Once again the end of the week is welcomed with your open arms full of expectation toward another one of ‘those' blog's! As I write from the computer chair on a Sunday afternoon my eyes are already feeling sleepy after such a full on week! I am going to admit that after my last blog and saying how much I wanted to stay and how I was already worried about having to leave, I was actually starting to feel ‘it'! ‘It' being the lack of cooked cow, the sleepless nights, the showering with a bucket and scoop, sharing a room with 2 other boys, having curry for breakfast! The list could go on but I want it to be more about you getting the picture than me having a rant!
It is a Friday, which can only mean another cheeky little blog for those of you who have been taking notice! It's been quite eventful again and I hope that I can make my blog a little witty for you all. I will make it honest so everything you read is true!
So it is time once again to fill you all in on my Indian adventure, slash travels up to date! Not a lot has changed since the last one, I may have possibly changed slightly because of some of the incidents that have gone on in the house and maybe even become different as a person as the weeks have gone on but the days are similar and the nights are long, we wait for the weekends! India is definitely changing me and throwing many obstacles in my way for me to get around so I can enjoy myself. As a youth worker though I am very grateful for some of the circumstances that have arisen over the last few weeks and looking forward to the next 5!
Before coming to India as a volunteer to work in schools and the community, I had recently started to work for the Y.M.C.A as a young consultant for their mYPlace (Y-young, P-people!) project. This project is to build world class facilities in England with the young people of today, for the young people of tomorrow! All the way through it is to be overseen by young people for their needs and to give them help in a wide variety of settings.
Heather Fawbert didn't have to go far to find the perfect spot for myplace Chesterfield. She discovered the site - an expanse of open space: tennis courts and overgrown, disused allotments that hadn't been dug for over fifteen years - on her way to work.
On his first visit to Westfield Folk House, the Grade II listed building which is currently being transformed into a myplace for Mansfield, architect Rudi Marecki spotted some graffiti.
The thing about myplace, and all new buildings in fact, is that the really good ones tend not to spring up overnight. World-class buildings need time. You just have to be patient.
"It's like that music venue in Australia," says Charlotte, as she pours over a book on architecture, with page after page of beautifully photographed buildings. It turns out that she's referring to the Sydney Opera House.
When Nicole Burke addressed the Blackpool business community at the Pleasure Beach at the end of the Knowsley and Blackpool ambassadors event, her audience was gripped. Nicole talked about what myplace meant for the young people of Blackpool, and people immediately wanted to get involved. Nicole made it sound like fun. People started to think of offering help in ways they hadn't thought of before. Good communication sparks creativity in all of us.
There's a newspaper cutting stuck on the wall outside one of the dressing rooms in the Leicester Haymarket Theatre. Written by Sheridan Morley in August 2004, and published in the Daily Express, it talks about the Haymarket's performance starring Ronni Ancona. "Singin' In The Rain that reigns supreme," is how the glowing review begins. It was just one of many glowing reviews for the myriad musicals staged in this theatre.
As part of my role as a young consultant I visit myplace projects to see how they are involving young people. There have been a number that have stood out and impressed me for a variety of different reasons, however one in particular that I found stood out was the myplace project in Carlisle. This project has involved young people from the beginning, sending them to leading youth centres in and around London to find out what they want in their centre and involving them in the design process.
Hartlepool's got talent. Loads of it. So much talent in fact, that the town recently held not one talent contest, but two: Hartlepool's Got Talent and Hartlepool Has Talent.
Beth Marshall, a key young person in the myplace team, who has a big talent for guitar playing, singing, and doing cover versions of Jack Johnson and The Beatles, lights up when she talks about the excitement behind the scenes at Hartlepool Has Talent.
"Do you have to be a certain age?" The question comes from the audience, from a six-year-old boy called Adam. We're in a dramatically lit, makeshift auditorium in Bristol's former Bridewell Fire Station, in the heart of the city. It's not a question that anyone else has thought of. But Adam has a point. It's a good question to ask. Because at the moment, he's too young formyplace. When he gets his answer, "13-19", he realises that he will have to wait a few years - seven, to be precise.
Westfield Folk House - result of a structured programme for development
Objectives: A scheme to transform Westfield Folk House Young People's Centre in Mansfield has won a £5 million fmyplace grant. This case study shows how the project developed from a logical and well structured plan to boost youth provision following years of under-investment. Successfully involving young people in planning and decision making has played a major role in this.
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Bolton Lads and Girls Club is a renowned youth social club in Bolton, Lancashire.
It was set up in 1889 to provide a safe place for young lads, particularly those working in the mills, to enjoy leisure activities.
Over the next century the club grew and grew and began letting girls in from 1991. After further development it was decided that the original 19th century building could be stretched no more and needed updating.
This case study highlights the work done by Islington Council in securing local buy-in and agreement to a forward strategy for youth facilities. This allowed them to engage over 3500 stakeholders and create a compelling case for change that resulted in an overarching strategy for young people aged 11-19.
Young Peoples Production Company Boclair Academy, Glasgow
Boclair Academy is a secondary school in Bearsden; a small commuting town three miles north of Glasgow. In 2005 the school got funding from the Scottish Arts Council through a bid by the local authority (East Dunbartonshire Council) to develop a purpose-built digital film studio on the school campus.
“The investment Pegasus will make in young people individually and the benefits young people will gain as a member of the group will help them develop responsible attitudes, encourage them to take an active role in their community and act as role models for their peers and other young people.” Euton Daley, Artistic Director, Pegasus Theatre
At Pegasus, we present exciting contemporary dance and theatre work from all over the world, made by both young people and professional artists. We aim for all our activities to be both accessible and affordable. Read more...
The Salmon Youth Centre, known as Salmon, is a Christian-run project that seeks to work with young people of all faiths and none. It is located in Bermondsey, London. Their focus is youth work, an extended youth centre; voluntary activity in the leisure time of young people that helps them move along a pathway from apathy through involvement to engagement. Salmon has been awarded cash from myplace for a one-year project to complete an extension to the pre-existing youth facility, which will cost just over £1.1 million.