Tag Archives: Girl Up

Thinking Outside The Box

28 Mar
Students promoting the recycling drive to benefit Girl Up.

Have you ever found yourself at a loss for fundraising ideas for an organization or cause that you are passionate about?

As teens, it can be frustrating when we find causes that we care deeply about but struggle to find the “right way” to ask other teens or members of our community to make monetary donations. While bake sales, penny drives, and candy-grams can all be effective ways to raise money through a school community, thinking outside the box and utilizing your networks and resources to mobilize a larger group in support of a cause can be a very powerful tool when it comes to grassroots fundraising.

Last month, the Girl Up New York Regional Coalition had the privilege of partnering with Electronic Recyclers International (ERI), the largest electronics recycler in the nation to support and raise money for Girl Up, a campaign of the United Nations Foundation. As I have previously blogged, Girl Up mobilizes teens in the U.S. to raise awareness and funds for the world’s hardest-to-reach-adolescent girls. Through ERI and the Girl Up New York Regional Coalition, we set up drives in seven different schools in NYC to collect unwanted small electronics such as laptops, cellphones, tablets, e-readers, cameras, gaming devices and ipods. Electronic Recyclers International reconditioned the small electronics collected for resale or recycling in an environmentally proper manner utilizing their certified processes. The profits will go directly to help keep girls safe, counted, educated, and become leaders in their community.

Students promoting the recycling drive to benefit Girl Up.

Students promoting the recycling drive to benefit Girl Up.

Although we still must determine how much was raised through this fundraiser, I believe it was already a success because it brought schools together with the common goal of raising awareness and funds by providing an environmentally friendly service to our respective communities. Instead of asking for money, we asked for people’s old electronics that were sitting in desk drawers or under their beds so that we can help girls receive the opportunities they so often lack in many countries around the world. Seems like a no brainer, right? This model of combining the efforts and resources of different people and organizations allows for funds to be raised more easily by larger groups while simultaneously raising awareness about a cause.  Always remember that while alone we are strong, together we are stronger.

**Stay tuned for a toolkit so that you too can organize an electronic recycling drive in your community to benefit Girl Up**

Invest in her Future!

31 Dec

Although my passion and dedication to girls and women’s issues led me to my role as a teen advisor for Girl Up, I would not have had the opportunities I have had without the investment my English teacher, Dr. Maureen Burgess, made in me. Beginning with a blog project in English class, she realized how interested I was in getting involved with an organization that would allow me to work on mobilizing teen girls to raise awareness about issues that girls our age face around the world.  She introduced me to Girl Up and has always been there for me to support my work with the campaign. Dr. Burgess inspires me every day and has shown me that by believing in the power of my dreams, I can make a difference.Dr.Burgess and Sofia

Khadija is just like me. She also has a teacher who believes in her. The difference is that Khadija is a 15-year-old girl in Malawi who was supposed to get married to a man much older than her.

Right before Khadija was forced to marry, one of the teachers at her school intervened and worked with a local organization that Girl Up supports to prevent Khadija from an early marriage.

Both Khadija and I are able to do well in school and positively impact our futures because of the investments our teachers made in us.

So what can you do?

When you give to Girl Up on Crowdrise this holiday season, Dell will double your gift! Donate today and make your contribution twice as nice.

With your help, we can double the important work being done through United Nations programs that provide education, leadership programs, and health services.

Invest in a girl. Invest in the future!

One Dinner in December

15 Dec

This post also appears on the Girl Up blog. (http://www.girlup.org/blog/one-dinner-in-december.html)

I recently had the honor of attending a dinner at the home of Liesel Pritzker Simmons to raise awareness about Girl Up.

I met powerful, inspirational women who are dedicated to helping adolescent girls and closing the gender gap. The women at the dinner are leaders in their respective fields (banking, venture capital, cosmetics, law, film-making, philanthropy) who also support organizations like Girl Up so that they can help empower the next generation of leaders here in the United States.

