YCW Leads Young People's Health And Wellbeing Conference

Preston YCW and IMPACT! Groups have shared with us a recent write up of their Health and Wellbeing Conference by an academic from the University of Cumbria. A big thank you to Steve Walker (Senior Lecturer and Programme Leader for Working with Children and Families BA & MA) for visiting the Group and his write up.

Reaching Out: Young People’s Health and Wellbeing Conference

I was privileged to be invited by young people to a conference designed to promote open discussion around health and wellbeing with a focus upon mental health.  The youth-led conference with Keynote opening by a lead young person on the project gave an evidence base to develop educative notion of the importance of the agenda.  As a role, my intention was to record the key features of the day and the impressive work that young people engaged in towards the notion of a social change agenda.

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‘The Start of the Journey’ keynote was intended to develop the notion of generating shared ideas, inclusivity, diversity, connection, growth, social justice as key features of the day.  The high level of engagement and participation was impressively displayed by young people and the insight into the topic was incredible.  The informal education and youth work approach has been central to the development of the project and the Impact Youth Group in Preston has enabled young people to take up on the agenda and research to inform a stance on the potential of social action.

Meeting new people and sharing experience and stories

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Discussion around the recent sad news regarding Caroline Flack and the “Be Kind” movement was cited as a personal and social investment indicates a relevance of the project and young people’s motivation to fill the gaps in responses on a social and political level and promote the nature of emotional wellbeing and the 8 core areas of mental health.

The questions posed; Are we doing enough in each of these areas as practitioners? As organisations? And as a Society?

Young people have planned, designed and delivered the day together and a radical approach to work with young people that enables capacity and agency and empowered belief in the potential of change! An interesting dynamic that was observed that is perhaps different to an adult action group is the lack of hierarchy in the day, the share of power and control between young people as facilitators and attendees and equally in the group that established and set up the event.  Adult led activities can be organised with leaders and managers taking ownership whilst this event has inclusivity and a genuine air of open space to discuss from any corner of the conference.

Outcomes Achieved by Young People

Developed Support networks

Enhanced partnerships with adult engaged participants

Wider and more effective discussion to support and sustain views

Peer to peer support

Sharing best practice, knowledge and networking

Knowledge share and commitment inclusive of an awareness that a 48% increase in anxiety for young people requires change

Increased self-awareness

Improved confidence and self-esteem

Positive development and visible connection

A safe space for young people to be creative and share ideas about initiatives they are facilitating and learn from one another

Volunteering

Campaigning

Making decisions collectively

Facilitating change through action

Adapting the agenda from a personal to a community, social and political dimension

Cohesion

Tolerance and acceptance

Opportunity for action and change

The earlier initial focus group facilitated by Terry Mattinson a professional youth worker in Preston’s Impact Youth Group, gave power, ownership and control of content, agenda and offers a unique approach to enabling and empowering young people. The intention to create a ‘hub’ to develop information and initiatives that can be shared across the range of people.  There was support and representation from a photographer, high school teacher, informal educators, faith leaders. The #iwill challenge campaign https://www.iwill.org.uk gave ground to engage further during and ideally after the event.

A key message from young people was about information and initiatives and the notion of talking together but listening at the same time.  Connecting and being together and sharing the importance of openly talking.

Young people facilitated whole group games and activities to promote a flow in the day towards action. The observable levels of confidence and self-esteem, leadership and facilitation alongside the value of developed communication skills and the inherent value of youth work and informal education were prominent features.

The activities moved from self-motivation to working together to solidify the intentions of the day.  An activity via a ‘peace education’ using elements of critical analysis and enhanced thinking skills alongside ethical and principled values development. 

The adult supporters included Youth Workers, formal educators, photographer, faith leaders learnt a great deal around the self-care agenda that was discussed by young people. The nature of personal reflection and valuing the personal self as a motivational part of the movement to ‘Be Kind To Your Mind’ was insightful and definitively a core focus of the day.

Young people feeding back on their real-life perspectives on stereotyping and exceptional views on diversity and inclusion were undertaken. An in-depth activity on the labelling process and the impact on mental wellbeing were raised and the need to share the findings from the activity are very important.  The identification of the need for safeguarding training for young people was noted as an ongoing aspiration.

The UK Youth Empower HER agenda aims to inspire young women and girls to lead change and funding secured to promote the day has been a substantial aspect of the youth work interaction with the group.  Ongoing actions such as the development of peer listening networks in schools are currently planning to recruit and train more young people as volunteers.  Lunch time drop in sessions have been established creating space by young people to listen to their peers with a signposting role for the active listeners.  Young people delivering in the assembly to the broader school inclusive of the teaching staff has been initiated with a theme each month to develop the movement and importance.  ‘Exam de-stresser’ activities to enable young people a space to break from the drive for exam success and take it easy.

The individual and community benefits of the conference from personal knowledge and skills development to social justice campaigning and effort to promote a developed awareness of existing and future projects has become a campaign aim and to draw together young people contributions, actions and increase awareness further will follow.  If you have information or events running, please send through so that we can begin to map the project that young people are facilitating and raise awareness further.

An astonishing insight into the capacity, agency and commitment from young people during the day and the beginning of a more formal movement in responding to the needs of young people using informal education and youth work as a vehicle to shift thinking from a personal, group to social and political dimension. 

Trafford Park Group Meet at HQ

At the latest meeting of the Trafford Park YCW Group an Open Enquiry was held to explore a whole range of topics that the members brought up from their daily lives.

An Open Enquiry still follows the SEE-JUDGE-ACT Method, beginning with each person talking about one thing (a situation, a conversation, an event) from their daily life which made them think a little, feel bad or good, ask questions, get angry, or want help, etc.

From these contributions the Group can choose one or two of the most urgent or relevant to explore, saving the others for a future meeting. The chosen topics are then explored in more details, with questions asked to gain a greater understanding of the issue.

Once this has been established, the group discusses the rights and wrongs relevant to the situations and experiences shared.

Finally, the group starts to look at possible ways of responding to the situations described in the SEE part.

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The Trafford Park Group raised issues around current work pressures, relationships and current affairs. These were each progressed through the Method and each member left with some guidance over what actions could be taken.

National President, Marc Besford, who attends the Group said: “Our Group has done a variety of Gospel and Social Enquiries over the years, as well as other aspects of Group discussion. However, we hadn’t had the chance to just sit down and have an Open one. I think each member was able to take something helpful away from the meeting.”

Sandbach IMPACT! Group Update

Our IMPACT! Group in Sandbach have been working on a variety of projects since they successfully completed their Parish refugee sponsorship scheme last year.

The Group had previously spent the last few years working on a long running action campaign to sponsor a refugee family through the Government’s resettlement scheme. They successfully raised the money, organised a suitable property and arranged for a range of support services to be in place for the family.

With this now in place, the Group have again gone through the SEE-JUDGE-ACT Method on a range of other potential issues. Their latest update summarises where they are up to, so please have a read and continue to keep them and all our other Groups in your prayers.

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The Group update reads: “Esther who is down from University joined the group. Currently we are working on campaigns around the environment and a plastic-free town. We also had an idea to make a Sandbach version of Monopoly, only with a strong emphasis on the environment. This way we could find an inventive way of engaging young people and their families.

Esther also asked the group to write a few words about what Impact means to them also. In this way we can help share the positive impact of the work of the YCW and how it helps young people grow as leaders.”

In response to their update, National President Marc Besford said: “I was really pleased to see the work of Sandbach continue and hear that they are coming up with new ways of working on important issues like the environment. I hope to go down and visit the soon.”