Tag Archives: girls’ education

Opportunity for NYC Students

5 Jan

Rise Up with Girl Up at a sneak peak screening featuring one of Girl Up’s partners, 10×10. Girl Rising is 10×10’s soon-to-be-released feature-length film about the strength of the human spirit and the power of education to change the world. The film uses the power of storytelling and leverages strategic partnerships to deliver a single message: educating girls in developing nations will change the world.
Girl Rising tells the stories of 10 extraordinary girls from 10 countries, written by 10 celebrated writers and narrated by 10 renowned actresses, including Meryl Streep, Kerry Washington, Alicia Keys, and Selena Gomez. The film will be released on March 7th so this event will be an exclusive opportunity for Girl Up supporters and friends before the Red Carpet Premiere.

Join students from across New York City who are passionate and determined to help ensure that all girls have access to stay safe from violence, see a doctor, receive an education, and be a leader for a very special screening of this film that will not be in theaters until March 7, 2013. A panel discussion will follow the screening. More details on panel to follow.

Date: January 25, 2013
Time: 6-8pm
Where: The Hewitt School (45 East 75th Street)

The event is organized by the Girl Up New York Regional Coalition, a collaboration of all the Girl Up clubs in the metropolitan area and who are living Girl Up’s motto,
“While we are strong, together we are stronger.”

Girl Up is a campaign of the United Nations Foundation that works to mobilize teens here in the U.S. to raise awareness and funds for the world’s hardest to reach adolescent girls. www.girlup.org

Please RSVP to Sofia.Stafford@mac.com. I hope to see you there!Girl Rising image

 

International Day of the Girl article

17 Oct

Below is an article I wrote with my friend and fellow Girl Up teen advisor, Ines Renique for the Huffington Post. Although it has past, it is still an important day for everyone to know about and to understand the importance of empowering girls to position them to be the next generation of women leaders.

 

Why October 11 is not a Normal Thursday

Every morning we wake up to the sound of our alarm. We get dressed, grab some breakfast and less than 20 minutes later we are at school. The two of us may live in different states, attend different schools, and be passionate about different things, but there is one common denominator we share: the opportunity to receive an education. It is something that every child in the United States is guaranteed, and it is the key to success. The education we have both received has given us a foundation on which to stand and reach our full potential.

But not all kids are as fortunate – 143 million children to be exact. There are currently 143 million out-of-school children, more than half of who are girls. It is a staggering number, but one that by working together, we can reduce.

Our generation needs to help the world understand the value of a girl in society and how crucial it is to educate everyone, but especially girls. Educating girls is the key to ending the cycle of extreme poverty, and the ripple effect is clear. When a girl in the developing world receives seven or more years of education, she marries four years later and has 2.2 fewer children (United Nations Population Fund, State of World Population 1990). An extra year of primary school boosts girls’ eventual wages by 10 to 20 percent; add to that an extra year of secondary school and her eventual wages are boosted to 25 percent.

This issue is not just grim statistical matter, it is a problem that can be solved. We can and will bring the number of children lacking an education down to zero. Steps have already been taken; global conversations have already been sparked. We know that way forward and all about ensuring girls are counted, receiving an education, staying safe from violence and accessing healthcare. From Malawi to New York, youth, policy makers, NGOs and IGOs are using their prevalence on the global platform to speak out against social injustices. In doing so we are providing a way for girls to speak up and have their words heard around the world. But there is so much work left to do and so many voices needed to reach our goal.

Given our role as Teen Advisors for the UN Foundation’s Girl Up campaign, we are working to get other people involved in solving this global issue. This upcoming week is a special week and October 11 is not just a day, but a movement. It is bigger than any one issue, organization, or even country. And that’s because last year, The United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution to establish the first annual International Day of the Girl on October 11, 2012.According to the U.N. this annual day will “help galvanize worldwide enthusiasm for goals to better girls’ lives, providing an opportunity for them to show leadership and reach their full potential.” This movement allows everyone to speak out against gender bias and advocate for girls’ rights on a global level.

This day can be the catalyst for people throughout the world to educate their communities on the challenges girls and women face, as well as to commemorate girls and our potential. International Day of the Girl is not just for girls, but it is an opportunity for fathers and brothers alike to participate and learn about different perspectives on gender stereotypes, discrimination, and opportunity.

We invite and encourage you all to celebrate this day whether by taking a few minutes to educate yourself about these issues, hosting an event at your school or making a quick donation. Let’s use this day to help create momentum around this movement. It is a day to be grateful for the opportunities we have had living in this country and for all the people in your life that have given you the opportunity and the confidence to follow your dreams and passions. Just like your parents, friends, and teachers have empowered you, we must continue to empower all girls so that they can act on their dreams and have the options that come with receiving an education. Together, we can give them a chance at a better future.

We hope that you think about the 143 million children without education past this day, and that you take a pledge to reduce this number. When 143 million children wake up and are able to go to school, only then will the job be complete. But until that day it is both our responsibility and opportunity to ensure that that they all receive the one thing that will no one will ever be able to take away from them: an education.

We may all be from different countries, speak different languages, and have our own traditions, but we are a part of a global team of problem solvers and equity creators and together we will leave our handprints on the world.

To learn more and find out what you can do this International Day of the Girl, check out www.girlup.org.

Educate a Girl, Change the World

14 Oct

“Educate a Girl, Change the World”

This phrase, although simple, when turned into action has a profound effect on our world and resonates with me today as we celebrate International Day of the Girl.

Wednesday night, I had the pleasure of attending a 10×10 event  at the Paley Center in New York City with four other Girl Up supporters.

In honor of International Day of the Girl and in anticipation of their feature film, Girl Rising, advocates from all over the world spoke about their firsthand experiences unleashing the power of girls’ education.

The 10×10 campaign includes their feature film, Girl Rising, and a social action campaign. The campaign uses the power of storytelling to deliver a single message: educating girls in developing nations will change the world.

Through partnerships with organizations such as Girl Up, 10×10 is creating momentum around the movement to promote education for girls around the world.

At the event, we heard from several inspiring speakers including Christiane Amanpour, Azure Antoinette, and the two writers for the film, Shabana Basu-Rasikh and Marie Arana, who are education advocates in their respective countries.

It was an incredibly moving experience to hear from women with different backgrounds, different perspectives, and different voices, but that all shared a common thread of advocating for girls.

No matter who and where we are in the world, we can and must take action to ensure that we give girls a platform to use their voices and tell their stories.

The key to helping girls find this platform is through an education. As Ms. Amanpour said when she opened the event, “This cause is something that is personal to all of us.”

For me, it is what has allowed me to pursue my passions and find my purpose, and it all comes back to my grandmother. She believed that if we invest in education for girls, we can create a world that is more aware and better informed, a world that will give us all voice.

Like Shabana Basu-Rasikh said tonight and like my grandmother used to say, “What you have in your head, no one can ever take away from you.” 

The most valuable gift we can give and receive is an education. Join me in celebrating International Day of the Girl!

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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