After dinner, Gina Reiss-Wilchins shared a story of a young woman she met in Ethiopia, who was able to escape early child marriage, stay in school, and become an empowered member of her community because of United Nations programs that Girl Up supports. Gina underscored the importance of Girl Up’s role in creating the next generation of women leaders.

The evening continued with a “fireside chat,” during which I was interviewed by Abigail Disney, American filmmaker, philanthropist, and scholar known for her documentary films focused on social themes, specifically those relating to girls and women. Ms. Disney asked me about my involvement with Girl Up, the work and impact of the campaign, and how young people can get involved. Ms. Disney’s questions were thought-provoking and gave me a chance to share my message. In the end, when Ms. Disney asked me what my vision for the future is, I realized that the simplest way to answer the question was to say the Girl Up motto, “while alone we are strong, together we are stronger.”

My fellow Teen Advisors and I, and Girl Up supporters around the world, are living this motto today, but I envision a future where everyone is working towards creating a world in which girls are equal to boys, not at advantage or at a disadvantage, just equal.  That we have the same opportunities to pursue our passions, and that we have the one thing that no one can ever take away from us: what we carry with us in our heads.

ACBTOLD interviews Girl Up Champion, Monique Coleman: Part II

6 Jul

Monique Coleman and the 2011-2012 Girl Up teen advisor class

Here is Part II of my interview with Monique Coleman. I am so inspired by all the work she does to helps girls and women around the world, and I encourage all of you to find ways to get involved with Girl Up to support women’s rights!

ACTBOLD: You have just stepped into a new role as a Girl Up Champion! What are you looking forward to the most about this new position?

MO: Everything! I LOVE Girl Up and I’m thrilled to use my platform to raise awareness about the various Girl Up campaigns. I also enjoy getting to know the teen advisors. They are passionate, creative, and committed to social change. Their efforts are inspiring to me.  

ACTBOLD: Their efforts inspire me too! What do you think is the most important thing teens can do in support of Girl Up and the work that they do?

MO: Start a Girl Up club at school or with your friends! Use your social networks to raise awareness about the campaigns. Keep your global sisters in mind as you advance in your personal endeavors. Look for ways to apply your personal dreams and passions to global change.

ACTBOLD: In your opinion, what is the most effective platform to educate young people around the world on issues such as child marriage?

MO: This is a difficult question. I find that with any issue, the best thing you can do is to create an emotional connection. The Girl Effect is a fantastic video that achieves this. Making important issues personal, relatable, and memorable will ensure that young people commit to the cause for the long haul and not just a one-day event.

Don’t forget to follow Monique on twitter @gimmemotalk or connect with her at facebook.com/gimmemotalk!

ACTBOLD interviews Girl Up Champion, Monique Coleman: Part I

4 Jul
I had the opportunity to interview Monique Coleman, actress, dancer, entrepreneur, and philanthropist best known for her co-starring role in Disney’s High School Musical movies, in which she plays Taylor McKessie.  On November 16, 2010 Monique was named the first ever United Nations Youth Champion for the International Year of Youth. Her aim was to raise awareness on the most pressing issues facing today’s youth, encourage young people to use their abilities to foster progress in their communities and urge the international community to take responsibility on youth issues. She is the Founder, CEO, and Executive Producer Gimmemo.com, an online talk show that empowers youth through safe conversation about issues pertinent to their development. Most recently, Monique was named a Girl Up Champion.  ACTBOLD: Was there a particular experience or person that inspired you to become an activist and get involved in the United Nations Foundation?

MO: I’ve always desired to make a difference. When I was in middle school and high school, I volunteered with several organizations and participated in a lot of community activities. As far as role models, I deeply admire the work of Martin Luther King Jr., and from a young age, I  aspired to walk in his foot steps. Getting involved with the UN was not something I ever expected, but once I became the Youth Champion, I felt that it was where I was always meant to be. I love working with the United Nations Foundation because it gives me the opportunity to further the efforts of the UN by supporting extremely impacting projects. 

