vice president with Disney ABC Cable Networks, recently sat down for an interview on entertaining children, the YouTube trend among preschoolers and her thoughts on the new Comcast building.
Question: How many homes get Sprout?
Answer: We're in 37 million homes in the U.S., which is really unprecedented for a new cable channel launching in this environment.
Q: I understand you recently moved into the Comcast Center. How did that go?
A: We're about halfway up. And it's great. It's really a very bright and open and airy building. So we're loving it. We've only been there a week. . . . We shoot our live morning show in the actual building, down on the 24th floor, with our partners at Center City Film & Video.
Where Are All the Girl Ninjas? Sexist Stereotypes Pervade Children's Media
By Sara Voorhees, Women's Media Center. Posted February 22, 2008.
Geena Davis (pictured at right) was watching preschool TV shows and children's videos with her two-year-old daughter when she began to wonder: where were the girls? Where were the animated girl mice, the girl ninjas, the girl puppy dogs? Boy rodents, canines and martial artists seemed to dominate every frame and animated cell, but only an occasional female came popping in for comic or gratuitous effect.
For an actress who had galvanized women with Thelma and Louise and A League of their Own, and was soon to change the course of television history as the first female president of the United States (Commander in Chief), "Where are the girls?" was a question that needed to be answered.
Side-by-Side, a joint project between UK-based charity PhotoVoice and the Palestinian-Israeli charity Parents' Circle/Families Forum, aims to give children their own voice.
It may be a bizarre idea - having fun learning photography in the midst of such violence - but the participants, all of whom have lost family members to the conflict, believe it has serious potential.
Declaration of the Committee of Ministers on protecting the dignity, security and privacy of children on the Internet
(Adopted by the Committee of Ministers on 20 February 2008 at the 1018th meeting of the Ministers’ Deputies)
The Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe,
Recalling the fundamental right to freedom of expression and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authorities and regardless of frontiers, as guaranteed by Article 10 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (European Convention on Human Rights – ETS No. 5);
Recalling the 1989 United Nations Convention of the Rights of the Child, in particular the inherent right for children to dignity, to special protection and care as is necessary for their well-being, to protection against all forms of discrimination or arbitrary or unlawful interference with their privacy and to unlawful attacks on their honour and reputation;
Convinced that the well-being and best interests of children are fundamental values shared by all member states, which must be promoted without any discrimination;
Convinced that the Internet is an important tool for children’s everyday activities, such as communication, information, knowledge, education and entertainment;
Concerned however by the enduring presence of content created by children which can be damaging to their dignity, security, privacy and honour both now and in the future as adults;
Here's a chance to watch the Blast Masterclasses that were broadcast on BBC Two. There are tips from industry experts on how to write a drama, what makes a good documentary, shooting a music video and plenty more.
Use these top tips to get creative with your own productions.
Take part in our StrangerGroup and win a trip to the StrangerFestival this summer in Amsterdam.
Are you between 15 and 25 and have good ideas up your sleeves? Then join the StrangerGroup and help us develop the StrangerFestival website and the festival programme. The way we will do it is by sharing ideas and brainstorming together, and all online so you can be part of the group wherever you are!
The 10 most active members will win a trip to the festival this summer in Amsterdam! So hurry on and sign yourself in by sending an e-mail to Erga Sonnenberg: erga@eurocult.org
By Ozi on Wednesday, February 20 2008, 15:09 - Permalink
Our association founded on July 2006 in Gaziantep by the volunteer students of Gaziantep University. Despite the fact that Gaziantep has many possibilities for youth people and volunteers projects, there are not enough organizations for them. Although our association has been founded yet, it will have an important role to fill up this blank. Our target groups are children and young people.
The aims of the organizations are;
- Being organized between children and youth people by legal and juristic personality,
- Being situated between children and youth people in the process of management, decision and administration with the comprehension of equality,
- Researching the problems of children and youth people and producing solutions for the problems,
- Assisting in raising the conscious of children and youth people' rights,
- Providing the communication and cooperation between children, youth people and volunteer foundings,
- Constituting politics related to children and youth people and assisting in improving existing politics.
- We have 26 members in our association. Administer team of our association is consist of president, asistant of president, general secretary, education coordinator, financial coordinator, organization coordinator and public relations. Members have had experience from participating in national and international education seminars and organizations. President, asistant of president and education coordinator have got education seminars and trainings for NGOs on including »project cycle management«. In May 2007 we applied and accepted for the »EVS sending organization« as the second organization in Southeast Anatolia Region of Turkey by NA. You can see the details as the following link:
We have a project called »Media Apprenticeses« funded by Turkish NA starting in October 2007 that is about youth activities including publishing a monthly youth newspaper by themselves, reaching all young people by web site of project, conferences about media process, photo exhibition of young newspaper’s editors, workshops in project team with common education style and as a result provide young people to add an active social life and in Gaziantep. This project aims to brace dialogue between NGOs and young people, redound communication activities by media and its action area, contibute to improve solution ideas to youth problems and “young policies” during the project by having a foresight to European Young people and their parity.
