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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: The Power of Children to Change the World, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 5 of 5
1. The Girl Effect

Girls living in poverty are uniquely capable of creating a better future. But when a girl reaches adolescence, she comes to a crossroads:

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The Girl Effect is about girls. And boys. And moms and dads and villages and towns and countries. And we can help.

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2. Podcast Features One Hen author Katie Smith Milway

Reading Today Daily, a bimonthly magazine published by the International Reading Association, recently reported:

On Friday, November 6, the Washington Office of the International Reading Association hosted a program titled “Learning Through Reading: Two Innovative Programs Give Students Broader Worldviews.” IRA’s Director of International Development, Sakil Malik, described “Reading Across Continents,” a program that links students in Washington, DC, Ghana, and Nigeria through young adult literature.

Author Katie Smith Milway talked about how her popular book, One Hen: How One Small Loan Made a Big Difference, and its accompanying website have spawned curriculum units and student projects focusing on philanthropy and microentrepreneurship.

Following the program, Reading Today taped a podcast interview with Milway. To hear it, visit the podcast page on the IRA website.

Last week we announced our Spirit of PaperTigers Project, an initiative of Pacific Rim Voices, whose aim is to promote literacy while raising awareness of our common humanity. The idea is to donate 100 book sets of seven carefully selected multicultural books to libraries and schools in areas of need across the globe. Katie’s book One Hen is included in the set along with these other titles. To read more about the Spirit of PaperTigers Project click here and be sure to check out Sally’s article Choosing the 2010 Book Set.

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3. Grade 5 Student Georgia I. Shares Her Speech on How She Is Changing the World

Georgia is a Grade 5 student in Mrs. Whiffin’s class at Anmore Elementary School in Anmore, BC, Canada. Over the past year she has learned a lot about the power she has to change the world! She shared this with her classmates last week at Anmore Elementary School’s Public Speaking Contest:

‘We can do no great things only small things with great love.” This is a quote by someone you might know, Mother Teresa. She is talking about how the small things we do can add up to big changes if we do them with great love.Hi my name is Georgia I am going to tell you all about Kiva, something I have been working on in class.

Kiva is an organization that helps people by lending them money so they can start a small business, then they give it back so we can lend it to someone else that needs it. When I was first introduced to Kiva I thought it was amazing because we were really helping people and it felt very good.

My friend and I were the first people to fundraise for our class. I remember we went to my house and got a big container of lemonade, some freezies, popsicles and off to work we went! Although my friend ate our only popsicle it was really fun!

When it rolled around to December my friends and I did a lot. One time for an hour or so we made and sold hot chocolate.It was so cold I had to borrow a pair of boots.

I think my most memorable experience is when my friend and I organized to carol for Kiva, a few days before Christmas. It was really fun! We all had jingle bells in our hands and we made one hundred and eighty eight dollars. One house even gave us chocolate.

Then…I finally got a chance to make a loan. One of my favorite people that I loaned to is Petrona. Petrona is a 66 year old woman taking care of her three grandchildren. She lives in Nigeria and there the literacy rates are very low, only 68% of females can read and write. Most of the people I have lent to work on less than a dollar a day! When we loan to people they use it for their business. Petrona used it for clothes and food to sell at her small shop. Many people use it for things like a fridge or farming tools. Maybe even a peanut crusher for their peanut butter mill.

As you can see people have such hard lives most of the time, we have very simple lives compared to them. That is why I think more people should get involved with organizations like Kiva. Like Mother Teresa said, “we can do small things with great love.”

The Power of Children to Change the World was the theme of our previous PaperTigers issue. Click on the words to access the archived interviews, articles, reviews and resources

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4. Kids for KIVA - What Mrs. Whiffin and Her Grade 4/5 Students Are Doing to Change the World

After reading our previous PaperTigers issue, “The Power of Children to Change the World”, Mrs. Whiffin updated me on the Kids for Kiva project taking place in her Grade 4/5 classroom at Anmore Elementary School. Mrs. Whiffin decided to show her students one way they could change the world and launched an integrated social responsibility unit based on Kiva’s micro-financing website, whereby students electronically assist people in poverty from around the world by providing them with small business loans. The concept of micro-financing is a phenomenon that’s grown in popularity in recent years given its ability to connect donors and philanthropists with budding entrepreneurs in developing countries. Two books featured in our previous PaperTigers issue - One Hen: How One Small Loan Made A Big Difference, and Give a Goat - are based on this concept and after reading about them on PaperTigers, Mrs. Whiffin has ordered them for the class.

Mrs. Whiffins states the Kiva Project doesn’t just tap into the social responsibility curriculum, but lessons in math, statistics, literacy, geography and leadership.

We are learning about the world and how we can make a difference. We have been lending to Kiva now for over a year. In the first year, we raised over $1100 as a class. This year, we have already reloaned the money that has come back to us (approximately $775). My students this year have also embarked on their own fundraising efforts to give them a chance to connect to the project. Amazingly, they have raised over $1300 so far!!! The fun part is making the loan! Each of us chooses a project and researches the region, community and business to determine which project we will support. The kids are so aware of the world! They also use statistics to justify their decisions and have become amazing at working with all kinds of numbers.

Mrs. Whiffin’s project has been a huge success and when it came time to write for the annual speech writing contest, one of her students chose to share her Kiva experiences. Check back tomorrow to read Georgia’s inspiring speech.

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5. The Power of Children to Change the World

Creating a more peaceful and compassionate world continues to be the most significant challenge of humankind. To acknowledge children as agents of positive change and to celebrate the ways in which they help create a better world, PaperTigers’ new issue offers interviews, articles, reviews and resources that point to their heart, determination and resolve to make a difference. We encourage you to take the time to explore these new offerings. And should you need further enticement, here’s an excerpt from author Mitali Perkins‘ article, “Books Can Shape A Child’s Heart:”

Stories are powerful allies as we seek to raise a generation of compassionate children. I distinctly remember the moment when I grasped the beauty of sacrificial giving. I was nine years old and befriending Sara Crewe in Frances Hodgson Burnett’s The Little Princess (J. B. Lippincott) for the first time…

Ready to be moved, inspired and energized?… Just head on over to the website. Then check back here, as we post more about this theme in the coming weeks.

(image credit: “My World” by Esau Andrade Valencia)

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