ACTBOLD: That’s so cool! Can you tell us a about your role as the Youth Champion for the United Nations?

MO: When I was appointed the first ever UN Youth Champion for the International Year of Youth, my role was to promote the theme of the year which was dialog and mutual understanding. I took this a step further by initiating a 6 month global tour to understand first hand the unique experiences youth face all over the world. I visited 24  countries in the six months. In each country, I facilitated dialog in schools, met with NGO’s, spoke with government officials, did media interviews, and volunteered with local and international organizations. The experience was multifaceted and life changing.

ACTBOLD: From all your travels, can you tell us briefly about one or two highlights or encounters that have had a significant impact on you?

MO: Bangladesh was a highlight because I had never seen such extreme poverty. At the same time, the people I met were some of the most gracious and positive people I’ve ever met. 

A project that was particularly impacting was visiting a sanitation project in Lodwar, Kenya where a local woman had employed women in the neighborhood to sew sanitary  napkins for girls in the community. It turns out that during a girl’s time of the month, she was forced to sit under a tree and miss a week of school. After a few months, girls typically dropped out of school completely. This project was especially meaningful to me because I saw how something so simple could make such a huge difference.

Make sure to check out Part II of our interview tomorrow! For More Mo’, follow her on twitter @gimmemotalk or connect with her at facebook.com/gimmemotalk.

“Walk in Her Shoes”

24 Jun

On Saturday, June 23rd, I attended Wagner High School Girl Up club’s event in Staten Island. I had a great time meeting other wonderful Girl Up supporters and participating in their event. “Walk in Her Shoes” was held at Clove Lakes Park and relayed Girl Up’s mission of helping our counterparts in developing countries through numerous activities, such as the “Walk in Her Shoes” race in which boys were sponsored to race in high heel shoes to signify the challenges girls face every day all over the world and to demonstrate boys’ support in the efforts to end violence against girls and women. In addition, members of the Wagner High School Girl Up club educated people on Girl Up and collected donations. We also enjoyed a live performance, music, games, and even a water balloon fight!

As you might remember from a previous post, Girl Up is a campaign of the United Nations Foundation that gives American girls the opportunity to become global leaders and channel their energy and compassion to raise awareness and funds for United Nations programs that help some of the world’s hardest-to-reach adolescent girls. Through Girl Up’s support, girls have the opportunity to be educated, healthy, safe, counted and positioned to be the next generation of leaders. Campaign supporters are encouraged to give a “High Five” to girls in developing countries by donating $5 or more to provide girls with such basic needs as access to school supplies, clean water, life-saving health services, safety from violence and more.

This event was a great example of how girls are taking action to bring awareness to these issues and speaking out on behalf of our sisters!

Wagner High School Girl Up Club members and myself at the event!

The Girl Effect in Action

5 Jun

When I sat down to write this post about a woman role model, names of powerful women leaders came to mind.

Then I thought, what about women in countries all over the world helping their communities? I decided I would write about one of them.

Last summer, I traveled to a village named Malakati in Fiji where I spent three weeks with local families, teaching at schools and working to develop solutions to help the village manage their drinking water.

The bures (Fijian word for wood-and-straw huts) the people live in are the size of an average bedroom, but accommodate families of at least five. My suitcase for three weeks contained more than the belongings of a family of five.

One of my first observations was that a small number of children from the village went to school because there was not enough room on the boat that took them there. Only a couple girls attend because by the time boys get on the boat, there is barely any space left.

It is rare for the girls to receive anything higher than an elementary school education.

While there, I met a young woman named Mary who is doing all she can to change that.

Every day, the girls of the village come over to her bure and she teaches them English, gives them math problems, and has them write in journals. She also has them play sports and participate as active members of their community.

Although Mary herself did not attend school past 9th grade, she has taught herself much of what she knows and reads every day.