Gaziantep Youth Union members, would like to take part social and politic discussions on Istanbul blog and other Cafebabel.com blogs by contributing articles. Also we would like to state that we will enjoy to support or join projects of other national or international youth groups, if it is needed.
Yahya Şimşek
Gaziantep Youth Union,
Cafebabel Representative
Moving Baltic Sea is a film and environmental festival travelling
through the Baltic Sea on a sailing boat during the summer of 2008. The
ship sets sail in Rostock and then anchors in the harbours of Gdansk,
Kaliningrad, Riga, Narva-Jõesuu and St. Petersburg. At each stop, a
four-day festival presents an international short film competition,
screenings, a 48h film contest, and workshops. Films are selected by an
international jury and compete for the Moving Baltic Sea Award. The
winning film will be licenced and broadcasted by ARTE.
With the unique combination of film and environment Moving Baltic Sea
stimulates a creative process in both fields to inspire filmmakers and
environmental activists alike. Moving Baltic Sea promotes a creative
process to develop long-term innovative strategies and possibilities for
cultural and environmental cooperation. The organisation of Moving
Baltic Sea reaches across national borders: Over two years a network of
film and environmental organisations from Germany, Poland, Latvia,
Estonia and Russia is working closely together to make the festival
happen at each tour stop. German film partner of Moving Baltic Sea is
Moviemiento e.V. Based in Berlin, the travelling European short film
festival "Moviemiento – short films on the road" promotes young European
filmmakers and connects people, places and cultures by way of film and
travel. Rather than being restricted to a single location, Moviemiento
screens films open-air on public spaces in different cities throughout
Europe, which allows the festival to incorporate the unique atmosphere
of each city. Moving Baltic Sea takes Moviemiento off the roads and for
the first time onto the seas!
Send in your short films that tell Stories from the Seaside.
More info in the attached pdf or here:
If you have any questions, don't hesitate to contact us at:
film@movingbalticsea.org
or visit our websites www.movingbalticsea.org www.moviemiento.com
Online professional development course in international youth journalism
Registration is now open for the PEARL online professional development course, which enables middle and secondary school teachers to integrate youth journalism into their curricula. The course also provides teachers the opportunity to get their students certified as youth reporters so they can report stories for a global online publication.
Dear film maker/journalist,
Hivos and VPRO Television (based in The Netherlands) are currently recruiting innovative videojournalists and filmmakers from all over the world for a new GLOBAL network of correspondents. The network aims to provide strong LOCAL news and background stories, video diaries, clips and creative short films based on weekly themes and with a personal touch.
We're looking for skilled young journalist and filmmakers, who can contribute 1 - 4 short stories monthly. The videojournalists need to have filming/editing skills and access to equipment in their countries, and will be paid accordingly.
The stories will be featured on a 24/7 website in Dutch and English and a selection will be shown in a weekly broadcast on national Dutch TV. Please contact the editors of this program at metropolis@vpro.nl if you fit the profile or know of anyone else who does!
Thank you in advance.
Best,
on behalf of the editorial staff
Stan van Engelen
VPRO TV
www.vpro.nl
A fund that supports youth media projects in England is seeking regional partners to help distribute its grants locally.
Mediabox, a £6m initiative launched by the Department for Children, Schools and Families, is looking for nine regional partners.
The partner organisations will receive up to £22,000 a year to support the work, but will not be able to apply for Mediabox grants.
They will be expected to help projects with applications, and also monitor how grants are being spent.
Youth media projects do not always need to be long-term, ongoing programs to have impact. Many youth media professionals question whether it is worth doing a project if it can only bring a one time opportunity to young participants. Thus, waiting to launch a lasting, more continuous youth media initiative is often seen as more productive.
Yet, any opportunity for young people to creatively express themselves using and constructing media is effective. Because of its ability to be replicated quickly and less-expensively, short, one time youth media projects may be just as effective as long term youth media projects.
For example, theoneminutesjr. project—initiated in 2002 by the European Cultural Foundation, the One Minutes Foundation and UNICEF—offers 5-day workshops where experienced video artists train people ages 12-20 on basic camera skills, story development, directing, and production skills. At the end of the workshop, each young participant has made his or her own one minute film. All three organizations that helped launch this project have numerous other initiatives, but the oneminutesjr project is a model that has provided opportunities to bring out young people’s voices without having to commit to major long term planning or funding.
D Is for Digital...and Disappointing
A new study says the potential educational benefits of interactive technologies remain untapped.
