VIRSA: Building Community, Culture, & Identity

South Asians Beyond South Asia

Posts Tagged ‘youth’

The 40 Developmental Assets for Adolescents

Posted by Change the Game on January 29, 2008

The 40 Developmental Assets for Adolescents

From the Search Institute:

http://www.search-institute.org/ 

 
Asset Type Asset Name & Definition  

EXTERNAL ASSETS    
Support Family support Family life provides high levels of love and support.
 
  Positive family communication Young person and her or his parent(s) communicate positively, and young person is willing to seek advice and counsel from parent(s).
 
  Other adult relationships Young person receives support from three or more nonparent adults.
 
  Caring neighborhood Young person experiences caring neighbors.
 
  Caring school climate School provides a caring, encouraging environment.
 
  Parent involvement in schooling Parent(s) are actively involved in helping young person succeed in school.

Empowerment Community values youth Young person perceives that adults in the community value youth.
 
  Youth as resources Young people are given useful roles in the community.
 
  Service to others Young person serves in the community one hour or more per week.
 
  Safety Young person feels safe at home, at school, and in the neighborhood.

Boundaries and Expectations Family boundaries Family has clear rules and consequences, and monitors the young person’s whereabouts.
 
  School boundaries School provides clear rules and consequences.
 
  Neighborhood boundaries Neighbors take responsibility for monitoring young people’s behavior.
 
  Adult role models Parent(s) and other adults model positive, responsible behavior.
 
  Positive peer influence Young person’s best friends model responsible behavior.
 
  High expectations Both parent(s) and teachers encourage the young person to do well.

Constructive Use 
of Time
Creative activities Young person spends three or more hours per week in lessons or practice in music, theater, or other arts.
 
  Youth programs Young person spends three or more hours per week in sports, clubs, or organizations at school and/or in community organizations.
 
  Religious community Young person spends one hour or more per week in activities in a religious institution.
 
  Time at home Young person is out with friends “with nothing special to do” two or fewer nights per week.

INTERNAL ASSETS    
Commitment to Learning Achievement motivation Young person is motivated to do well in school.
 
  School engagement Young person is actively engaged in learning.
 
  Homework Young person reports doing at least one hour of homework every school day.
 
  Bonding to school Young person cares about her or his school.
 
  Reading for pleasure Young person reads for pleasure three or more hours per week.

Positive Values Caring Young person places high value on helping other people.
 
  Equality and social justice Young person places high value on promoting equality and reducing hunger and poverty.
 
  Integrity Young person acts on convictions and stands up for her or his beliefs.
 
  Honesty Young person “tells the truth even when it is not easy.”
 
  Responsibility Young person accepts and takes personal responsibility.
 
  Restraint Young person believes it is important not to be sexually active or to use alcohol or other drugs.

Social Competencies Planning and decision making Young person knows how to plan ahead and make choices.
 
  Interpersonal competence Young person has empathy, sensitivity, and friendship skills.
 
  Cultural competence Young person has knowledge of and comfort with people of different cultural/racial/ethnic backgrounds.
 
  Resistance skills Young person can resist negative peer pressure and dangerous situations.
 
  Peaceful conflict resolution Young person seeks to resolve conflict nonviolently.

Positive Identity Personal power Young person feels he or she has control over “things that happen to me.”
 
  Self-esteem Young person reports having a high self-esteem.
 
  Sense of purpose Young person reports that “my life has a purpose.”
 
  Positive view of personal future Young person is optimistic about her or his personal future.

Posted in Youth Development | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

My Experience Living as a south Asian (M.E.L.A)

Posted by Change the Game on January 29, 2008

M E L A : d e s i   g a t h e r i n g
My Experience Living as a south Asian (M.E.L.A)

As young South Asians, we find ourselves faced with particular realities, challenges, and questions about our histories, our cultures, and our identities. Our objective in organizing this mela is to facilitate a platform in which to empower and inspire South Asian youth to dialogue on and explore community social issues through self-expression, education, and arts & culture.

The mela will include a variety of mediums through which young South Asians express themselves and communicate through- visual art and photography, films, dance such as classical dance and bhangra, performances of hip-hop/tabla/ Asian underground/spoken word & poetry and other musical performances, discussion groups, workshops, popular theatre, and educational panels.

In the mela, young South Asians will be able to exchange, debate, critique, and explore different issues such as: what it means to be a south asian youth, our experiences in the educational system, family and peer pressures, the influence of popular culture in our lives, how we are represented in the media, reclaiming cultural traditions, our ability to access culturally-relevant services such as for women’s health, religion in our personal lives and as a political reality, our roles and realities in the labour force, sexuality, cultural taboos, violence, inter-community prejudices, immigration, race, social/economic/political histories of the subcontinent, globalization, caste, environmental sustainability, civil rights in the post 9/11 climate, migration history of the South Asian community, peace in the subcontinent, and much more.

We also hope to empower young South Asians through skills training in media, web design, radio production, film making, writing, public speaking, and performance art which will encourage young South Asian youth to advocate for themselves.