I asked Mary what inspires her to do this, and her answer was clear and simple, “Because I want each girl to be someone I only dream of being.”

When asked what they want to be when they are older, most of the girls say they want to be flight attendants so that they can see the world they hear so much about. Mary believes in them and encourages them to be more than a caretaker for their younger siblings.

She told me about one of the girls she worked with who earned a scholarship to a high school on the main island of Fiji.

She going to study medicine because she wants to come back to Malakati and be a doctor the village so desperately needs.

Because this young girl was encouraged to attend school, she has now chosen to give back to her village and help saves lives.

I have learned that you do not have to be powerful, famous, or wealthy to make a difference in the world, you just have to be empowered to be the change of one girl.

Mary is proof that the Girl Effect is a worldwide movement.

Girl Up: Together We are Stronger

3 Jun

The Girl Up Girlafesto
http://www.girlup.org

 Did You Know?

  • Studies show that every year of schooling increasing a girl’s future earning power by 10 to 20 percent.
  • Less than half a cent of every development dollar goes to programs specifically for girls, particularly those ages 10-14.
  • Girls make up more than half of the world’s 143 million out-of-school youth.
  • One in seven girls in the developing world marries before the age of 15.

 “Together we are stronger.” One of my favorite organizations is Girl Up, a campaign of the United Nations Foundation. There are more than 500 million adolescent girls living in developing countries today.

Many of them struggle for the opportunity to go to school, see a doctor or be included in their communities. This has serious consequences including: low levels of enrollment in school, high levels of child marriage and way too many girls facing health risks from pregnancy and early child birth.

Solution

Girl Up believes that American girls are a part of the solution. The campaign gives American girls the opportunity to become global leaders and channel their energy and compassion to raise awareness and funds for United Nations programs that help some of the world’s hardest-to-reach adolescent girls.

Vision

Girl Up works in four contries: Ethiopia, Guatamala, Liberia and Malawi and has five different areas of focus: education, health, safety, leadership and documentation.

I love Girl Up and the work they do because I  believe it is so important that all girls-no matter where they are born-should have the opportunity to receive an education, have a safe space to grow up in, and be empowered to reach for her dreams.

I am very excited to work with Girl Up this summer to create a New York regional coalition, bringing together Girl Up clubs and supporters and teen advisors from across New York. If you are a teen living in New York or the surronding area who wants to help these bright, talented girls full of dreams reach their full potential living in New York leave a comment so that we can get you involved.

Visit http://www.girlup.org to learn more.

Teens Everywhere Can Take Action

1 Jun

Don’t wait around for change to happen — be the change.

“This is the century of participation.” Bill Clinton spoke these words at the Clinton Global Initiative Conference held at the end of September in New York City during UN Week. As the teen reporter for The UN Foundation’s Girl Up, I had the opportunity to cover the conference and blog about it for Girl Up and MTV Act. Now that I have had a week to process all of the inspiring stories and direct challenges for progress, I want to encourage teens everywhere to take action. There is no time to lose.

We each have a small section on a large canvas to paint, and, as teens and as human beings, it is hard for us to see more than our little square of the canvas. My experience at CGI showed me the WHOLE canvas and how important it is for us to take the initiative to help better our world. As the future generation, we must open our eyes to the bigger picture and help others paint their squares to create an amazing landscape that includes the world beyond our immediate horizon.

When I accepted the invitation to cover CGI, like most teens, I was unfamiliar with the Initiative, who was a part of it, and how the annual conference worked. I realized right then and there that this was the first problem. So I set about educating myself. The Clinton Global Initiative is unique because it brings together members from the private sector, public sector, and civil society, as opposed to conferences for only government officials or business people. The event is invitation only, and some of the most powerful and innovative thinkers and doers attend, creating a dynamic group of people not just discussing the problems at hand but actually doing something about them. I heard President Obama and President Clinton speak, as well as heads of state (some of which included women!), and also celebrities who are using their fame as a platform to help inspire change.