A REPORT FROM the Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop has mixed news for the ed tech industry, finding that digital media is ever-present in young children's lives, but is not being used to the fullest advantage in their education.
The center, named after the pioneering founder of the Sesame Workshop, released "D Is for Digital" at the first Sandbox Summit last month in its continuing effort to raise national awareness of the importance of interactive technologies in accelerating children's learning.
The 50-page report, authored by educational toy marketing expert and Cooney Fellow Carly Shuler, summarizes the center's analysis of the current interactive media environment for preschool and elementary-age children. The study grew out of the center's fall 2007 review of more than 300 mass-market informal learning products for kids ages 3 to 11. Michael Levine, executive director of the Joan Ganz Cooney Center, says the results present cause for both optimism and concern.
Dear Friends
Seasons greetings!
Thank you for the encouraging response to our forthcoming annual workshop: "Theatre for Development as Cultural Action".
We can still accommodate a few more participants (max 4) and would appreciate if you could circulate the workshop announcement among your partner organizations.
Please refer the attached flyer. In case you need any further information, do get in touch with us.
Regards and best wishes
Seema Kurup
Mobile: 9881261094
media matters
400 Sai Section, Ambernath 421501, District Thane, Maharashtra, India
tel. 91-251-2606929; email mmindia.org@gmail.com
media matters is a registered non-profit trust working in the area of development communication for the past 10 years.
In February 2007, Ofcom published its final statement on the Television Advertising of Food and Drink to Children which launched a package of new rules aimed at reducing the impact of advertising of high fat, salt and sugar (HFSS) food and drink to children.
Ofcom carried out some initial analysis of the effectiveness of the first phase of restrictions and issued a summary of its findings in an Ofcom Update on 12 December 2007.
On 12 December 2007, Ofcom also briefed consumer, health and industry representatives on these early findings (using data from the first six months of the restrictions, April-September 2007).
In response to a request from stakeholders for further information on the findings set out in the summary, Ofcom is publishing the data which was presented to consumer, health and industry representatives at the briefing in December 2007.
Ofcom will be carrying out a full review of the effectiveness of the restrictions on the television advertising of HFSS food and drink products to children. The review will begin in July 2008, using data from the first six months of 2008. We aim to complete the review in the autumn.
This note summarises:
A growing body of research indicating that obesity was an increasing risk to the health of children and young people led the Government to ask Ofcom in December 2003 to consider strengthening rules on advertising food products to children(-1-). Towards the end of 2005, the Food Standards Agency (FSA) completed work on a nutrient profiling model designed with independent scientific input to help distinguish less healthy food and drink products from more healthy products for the purposes of distinguishing which products might be made subject to advertising restrictions(-2-).
Ofcom carried out wide-ranging research and in March 2006, published a consultation setting out in detail why it considered targeted action on food advertising was appropriate. It consulted on several options, including restrictions based on all foods or just those profiled as less healthy(-3-).
After carefully reviewing all responses to the consultation, Ofcom concluded that nutrient profiling based restrictions were the most appropriate and proportionate, and invited further views on a variation of one of the options, which would apply restrictions to advertising HFSS products in and around programmes aimed at and of special appeal to children aged 4 -15(-4-), as opposed to the 4-9 year olds as originally proposed. It also decided that changes should be made to the ASA’s Code on Advertising Practice, to restrict the use of techniques that might make advertising of HFSS products particularly attractive to children.
In February 2007, Ofcom reached its final decision and announced that the scheduling restrictions would come into effect on a phased basis with effect from April 2007(-5-).
Phase 1 (April 2007) comprised a total ban on HFSS advertisements in programmes aimed at children aged 4-9, or attracting disproportionately high child audiences(-6-). As a transitional measure, children’s channels were required to scale back HFSS advertising to 75% of 2005 levels. With immediate effect restrictions were introduced on advertising techniques in new promotions that might make HFSS advertising attractive to children at other times(-7-); they applied to all existing promotions with effect from 1 July 2007.
Phase 2 (January 2008) saw the ban extended to children aged 4-15, and HFSS advertising on children’s channels scaled back to 50% of 2005 levels. Phase 3 (from January 2009) will ban all HFSS advertising on children’s channels.
The Ofcom slide pack provided to consumer, health and industry stakeholders on 12 December can be found at http://www.ofcom.org.uk/research/tv/reports/update/briefing.pdf. This explained that, while it is still too early to come to any firm conclusions about the success or otherwise of the new rules, there are clear signs that the new rules are having the intended effect on reducing the amount of food and drink advertising that children are exposed to on television.
The interim data reflects the partial introduction of the restrictions to date:
When launching the rules, Ofcom committed to a full review during 2008 of how well the new advertising restrictions are working. In conducting the review, Ofcom will work with the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, with the Department of Health, which is collecting data about advertising across all media, and with the Food Standards Agency which will be reviewing the operation of the nutrient profile model used in the rules.
