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Summer 2010 Boston City Council Youth Violence HearingUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
Anike Staples worked with the Boston Youth Environmental Network attending events and visiting environmental youth employment programs throughout the city of Boston.

This story is an account of her experience when she accidentally found a Boston City Council hearing on youth violence on August 11th 2011.
GOAL K-8 Project Highlights: The Charles Taylor School and the Wakefield EstateUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
Get Out And Learn (GOAL) is significant in its structure because it empowers teachers to select the program and/or provider that he wants for his class that will best serve the needs of his students.  And it is the teacher and provider working in concert that produces the strongest, and sometimes, most unexpected results.  A good case in point is what’s taking place between the Charles Taylor School in Mattapan and the Wakefield Estate in Milton.  Teacher Luis Arroyo, over the past two years with his GOAL awards, has been systematically ensuring that every Taylor School student, in total 500 students in grades K-5, visits and engages in a meaningful learning experience at the Wakefield Estate.  Though the school is located less than fifteen minutes from the Estate in Milton, there had been little previous interaction between the two entities.  But after meeting the Education Coordinator Erica Max at a BYEN gathering and visiting the Estate for himself, Arroyo saw the opportunity to enrich his students’ classroom kit-based science learning with hands-on, outdoor learning experiences. 
 
The relationship built between the Charles Taylor School and the Wakefield Estate epitomizes the types of positive, organic working relationships BYEN seeks to foster through GOAL.  The BPS Science Department has expressed confidence in BYEN and the GOAL program to connect even more EE organizations with its teachers, as part of its ongoing strategy for improving instruction of the core academic concepts of the BPS science curriculum. In this next year, BYEN will leverage recent GOAL achievements and implement improvements based upon our review of lessons learned over the two-year pilot.  If we are successful, by Spring 2012, we anticipate up to 10,000 BPS students will have participated in unique outdoor learning experiences, like the students at the Charles Taylor School, experiences that will enrich their science education and much more. 
“I’ve noticed that the students talk about science differently.  It’s not something they have anymore, it is something they do.  When are we going to do science is what they ask me.  The science we do in the classroom is reinforced at the Wakefield Estate, with living material found in the field in its nature habitat.  Students can compare what they’re seeing in the classroom with what actually exists in the world.  These experiences add a new dimension to both teaching and learning.”
-Luis Arroyo, Science Specialist, Charles Taylor Elementary School in Mattapan
Since 2009, through GOAL, forty-five EE providers have received training and forty Boston Public Schools have received GOAL grants to work with them resulting in 6,000 BPS students participating in 8,500 outdoor learning experiences.  Below are words and images highlighting the experiences of children from the Charles Taylor School at the Wakefield Estate who according to teacher Luis Arroyo have had their perception of science changed. 
BYEN Youth Intern working at Clean Tech company - Summer 2011Use SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
FastCAP, a Boston-based Clean Tech company working with BYEN youth intern, Nebia Zeroual, featured on White House "Champions of Change" blog http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/08/01/little-help-goes-long-way-clean-tech-company
 
'But it’s up to the private sector to do the actual hiring, which is why FastCAP is so committed to its internship program – especially because its work is so state-of-the-art.
 
“It’s not efficient to develop green technology without also developing the workforce,” Signorelli said. “Our internship program gets [young people] excited.”
 
“That’s how we make this revolution sustainable in the U.S.”'
 
- Riccardo Signorelli, CEO FastCAP Systems
 
Learn about Boston's Summer Youth Conservtion Crews: Summer 2011Use SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).

Collards and kale, buckthorn and bittersweet, teamwork and tenacity are the refrain of nearly 100 teens across Boston this summer who are helping to keep our parks, gardens, greenways and urban wilds well-maintained and programmed.  Each week, these youth ages 14 - 18, working in crews of 8 – 10, and supervised by young men and women hardly older than themselves, are building trails, removing invasive species, creating gardens, harvesting fresh food, and teaching other young people to enjoy activities in the outdoors.  It is often back-breaking, sweaty labor for which the teens are paid $8.00/hour for 25 hours/week by the City of Boston’s Department of Youth and Community Service.  And they love it!  “We are like a family” “We are a team” “I’ve loved meeting all the other people in my crew” are typical comments.

Last week BPA staff had the privilege of interviewing nearly 30 youth from crews at the Emerald Necklace Conservancy, Franklin Park Coalition, and Boston Collaborative for Food and Fitness as they worked at various sites in the Fenway, Dorchester, and Roxbury. 

Our first impression was:  WOW!  Are these youth having fun and boy, do they know A LOT about what they are doing!  What exactly are they learning?  The young people list specific skills like landscaping, tree pruning, planting, and invasive removal, but they elaborate on skills such as patience, independence, respect for the environment, learning to work in a group, making strong friendships, meeting lot’s of new people, learning about health and food, and becoming a leader.  One young man talks about making the jump from crew member to leader and how many useful skills he acquired through hours of training during the year and before the summer program.  One young man spoke frankly about how much he has “grown up” this summer and how good it feels to earn his first paychecks. 

Who are these youth and where do they come from?  Young people apply through the Boston Youth Fund lottery and are placed in these outdoor jobs based on their interests.  For most, it is their first “real job”.  Most are students at high schools across the city – Madison Park, Brighton High, Latin Academy and numerous others.  A handful aren’t attending school, but hope to finish at some point. 

But it’s not ALL dirt and sweat…. Most groups take one day a week for field trips and outdoor adventure activities including an overnight camping trip, canoeing on the Neponset River, tree climbing, and attending city-wide youth events such as the The 180: Youth United for the Environmental Turn-Around sponsored by the Boston Youth Environmental Network, and the Environmental Justice Youth Summit, hosted by the youth from Roxbury Environmental Empowerment Project (REEP). 

Another perk of summer employment:  several of the crews are signed on with Roll it Forward a program sponsored by Boston Bikes, which provides teens with a free bike and training on how to safely ride in the city.  Many of the crew members spoke enthusiastically about the daily commute to work on their bikes and how much easier it is to bike than to take transit.

In addition to stewardship projects, Youth Crews also help out with community events such as movie nights and Drop-In Sports Nights for younger children, and coordinate work with other crews.  Learning from other youth crews and working along side them is a highlight of the summer.  

Despite the heat, dirt, and hard labor, the teens are incredibly enthusiastic and eloquent about their experiences.  Most say they would definitely come back for another season!

We want to extend a HUGE THANK YOU to all the young people we spoke to and to the organizations who spend a lot of time and energy raising the funds to offer such a great work experience to so many of Boston’s Teens!  We raise our hats to the Boston Collaborative for Food and Fitness, the Boston Natural Areas Network, the Emerald Necklace Conservancy, and the Franklin Park Coalition.

National Park Service, New Bedford Youth Ambassador ProgramUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
This Youth Ambassador Program video gives a whole new meaning (and life) to walking tour - http://youtu.be/4CP10K_KTAE