Our community is diverse, culturally rich, and maintains strong ties to South Asia, as well as diasporic ties across the world. We envision that through the mela we will strengthen our ties across different religions, regions and nationalities and define and create new political, cultural and social spaces for young South Asians.

The cost of this gathering is pay what you can afford ($0-$20). Food and snacks will be provided for free, free childcare will be available, and there will be multilingual presentations with translation available.

Organized by a diverse group of young South Asians with the support of community partners and organizations.

[desi -- desi (de 'see), n. [Sanskrit des' ] 1. some one with south-asian ancestry; of any one of the indic peoples; people of south asian ancestry 2. people who share a common history with origins in nepal, bhutan, sri lanka, bangladesh, pakistan, guyana, trinidad, india and the diaspora.]

OBJECTIVE OF GATHERING

To facilitate a platform in which to empower and inspire South Asian youth to dialogue on and explore community social issues through self-expression, education, and arts & culture.

PROGRAMMING

==> WORKSHOPS  (tentative list)
1.        What it means to be a south asian youth: South Asian identity/ subjectivity
2.        Racism in the educational system, media, popular culture & reclaiming cultural traditions, identities, representation
3.        Cultural taboos and family/peer pressures
4.        women’s health/
5.        South Asian gang violence:
6.        Power and privilege workshop
7.        Homophobia/sexuality/queer caucus
8.        Patriarchy and Violence against women (closed discussion for women)/Discussion of violence including young men of colour (socialization, racialization etc)
9.        Castism/Dalit issues
10.       Religion: liberation and oppression (religious fanaticism, secularism)/ interfaith dialogue
11.        Labour and working experiences (training wage, mills, schooling, migration, class aspirations)
12.        Comprehensive histories (social/economic/political) of the subcontinent
13.        Migration history of the South Asian community and links to other community histories (eg Chinese migration, indigenous histories)
14.        War and Peace (Nuclear proliferation, Kashmir etc)
15.        War on terrorism and profiling in post 9/11 climate
16.        Anti-globalization struggles/ environmental racism

Posted in Project Ideas | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

Meeting: January 21, 2008

Posted by Change the Game on January 29, 2008

Meeting Notes from January 21, 2008

Team (present):

(NP7): Lida Lore, Leilani Ocampo, Lucy Varghese, Brenda Bearisto

(NP6?): Jessie Sandhu, Sharyln Khan, Raj Khatra, Karm Sodhi

(Virsa): Balbir Gurm and Mike Powar

What did we talk about?

  • There will be 2 teams working on two separate (but also connected) aspects of the project with Virsa
    • Community Change (NP7):
      • Literature Review: (suggestions: best practices of other youth programs (Bay Area), youth development, migrant community issues, etc.)
      • Project: unclear yet, but the general goal is to work towards a community event of some sort
    • Research:
      • Culture & Identity with Youth of Migrant Communities
      • Community visits
  • Discussed goals of project-starting with the rationale for the creation of the committee from Virsa & the feedback from various forums held throughout the lower mainland
  • Possible projects:
    • working with mentorship groups or mentors: perhaps an evaluation of the program, or delivering some useful material to incorporate into mentorship programs that meets the goals of the committee
    • MELA–My Experience Living as a South Asian
  • TO DO:
    • figure out meeting schedules
    • research respective areas of concentration to start developing ideas about possible concrete work
    • develop a timeline for various aspects of project

Posted in Meeting Notes | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Community Building through Culture & History: Rationale

Posted by Change the Game on January 28, 2008

Virsa & Kwantlen Partnership:

WHY?
Community Building through Culture & History using a strength-based approach:
(Rationale)

Forums such as those held at Tamanawis & Princess Margaret (VIRSA), and Abbotsford (Speak Out) have dealt with many of the challenges facing the community. There have been quite a high number of these community forums that talk about the problems with the community—gang violence, substance use and trafficking, domestic gender based violence and discrimination—both within community circles and under the intrigued eye of the mainstream media/public-at-large. These forums have consistently demonstrated a need for a more dynamic understanding of what South Asian cultures have been, are, and will become. It is important to note that this understanding, this gained knowledge of self and of community entails more active processes and seeks to go beyond the static form that has dominated many of the forums thus far.

Building on the idea of praxis (to know, to be, to do), this committee will be dedicated to a long-term holistic approach. Meaning that several issues will be discussed, exploring critical self-reflection—both as communities-at-large (linguistic, religious, and regional, as well as friendships/peer groups, families, workplaces, etc.) and as individuals (recognizing one’s own position in relation to all issues taken on in terms of class, gender, ethnicity, etc.)—as a guiding principle for how and which multiple histories will be told, and how they will be connected to the conditions of the present.

At this moment, I only have my own experiences and studies to build these rationales and believe that this will ultimately be a primary, ongoing dialogue with committee members and community allies/partners.
Mike

Posted in Program | Tagged: , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
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