Ofcom has agreed to bring forward to July 2008 its review of how the restrictions are working. It is important to note that Ofcom will not look to see whether they are having effects on child obesity – it would not be realistic to expect short term changes in obesity, and in any case, television advertising is only one of a large number of factors that affect obesity. Rather, Ofcom will be looking at whether the restrictions are working as intended, and in particular, whether:
Ofcom’s review will draw on data from January to June 2008, which will show the effect of the first six months of Phase 2 of the restrictions.
In conducting its review, Ofcom will work closely with the Department of Health and the Food Standards Agency.
The Department of Health has commissioned work to examine the balance and nature of advertising for HFSS products across a range of media, including television, radio, press, outdoor and cinema advertising.
The FSA has commissioned an independent panel to review the nutrient profiling model in the light of experience. The panel’s draft conclusions are expected to be reviewed by the Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition towards the end of 2008, with a view to recommendations being made to the FSA Board in early 2009. If the FSA decides that changes should be made to the nutrient profiling model, Ofcom would need to consider whether corresponding changes should be made to the model used to identify products that are subject to advertising restrictions.
Ofcom - February 2008
Young people on a London estate are using text messaging to report antisocial behaviour discreetly and without fear of recrimination, in an initiative which is believed to be the first of its kind.
The government is to spend 125m pounds on helping cultivate young creative talent.
The Department for Children, Schools and Families (DCSF) has teamed up with the Department for Culture, Media and Sport to give every young person in England the chance to experience high-quality arts and culture.
This year’s event focuses on the dangers of social networking
About 50 countries have joined forces to raise awareness of the online threats facing children and their parents.
The allegiance is part of the fifth annual Safer Internet Day, which takes place today and has been created by the European Commission.
Run by EU Information Society and Media leader Viviane Reding, this year’s event aims to educate children globally on the risks of sharing too much personal data on social networking sites, through school assemblies and youth meetings. It will also highlight the risks of befriending dangerous adults who chat online under the guise of other children.
To celebrate Safer Internet Day 2008, several organisations have also announced schemes that involve getting young people’s opinions on how to prevent the dangers found online.
The European Commission has organised a Youth Forum on Safer Internet in Brussels where 14- to 17-year-olds from the UK and the rest of Europe will meet to discuss issues related to their use of online technologies.
In snowy conditions 40 teenagers took to the challenge and worked hard to finish the first two video workshops for video making and animation held in Romania as part of Stranger.
The first participants were 20 teenagers, ages 14 to 18, from Campulung Muscel, and 20 Hungarian young people from Miercurea Ciuc. Guided by art director Alexandru Buzea and mentor Raluca Spataru, the first group created a vast world of drawings and colours onto their white sheets of paper which will be made into animations. The second group, coordinated by video artist David Djinddjikhachvili, director Florin Kevorkian and TV producer Marius Csucs tell their stories in a one-minute film, concluding one week of training in script writing, story-board drawing, filming and editing. All films realised during the workshops will be entered into the StrangerFestival competition.
(...) Designed primarily for pre-readers and early readers aged 3-6, smart-e-bear and friends encourage children to discover and explore through a library of thousands of award-winning songs, interactive stories, educational games and other content that parents (and grandparents) can selectively purchase through the Internet and download to the toy with a super-easy USB connection. "Would you like to sing songs about animals with me?" purrs smart-e-cat. "For yes, squeeze my hand. For no, squeeze my foot." FULL ARTICLE AT: http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/02-11-2008/0004753223&EDATE=

Playing to learn safety on the internet - Council of Europe launches game for children in thirteen languages
Strasbourg, 12.02.3008: The Council of Europe will today launch its "Wild Web Woods" internet game in Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish, Romanian, Russian and Turkish.
The Wild Web Woods game has been developed to help children learn the rules of internet safety in a fun format, using familiar fairy tales to guide children through a maze of potential dangers to the fabulous "E-city". The game, mainly for children between 7 and 10, was launched in English at the end of last year, and is hosted on the Council of Europe website.
The Council of Europe is working with both children and adults to make the internet safe for every age. The 47-nation organisation is at the forefront of efforts to combat internet crime.
The game has been developed in the spirit of the Council's "Building a Europe for and with children" programme, set up to promote children's rights and protect them from all forms of violence - including online dangers. It is also a fundamental step in the Council of Europe's efforts to curb the grooming of children by abusers through the internet, following the principles of the recently-launched Council of Europe Convention on the Protection of Children against Sexual Exploitation and Sexual Abuse.
