Category Archives: Youth

Youthopia , Youth for Inclusion Program

Youth participating in the Youthopia program

In 2011, as part of its BUILDING VITAL COMMUNITIES grant program, the Guelph Community Foundation  awarded $4,450 to Immigrant Services Guelph-Wellington for its Youthopia , Youth for Inclusion, program.

Youthopia set out to engage newcomer youth through the arts with spoken word, drama and media, while building leadership skills and broader engagement in the community.

“Moving to a new school is difficult enough for youth, now imagine being new to the country, city, neighbourhood, and having to function in a second language,” said Roya Rabbani, Executive Director of Immigrant Services Guelph-Wellington.

Over a period of six months, participants met with trained youth facilitators to work on a variety of activities. This process led to a core group choosing to work on a live production to honour the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination . Another group continued to meet weekly to work on smaller arts projects. Youth also participated in community and civic engagement activities in the Guelph community.

What did it mean to youth participating?

Youthtopia’s RiseUp! event poster said it best: “life is no longer about hiding in the shadows or trying to get by – it’s about laughing and crying, and all the things in between; it’s about the opposite of disappearing. Watch as we come out of our cocoons …”

Roya Rabbani, who recently spoke at the Foundation’s Fall Community Celebration, told the audience that two-thirds of Canada’s growth is coming through immigration. Like trees, these newcomers are uprooted from their homelands and transplanted here, and that is a difficult process. “A caring community allows those trees to take root, to flourish and bear fruit,” she said.

Spoken word was one of many activities undertaken.   To view a short clip from one of Youthopia’s Spoken Word sessions, click here.

Andrea Olson is Executive Director of Guelph Community Foundation

Vital Youth Café melds youth, wisdom and expertise

Community Foundations of Canada’s recent Vital Youth Café brought together a multitude of individuals – mainly youth, but there were also others on hand to help move the discussion forward.

One of the various volunteers was Leah Walker, a writer, editor and broadcaster who spent part of the day as an Information Studies volunteer. Her mission? To provide research services to participants on questions related to helping vulnerable youth.

Read what Leah had to say about the event.

Our Vital Signs blog is moving! Check out our new home here

Vital Youth Café digs deep, finds fertile soil

Vital Youth Café, the dialogue and design workshop hosted by Community Foundations of Canada in Ottawa this week, gave Montreal-based youth activist Jonathan Glencross the shot in the arm he was seeking.

“I wanted to see if what I’d been experiencing was also happening elsewhere – this disconnect between potential and impact,” he said afterward.

“It just really affirmed my understanding that we need to create spaces where youth can imagine seriously and break free from cookie-cutter expectations,” said the McGill University graduate.  “We need to ask bigger questions, find support and funding. We need sustained support to take a different path. I feel more strongly about that now than I ever have before. ”

The Vital Youth Café, held a day after the release of Canada’s Vital Signs 2012 – Vital Youth, drew a dynamic crowd of about 35 delegates to the stunning Panorama Room at the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Hull.

The day-long event – taking us from statistics to solutions – was marked by raucous discussion and debate, both in small and large groups, as well as compelling presentations of ideas by participants.

“I can’t stress enough how great the facilitation was. It was a day of unexpected learnings and reflections and that’s always nice,” said Glencross. “I felt I was able to learn more things by diving into other people’s experiences … it felt like fertile soil.”

Agreed Amanda Mayer, Coordinator of the National Alliance for Children and Youth (NACY):  “Taking part in the Vital Youth Dialogue was a great way for me to help shine light on Canadian youth and issues we face today. I was energized by colleagues around the table and the discussions on new ideas, unique concepts and redefining success and failure amongst youth. There was lots of exuberant dialogue, compelling and practical solutions for GenerationFlux that I look forward to working on in the near future. Kudos to CFC for convening such a great community of colleagues to collectively work on solutions! ”

Our Vital Signs blog is moving! Check out our new home here

Hope. Connect. Care.

That’s what you get when you involve young people – Generation Flux, if you will – in the decision-making process.

“They will make sure you walk the talk,” Marc Langlois, facilitator for the Vital Youth Café, said yesterday.

The Vital Youth dialogue and design workshop, held a day after the release of Canada’s Vital Signs 2012 – Vital Youth, drew a dynamic crowd of about 35 delegates to the stunning Panorama Room at the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Hull.

They came as engaged citizens, and as representatives of organizations as diverse as TakingItGlobal, National Alliance for Children and Youth, Vancouver Foundation, Greater Saint John Community Foundation, Canadian Index of Wellbeing, Carleton University, Otesha Project, Ici Par Les Arts, Child and Youth Friendly Ottawa, University of Ottawa, and our partners in Vital Youth, Deloitte.

The day-long event – taking us from statistics to solutions – was marked by raucous discussion and debate, both in small and large groups, as well as compelling presentations of ideas by participants.

As Langlois said: “I’m tired of hearing young people aren’t engaged. They are engaged. It’s just that Stats Can doesn’t know how to measure it.”

With the intent of sharing and building on a variety of perspectives and strategies on sustainability, entrepreneurship, employment, physical and mental health, accessibility, immigration, engagement, inclusion and more, Vital Youth Café will serve as a prototype for similar discussions at CFC 2013 Conference in Winnipeg next June, and in communities nationally.