Attending CGI as the Girl Up teen reporter

Through the course of the conference, I met and interviewed many people such as Monique Coleman, Geena Davis, and Juliette Musabeyezu, a 17-year-old from Rwanda who created a magazine to create a place for girls to express themselves. I also heard many intriguing conversations of how leaders are working to solve some of the world’s most pressing issues such as climate change, the job market, and girls and women’s rights. I believe it is important for a teen to be a voice for our generation and to learn and understand our world’s pressing issues.

So why is it so vital? It is important for us as teens to be part of these dialogues because we have to be part of the solution.

Why? Because the changes, or the absence of changes, that occur will impact the world that we inherit. One experience I would like to share with you was my time at an all-adult press conference announcing the new campaign, Girls Not Brides. I walked in to a room of men and women in black suits with lots of cameras. To say the least, I was intimidated and nervous. After I heard a panel of distinguished speakers, such as anti-apartheid hero Desmond Tutu, the press started asking questions, and then it hit me: sometimes we just need to go for it. We need to take risks, feel a little uncomfortable, and cross uncharted waters. Girls across the world do not have a voice to speak up for themselves against early child marriage, lack of education, and violence, so at the moment it was my job, my responsibility to speak up because I had the chance to. I raised my hand as far as I could raise it and asked away. I wanted to know what teen girls could do other than donate money, but I also wanted to know how they were going to get this money directly to the girls in developing countries where child marriage is prevalent. On a larger scale, I learned that educating yourself on the facts is important, but it isn’t until you share your knowledge that change can begin. Sure, I felt uncomfortable standing up in front of lots of important, intelligent, and experienced press, but I knew that if I was going to represent the power of girls, I had to embody it.

Girl Up is a campaign of the United Nations Foundation that focuses on all the needs of girls, specifically those in developing countries. They give American girls the opportunity to become global leaders and channel their energy and compassion to raise awareness and funds for programs of the United Nations that help some of the world’s hardest-to-reach adolescent girls. Not only did I learn more about the barriers girls face in developing countries every day that prevent them from going to school, but I was also able to interview some really amazing people doing powerful work to help girls across the world. My big question for almost everyone I interviewed was, how can teens make a difference? I know most of the time the question is not what is the problem, but rather how can we help? I have come up with eight ways that teens (yes, that includes the boys!) can help change the future for girls and women.

1. Donate your status! Believe it or not, the biggest thing you can do to help is to spread awareness. The more people know the statistics and the pressing issue, the more change can occur. Make a commitment to change your status on Facebook or to tweet statistics. Imagine how many people you could teach in one day just by changing your status or sending a text!

2. Give a High Five at the Girl Up website.

3. Make a presentation at your school. This does not have to be a formal powerpoint presentation. Be creative — create a video, interview students, do an activity — anything to make a powerful point and grasp the attention of other teens.

4. Start a Girl Up club at your school and create a place for students to talk about these issues and make a plan to do something about them.

5. Hold a drive at your school. This does not have to be simply collecting money; it can be selling bracelets or t-shirts, or collecting items for girls.

6. Have students write letters. Writing letters to girls in developing countries that encourage them to be strong and powerful will help boost self-esteem and keep girls going.

7. Use your passions for social good. If you like dancing, hold a dance workshop to help boost self-confidence among girls. Soccer player? Travel with Grassroots Soccer for a summer and help girls in Africa develop leadership skills.

8. Blog! If other teens read what you have to say about girls’ issues, then they will likely want to be part of the movement.

Although attending this conference was a phenomenal experience, part of the work I want to do is to help other students have opportunities to discuss these issues and figure out ways to take action. I began my path by curating my school’s second annual TEDxYouth@Hewitt conference in November 2011 to create a platform for speakers and performers to share their ideas and experiences, and for students to discuss how they can use what they have learned to take action. Our theme was “BREAKthrough” because when it comes down to it, it is by breaking barriers that we come one step closer to the solution.

What is your BREAKthrough?

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