Link to the game (13 versions of linguages)
For more on the children's programme see www.coe.int/children
Contact: Cathie Burton, Campaigns Support
Tel: +33 (0) 3 88 41 28 93, Mobile: +33 (0)685 11 64 93 cathie.burton@coe.int
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 7 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Examining 15,000 individual speaking characters across G-, PG-, PG-13, and R-rated films, research by Dr. Stacy Smith of USC's Annenberg School for Communication in association with the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media indicates that males outnumber females roughly 3 (2.71) to 1 on the silver screen.
Dr. Smith and her team also examined 4000 female film characters and found that two types of females often frequent film: the traditional and the hypersexual. For example, females are over five times as likely as males to be shown in alluring apparel and are roughly three times as likely as males (10.6% vs. 3.4%) to be shown with an unrealistically "ideal" body.
Dr. Smith's research also reveals problematic portrayals in television aimed at children. Females in kids' fare are almost four times as likely as males to be shown in sexy attire (20.7% vs. 5.4%) and nearly twice as likely as males to be shown with a small waist line (25.6% vs. 14.4%). Animated females in TV for kids are more likely to be shown in sexually revealing attire than are live action females (24.5% vs. 17.4%). Also, females in animated TV stories for children are more likely to have small waists (36.9% vs. 6.9%) and have an unrealistic body shape (22.7% vs. 1.2%) than are females in live action TV stories for children. Though, females are not the only ones hypersexualized in TV content for children. Animated males are more likely than live action males to have a large chest (15.4% vs. 4.9%), small waist (18.4% vs. 4.3%), and an unrealistically muscularized physique (12.5% vs. .5%).
This research was announced at a four-day international conference on gender and children in media at the University of Southern California and hosted by the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media.
FULL ARTICLE AT:
http://sev.prnewswire.com/entertainment/20080207/DC1371207022008-1.html
The Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs announces an international essay competition. Singapore youth are welcome to participate. Come join and shape the city of your dreams! More details about the competition below.
28/01/2008 ::
International Essay Competition 2008
Young people are not only the future, they are also the now. More than one fifth of the world’s population is between the ages of 12 and 24, with 1.3 billion young people living in developing countries. Over the last two years, consultations and research work with youths have demonstrated that they can make a difference in fighting poverty through their actions and advocacy activities in youth organizations. Youths are key agents of change, but too often the nature and impact of their projects are not recognized or documented sufficiently, and youth face difficulties being heard and engaging more directly in civic life.
In order to learn how youths can make a difference in reducing poverty, the World Bank launched the International Essay Competition. The Essay Competition is an annual, worldwide competition targeting youths aged between 18 to 25 years and managed by the World Bank Office in Paris. The competition is designed and implemented in partnership with Country Offices of the World Bank and Public Information Centers (PIC) in 84 countries, as well as partners representing universities, NGOs and youth organizations all over the world.
The fourth edition of the Essay Competition in 2007 on the theme of Corruption attracted 2240 submissions from over 130 countries all over the world (90% of submissions came from developing countries).
This year the World Bank has teamed up with the Cities Alliance and the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs – sponsor of the Essay Competition 2008, to invite youths all over the world to participate in the International Essay Competition 2008, under the theme of urbanization:
WANTED: Your Practical Ideas
Shaping the City of Your Dreams
In 2007, for the first time in human history, the majority of people in the world, particularly in developing countries, will be living in urban areas. Life in the city is often associated with more opportunities, better access to employment, education, health and other services. Cities are often called engines of economic growth, contributing disproportionately to the national gross domestic product (GDP). They are also centers of innovation, entrepreneurship and investment. But many cities also have a large part of their population living in slums, without essential services such as water, sanitation and energy, and threatened by environmental hazards, violence and social exclusion. As more and more people move from the countryside to the city, and as city populations grow, there is a growing need for solutions to the issues of urban poverty, environment, and urban infrastructure (housing, roads, water, energy etc.).
What can you do to shape the city of your dreams?
Please answer the three questions below:
1) Think about the city you live in. What are the biggest opportunities and challenges for people living there?
2) What needs to be done to transform your city into the city of your dreams?
3) What could be your role, working together with your peers, in shaping the city of your dreams? Please focus on one or two points you mentioned in question 2).
You may use some of the points below to structure your answer:
If you have been personally involved in concrete initiatives, write specifically about your experience:
Who have you worked with? Who have you helped? What have you accomplished? In what way would you consider this work to be innovative? How have you measured the results of your work?
Looking ahead:
How would you expand or improve the impact of your work? How can other youth replicate your experience?
If you don’t have practical experience, write specifically about your ideas:
How would you work with your peers to shape the city of your dreams?
Who can take part in the World Essay Competition
The World Essay Competition is open to all young people, students and non-students alike, between the ages of 18 and 25. Essays should be submitted by individuals.