“If you infuse youth in critical decision-making roles, there will be 1. More hope – because young people focus on vision – 2. You will have more connections, more relationships, and 3. There will be more of a focus on caring,” said Langlois.

In our next post … ideas and solutions from Vital Youth Café participants!

Our Vital Signs blog is moving! Check out our new home here

VitalYouth shines some light on Canadian youth

Canada’s Vital Signs 2012 – Vital Youth launched yesterday, focusing on the myriad issues facing Generation Flux. We garnered lots of media attention, which kept CFC’s President and CEO Ian Bird hopping with back-to-back interviews throughout most of the day and evening. That continues today, amidst the backdrop of Vital Youth Café, our dialogue and design workshop happening at the Canadian Museum of Civilization.

Here’s a sampling of media coverage so far:

Our Vital Signs blog is moving! Check out our new home here

Generation Flux: Seismic shifts shaking Canadian youth, says report from Community Foundations of Canada

The predictable trajectory that guided the lives of their parents is gone and Canada’s youth are coming of age in an era of complexity and uncertainty that has delayed or even destroyed the landmarks that once signalled life transitions, says the Canada’s Vital Signs 2012 -Vital Youth report.

“The linear path from school to career, home ownership, and family has disappeared,” said Ian Bird, President and CEO of Community Foundations of Canada. “We want communities to recognize that this is ‘the new normal.’ We need to work with youth to find better ways of preparing and supporting them for a journey that is less certain and more fragmented.”

The national quality-of-life report, released today, aims to provide communities and policy-makers with a snapshot of the youth experience in Canada. It pulls together research conducted by many organizations to paint a comprehensive picture of the economic, educational and societal factors affecting youth as they enter adulthood, amidst a backdrop of rapid change.

Among the report’s key findings are:

Big debt, little work. After graduation, youth are saddled with debt that can take 14 years to pay off. Then only piecemeal or part-time employment awaits: 1 out of 3 move into a low-skilled job after graduation.

Summer jobs at all-time low. The youth unemployment rate is consistently double the national average. In June, it was 14.8% compared to the national average of 7.2% and summer jobs in 2012 were at the lowest level since data was first collected in 1977.

Delays in post-secondary. Young people are delaying the start of post-secondary education to improve high-school grades, or save for tuition, which has risen up to 200% in some provinces in the past 20 years.

Retirees still working. Young people today face competition from Baby Boomers who are hanging onto jobs longer, or returning to work after retirement age.

Young people are already feeling financial and other impacts.A staggering 3.2 million of 12- to 19-year-olds in Canada are at risk for developing depression. A recent CAMH study of Ontario students also found that “the rate of students reporting psychological distress has risen to 43%, up from 36% in the 1999 survey.”

But growing up in an era of rapid change has also helped prepare youth for some of the challenges ahead. They are tech-savvy, connected to vast networks and are passionate about public policy and global issues, even if they don’t show it on voting day or via traditional institutions. They place a high value on personal relationships and want to align their values with the work they do.

“If any country can grapple with these challenges, it’s Canada,” said Bird. “We are one of the best educated countries in the world. But like others, we need to come to grips with the gap between who is thriving and who is being left behind. The consequences of inaction are too serious – for young people and our communities.”

The Vital Youth report is supported by Deloitte and will be released today at 9:30 a.m. at Carleton University’s School of Public Policy and Administration, followed by a press conference at Parliament Hill at 12 noon. Community Foundations of Canada is also holding a Vital Youth Dialogue and Design Workshop in Ottawa on Oct. 3, to begin moving from research to action.

Communities across Canada releasing local reports
Vital Signs is an annual community check-up conducted by community foundations across Canada. It provides a comprehensive, reader-friendly look at how our communities are faring in key quality-of-life areas such as learning, health, housing and the environment.

Today, 14 community foundations across Canada launch their own local reports at vitalsignscanada.ca.

Community Foundations of Canada is the national network for Canada’s more than 180 community foundations, which help Canadians invest in building strong and resilient places to live, work, and play. Find out more at www.cfc-fcc.ca.

Find out how seismic shifts are shaking Canada’s youth on Oct. 2

Youth will be the focus of CFC’s 2012 Canada’s Vital Signs report, to be released during a special presentation by President & CEO Ian Bird at Carleton University’s School of Public Policy & Administration on Oct. 2. We’ll spend the rest of the day on Parliament Hill, briefing media and politicians about our findings and then hosting some close colleagues in our new Ottawa office.

We’ll post all the stats and research, including a new YouTube video, on our newly redesigned Vital Signs website on Oct. 2.

Join us @ Carleton!

Canada’s Vital Signs 2012 digs deep into youth issues

Each fall Community Foundations of Canada releases its national Vital Signs report, and youth issues have consistently been flagged every year since its inception in 2006.

We know education, employment, health and technology are among the huge concerns facing Canada’s young people.

That’s why we’re dedicating Canada’s Vital Signs 2012 to youth, making connections between research in various areas to provide a critical snapshot of the issues facing Canadian youth at this point in our history.

On Oct. 2, we will be releasing our youth research along with a YouTube video promo that encapsulates some of the key findings from our Vital Signs research. Our focus on youth is intended to act as a catalyst for candid and creative conversations that will lead to action among Canada’s community foundations and Canadian communities.

To help move from statistics to solutions, we’re also hosting a Vital Youth Dialogue and Design Workshop on Oct. 3, a day for youth and youth advocates to share and build on a variety of perspectives and strategies on sustainability, entrepreneurship, employment, physical and mental health, accessibility, immigration, engagement, inclusion and more.

This highly interactive, solutions-focused day will serve as a prototype for similar discussions at the CFC 2013 Conference in Winnipeg next June, and in communities nationally.

Stay tuned for more in the coming weeks …

The Calgary Foundation releases Youth Vital Signs 2012

“Calgary is a great place to be a youth!” That’s what Calgarians, aged 12-20, are saying in the 2012 Youth Vital Signs Report. In fact, Calgary youth rated their overall quality of life a B.

Published for the first time in 2010, as a partnership between The Calgary Foundation and Youth Central, the 2012 edition of Youth Vital Signs is hot off the press. Inspired by The Calgary Foundation’s Calgary’s Vital Signs Report, the Youth Vital Signs Report combines the opinions and perspectives of youth, aged 12-20, with timely research to inform the public and private sectors, governments, youth funders and youth-serving charitable organizations.

This year, we were excited to learn that 26% of survey graders were born outside of Canada – adding unique voices to the survey results. The report showed high levels of youth engagement and volunteerism. In fact, 72% of graders indicated they have volunteered within the past year.

The report revealed some eyebrow-raising data. For instance, Canadian teens spend an average of 6 hours a day in front of a screen… substantially more than the recommended 2 hours. On a positive note, survey graders who indicated they participated regularly in a recreational activity were significantly more likely to rate their physical and mental well-being as high, compared to those who did not participate regularly in sports.

Calgary Youth Vital Signs Report Highlights

  • Employment & Training: C+
    Calgary youth unemployment rates reached 14% in 2010, nearly double the 2008 rate of 7.4%. Alberta has also seen a 27% drop in on-the-job apprenticeship registrations since 2006.
  • Health & Safety: B-
    Youth crime rates continue to decrease in Calgary, with the total youth crime rate dropping by 33% between 2006 and 2010.
  • Identity and Belonging: C+
    Youth told us that there is a growing sense of belonging and an increase in opportunities to embrace cultural differences. One area of research was less positive… the high school dropout rate for Alberta ESL learners is more than double the average.
  • Youth Spaces: C+
    Youth commented that while Calgary is home to many recreation and leisure centres, including Shaw Millennium Skate Park, there is a real need for more youth-friendly spaces – specifically places out of the downtown core.

Victoria’s Vital Youth – called to build a better world

Victoria Foundation’s Vital Youth program provides students with hands-on experience in philanthropy and community development. Formally launched in three schools in November 2003, the program – previously named Youth in Philanthropy – has since grown to include seven high schools.

Representatives of the Victoria Foundation’s Vital Youth program presented a total of $17,684 in grants to 18 local charities May 2.

The following is an edited excerpt of the speech by grade 12 students Bree Neale and Emma Thompson of Oak Bay High School, who represented the program:

When we joined the Oak Bay [High School Vital Youth] club for the first time, we were touched by the stories we heard from various charities. Some of the stories related to our own personal lives in some ways, whether it be a life challenge somebody faced with homelessness or having a brain injury and needing somewhere to stay.

In Grade 11 we stepped up and became [club] leaders, but we were still a little unsure of the best way to lead the group. When we were invited to the Community Foundations of Canada Conference in Vancouver last year we were really excited and happy to be chosen. And it was amazing.

The best part of the youth day was the scavenger hunt. There is no way to describe the feeling you get from being out in the community experiencing first-hand how small acts of kindness leave positive impacts on  people. During the scavenger hunt, we were fortunate enough to be a part of these impacts on people as we gave out free coffee to someone who we felt needed it, made a sign to make people smile (that said “smile if you like the Canucks”) and singing and dancing with complete strangers on the street. All of these activities were incredible experiences to be a part of and it was so special to meet so many youth from across Canada and around the world. We made a lot of new friends!

Attending the main part of the conference allowed us to see how philanthropy exists in the bigger picture. Listening to speeches by some of the world’s most influential leaders, including the Governor General of Canada, David Johnston, human rights activist Naomi Tutu, and former U.S. President Bill Clinton, provided us with new motivation, skills and information to bring back to our club. A quote that really spoke to us from this conference came from Tutu, the daughter of Archbishop Desmond Tutu from South Africa: “In times of trouble the wise reach out. They build bridges to connect with others.”

We would like to say a big thank-you to the donors on behalf of all the youth who get the opportunity to be involved in Vital Youth. There are endless benefits from the program. It is extremely rewarding to know that we are making a difference, and to see the enthusiasm recipients show, and the ability they have to further develop their charitable goals. It’s amazing to see how much of an impact the group makes on not only the charities who receive the grants, but also the students.