Process
The competition will be launched in January 2008 through a massive media campaign, and posters and leaflets in universities and youth clubs. The launch will be carried out in close collaboration with World Bank country offices worldwide. The competition is entirely web-based (guidelines, submission of papers, review process, etc).
Young people will be invited to submit their essay (max. 10 pages – 4,000 words) together with an abstract (max. 1 page) in French, English, Spanish, Portuguese or Arabic. The abstracts will serve as a basis for the first round of selection. Winners will be selected by a jury (Review Committee) composed of representatives of the Steering Committee.
Deadline for submissions is March 23, 2008.
The jury will complete their selections of 8-9 finalists in April, 2008, after a three-stage review process. Essays will be blind-reviewed. Finalists will be invited to present their essays to a panel of experts during the Final Jury. The winner(s) will present their work to the audience of the ABCDE 2008 conference in Cape Town, South Africa (June 8 -10, 2008).
Presentations will be taped and posted on the internet at www.essaycompetition.org. A summary of the best essays will be published in the months that follow the award ceremony.
Partnership
The process is supervised by a panel of experts from the World Bank and its partner organizations, who make up the Steering Committee:
The World Bank (co-organizer), The Cities Alliance (co-organizer), Researchers Alliance for Development (RAD), UNAM University, Mexico; Jadavpur University, India; Cairo University, Egypt; University of Texas in San Antonio, USA; student organizations AEGEE (Europe), AIESEC (International) and Junior Achievement Worldwide; Africa Leadership Forum; Conciencia Association, Argentina; the Glocal Forum.
And the Advisory Committee:
Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (co-organizer), Norwegian University of Science and Technology, UN HABITAT, United Cities and Local Governments.
Selection Criteria for Winning Essays
Evaluation criteria include: quality of proposals, structure, coherence of arguments, originality/creativity, style, use of sources and evidence.
Essays will be reviewed by the Review Committee, consisting of some members of the Steering Committee and Advisory Committee.
Awards
Awards include up to $10,000 in prize money:
Grand prize of $5,000
Runner-up prizes of $1,000
The jury reserves the right to modify the allocation depending on the number of winning essays.
Schedule of the Essay Competition
NEW YORK, Feb. 4 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- In what has become a beloved annual tradition, U.S. children are being asked to submit creative drawings for the 2008 Pier 1 Imports/UNICEF Greeting Card Contest to benefit children worldwide. One winner will be chosen from thousands of entries and their winning artwork will be reproduced as an official UNICEF holiday greeting card, sold exclusively at Pier 1 Imports stores across the country during the 2008 holiday season. One hundred percent of the proceeds from the sale of this as well as all UNICEF cards sold at Pier 1 go to the U.S. Fund for UNICEF.
Children ages 14 and under are eligible to enter the contest, which will begin on March 1, 2008, the start of National Art Month. Entry forms are available in all Pier 1 Imports stores nationwide while supplies last, online at www.pier1.com and www.unicefusa.org, or by calling Pier 1's Customer Relations Department at 1-800-245-4595. All entries must be hand-drawn and received by Pier 1 Imports' Corporate Headquarters by April 12, 2008. The children's artwork will be judged on artistic quality and creative interpretation of the theme "Making Spirits Bright."
FULL ARTICLE AT:
http://sev.prnewswire.com/art/20080204/NYM11504022008-1.htm
Youth groups risk losing out to social networking sites like MySpace unless they rethink how best to attract teenagers, a Big Lottery Fund Scotland and YoungScot study has concluded.
The study, seen exclusively by CYP Now, examined how young people viewed the relationship between online communities and community groups, such as youth and sport clubs.
While the 336 teenagers who took part said they were still interested in traditional community groups, many said they spent a lot of time using the internet, sometimes to the detriment of youth groups.
Gregor Urquhart, director of communications at YoungScot, said: "Existing traditional community groups still have a very large part to play and young people see them as important. But the new online communities do have advantages, particularly when it comes to convenience and money."
FULL ARTICLE AT:
http://www.cypnow.co.uk/bulletins/Daily-Bulletin/news/781668/?DCMP=EMC-DailyBulletin
By Susan Markisz
NEW YORK, USA, 4 February 2008 – Last Friday, the Republic of San Marino hosted the second annual San Marino-UNICEF Awards dinner in New York. The focus of the award was active youth participation in community-based programmes as a means to strengthen and protect children’s rights.
The event was hosted by the Minister for Foreign Affairs and Economic Planning of San Marino, Fiorenzo Stolfi, and the Permanent Representative of the Republic of San Marino to the United Nations, Daniele Bodini.
The 2007 awards – consisting in part of two cash grants of $20,000 from the Alexander Bodini Charitable Foundation – recognized the positive contribution of two UNICEF-supported, child-based organizations: the Burkina Faso Environment and Sanitation Club from Boussouma High School and the Children and Adolescents Communication Agency of Ecuador.
The winning organizations were chosen for their dedication to promoting child rights and for acting as role models and agents of change for children around the world.
“I am extremely pleased to award this prize to two projects,” said Mr. Stolfi. “Indeed, these projects were developed thanks to a synergy between NGOs and UNICEF, which has been operating for more than 60 years in close contact with communities and governments in order to improve children’s living conditions.”
(...)
‘Children have a voice
The Children and Adolescents Communication Agency of Ecuador was honoured for its televised reports, which are produced by children and broadcast on national television.
The broadcasts aim to give Ecuadorian children a voice and raise awareness on such issues as child sexual abuse and the situation of marginalized children in urban areas and handicapped youths. In the two years since the inception of the programme, it has produced over 200 stories of children from eight provinces.
“It is our way of telling people we have a voice and our own ideas,” said one youth participant in the programme. Others commented: “This work opened our eyes” ... “It showed us who we are” ... “We want people to see what we see.”
(...)
FULL ARTICLE AT:
http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/usa_42748.html
The weeklong 1st International Children's Film Festival ended on
February 2 with a daylong seminar on children's films at the Seminar
Hall, Central Public Library.
Keynote papers were read out by Badal Rahman, Geeti Ara Nasreen, Fuad
Chowdhury and Anupam Hayat. Morshedul Islam, Masihuddin Shaker, Munni
Saha and Monira Morshed Munni were the moderators. Dr Muhammad Zafar
Iqbal, Professor Anisuzzaman, Atiqul Haque Chowdhury and Masihuddin
Shaker chaired the sessions.
Altogether four papers were read. Badal Rahman presented his paper on
the problems and prospects of making children's films in Bangladesh. He
explored the subject in three periods. From 1971 to 1983 our films
eulogised the Liberation War and later highlighted social problems. From
mid-'80s to 1995, according to the speaker, alien elements and vulgarity
crept into our films. From 1995 onwards, said Rahman, attempts have been
made to get back on track.
Geeti Ara Nasreen presented her paper next. She went over the influence
of film and media on children. Nasreen believes that teachers and
guardians have to be acquainted with the media to understand its effects
on the children. "We need research involving media activists and those
who monitor it," she said. According to her "An alternative media should
be developed." Nasreen also thinks that the government should come
forward with funds and training facilities for these.
FULL ARTICLE AT:
http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=21972
http://www.saferinternet.org/ww/en/pub/insafe/sid/sid_2008_events.htm
Safer Internet Day is a yearly event, taking place in the month of
February. It is organised by Insafe, the European internet safety
network. In 2007, 43 countries from all over the world participated in
Safer Internet Day. The 5th edition of SID will take place on 12
February 2008.
Fun and thought-provoking digital stories evolved with the help of group discussions and vivid aid from experienced seminar leaders. The self-told stories portrayed the life of young people on the internet in inspiring ways. Subjects ranged from anonymity on the net and digital harassment, to the difference between life on the net and real life, as well as the social possibilities of the net.
FULL ARTICLE AND FURTHER LINKS AT:
http://www.saferinternet.org/ww/en/pub/insafe/news/articles/0108/digital_storytelling_sweden.htm
The biggest and best kids film fest steams back into town. This year’s Showcomotion Young People’s Film Festival will run from 26 June to 10 July at the Showroom Cinema in Sheffield.
Kathy Loizou, the Festival Director, said: ‘I can’t quite believe it, but Showcomotion shall be 10 years old this June. The very first festival was in 1999. Since then we’ve grown into a 15 day event with an international reputation, showing 175 films from around the world and with a lovely family of regular supporters. Like any 10-year-old we’re looking forward to celebrating in style in June and July.’
‘There’s going to be an exciting line up of activities in 2008, and we are cramming the 15 days of the festival with premieres, previews, special guests and fun-packed workshops.’
Showcomotion Young People’s Film Festival is accepting submissions for the 2008 festival.
Festival organisers said: ’We are on the look-out for exciting and inventive films made both for and by children and young people from across the UK and the world. They can be shorts or features and we are interested in seeing all kinds of films including fiction, documentary and animation. We want the very best films from around the world to entertain and inspire our audiences and we want films that showcase the best in emerging new film making talent.’
Submission details and regulations can be downloaded at www.showcomotion.org.uk and the deadline is 31 March 2008.
The festival has three sections:
PANORAMA PROGRAMME
Films made for young people and films made by young people from around the world are accepted. Animations, live action, documentaries, features and shorts are accepted.
The UNICEF UK YOUNG FILM MAKER AWARD is for film makers up to and including 18 years old.
The UNICEF UK SHORT FILM AWARD is for professional film makers, semi-professional film makers and students aged 19 years plus.
The AUDIENCE AWARD is for the best overall film in both categories.
THE STEEL CITY GLOBE AWARDS
The Steel City Globe Awards (Primary & Secondary) are for short films on any subject. This competition is open to schools in the Sheffield city region only.
-ENDS-
For further information contact Kathy Loizou, Showcomotion Director
kathy@showroom.org.uk T. 0114 276 3534
Images available, photocalls can be organised on request.
-EDITOR’S NOTES-
1. The festival, now in its 10th year, is the largest and longest-established kids’ film fest in England, Scotland & Wales. In 2007 Showcomotion screened a total of 175 films from 23 countries. This total included 101 films made by young people.
2. The UNICEF UK AWARDS are open to film makers from around the world. Animations, live action, documentaries on the theme of young people’s rights are accepted. The duration is to be no more than 30 minutes and films need to have been completed after 1 January 2007. The jury have the right to award honorary mentions.
3. Most Showcomotion films cost just £2 for under 18s and some are free. For more about UNICEF visit www.unicef.org.uk/youthvoice. For full details see the Showcomotion brochure or visit the website at www.showcomotion.org.uk.
4. Showcomotion takes place at the Showroom Cinema, Paternoster Row, Sheffield S1 2BX Box Office: 0114 275 7727
Press Int.
| The Festival VidéEau is an international competition for video clips organized by the International Secretariat for Water (ISW), in preparation for the International "Water and Film" Events that will take place in Istanbul in 2009, within the context of the 5th World Water Forum. The Festival VidéEau invites young people aged from 17 to 30, to submit 90 second or shorter video clips on the theme "Water, People and Sustainable Development". The winners of the competition will be announced at a prize-giving ceremony to be held during the World Youth Congress, taking place in Quebec, Canada, from 10 to 21 August 2008. MORE INFO AT |
| Tunza International Children's Conference on the Environment Stavanger, Norway 17-21 June 2008 Theme: "Creating Change" |
| United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) in collaboration with the Young Agenda 21 Foundation of Norway will host the 2008 Tunza International Children’s Conference on the Environment which will bring together 1,000 people (700 children and 300 chaperones), between 10 and 14 years, from over 100 countries. The conference will be held from 17 to 21 June 2008 in Stavanger, Norway. The Conference is a follow-up on the decision adopted at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development, in Johannesburg, South Africa, which states that views of the children’s should be incorporated in decisions regarding environment. The Conference will increase the children’s understanding of environmental issues by providing them with a forum to share experiences and opinions and to collectively voice their concerns for the environment. It will also inspire them to initiate and implement community environmental projects in their school and community. The Conference will offer a series of workshops organized by both local and international facilitators on the themes of the Conference (Energy, Biodiversity, Water and Production and Consumption). The Conference will culminate in a set of commitments to be implemented by the children. Junior Board which comprises of 12 members of eight representatives from the UNEP regions (North America, Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, West Asia, Asia and the Pacific and 4 from Norway) will help with preparations for the Conference and ensures that the facilities and programme of the conference reflects the needs of the children. SOURCE: http://www.unep.org/tunza/children/events/icc%5F2008/ |
Innovative mobile phone technologies used to target young people about issues surrounding AIDS
Tblisi, 29 January 2008- A twenty minute long film about AIDS has been produced as part of the Save the Children and UNICEF-led educational campaign targeting young people in Georgia. The film aims to educate young people about the disease without preaching and dictating.
The film will be split in five parts and converted into the mobile phone format. Young peer counselors will distribute one piece at a time to their clients, and will encourage them to pass it on to their friends. The distribution of the film through mobile phones is a very innovative method of reaching young people and has never been used in Georgia before.
FULL ARTICLE AT:Cagayan de Oro City (31 January) -- Some journalists still use judgemental words such as "drunk", "epileptic", "fugitive", "escapees", "rugby addicts," etc. to describe children.
In fact, just this week, a local newspaper came out with a story of a woman, still considered a child because of her mental condition, who died due to bee stings.
The writer spelled out the name of the victim (who was alleged to be "sexually abused" when swamped by the bees) and those of her mother and abuser, plus a description of where it happened.
What the writer has done only corroborates the findings of a study done by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) on the Philippine media's adherence to the guidelines in covering cases about children, that the confidentiality of the victim's name and other information had been breached.
"Per guidelines promulgated by the Dept. of Justice (DOJ) in 1999, the media should adhere to the highest ethical and professional standards in reporting and covering cases involving children," Regional Director Myra V. Balandra of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA), region 10, said.
FULL ARTICLE AT:
http://www.pia.gov.ph/default.asp?m=12&r=&y=&mo=&fi=p080131.htm&no=15