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Great Collaborations lead to Great Opportunities… Continued

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In early April, SBL partnered with Civic Action and H&M Canada to provide a group of SBL youth with the opportunity to gain valuable employment experience. From the group of 10 youth that secured employment with H&M, 7 will continue learning & growing with H&M into the fall.

The students continuing with H&M were recognized for their contributions and achievements at H&M’s downtown office on September 15th. The H&M team put together an amazing evening of celebrating growth and partnerships, where every youth in the room felt valued and recognized.

H&M’s new campaign “________is Possible” attempts to instil confidence and convey the message that great things are indeed possible. This partnership exemplifies that #ANYTHINGISPOSSIBLE through great collaborations!

We are excited to continue this partnership into the new school year and provide this opportunity for many more youth.

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successblGreat Collaborations lead to Great Opportunities… Continued
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Head Start Day at Westview

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On September 2, the doors of Westview Centennial Secondary School were open to hundreds of grade 9 students for Head Start Day. Head Start Day gives students the opportunity to learn about what their high school experience will look like and where students receive their first high school timetables! Many students were excited and some anxious about high school were happy to see the Success Beyond Limits staff, mentors and volunteers in the main entrance of Westview C.S.S. greeting them with warm smiles and well wishes for the day. While Head Start Day serves as an orientation for grade 9 students, it’s also a time for students and the SBL staff, mentors and volunteers to reminisce about the fun summer program that just past, while expanding and building upon those relationships into the school year at Westview. It’s also a time to meet new students who were not able to attend our summer program, but who were the nevertheless eager to register for the Success Beyond Limits school year program at Westview. We are excited and look forward to what will come this school year!

successblHead Start Day at Westview
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SBL at TDSB Partnership Appreciation Celebration

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On Thursday May 21, 2015, TDSB held a partnership appreciation celebration in which Success Beyond Limits was recognized. The event was to recognize the new and renewed educational partnerships for the year and the unique contributions the partners make to support student success. The evening provided an opportunity to connect and share stories from various organizations. Donna Quan presented an award to SBL on stage in which Mohamed Ahmed was able to receive it on behalf of the program. Our partnership has been growing each year since 2007 and we are excited about continuing to support our students through this collaboration.

successblSBL at TDSB Partnership Appreciation Celebration
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SBL Surprised by a Special Guest

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Tuesday July 28 started off as a regular day. As students walked into Osgoode Hall Law School they grabbed breakfast then headed to the auditorium for morning announcements. After quickly being dismissed from the auditorium, they walked towards their classes. As the morning progressed, students had no idea the surprise they were in for…

Learn more about the day by clicking the link below:

CLICK HERE

PK SUBBAN COLLAGE

 

successblSBL Surprised by a Special Guest
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More Than A Bargaining Unit: York University Faculty Association’s Commitment to Social Unionism

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Over the years, York University has made a concerted effort to engage the community it finds itself in, Jane and Finch. One successful way it has done so is through the York University Faculty Association (YUFA). Read more about the relationship between YUFA and Jane and Finch.

http://www.academicmatters.ca/2015/06/more-than-a-bargaining-unit-york-university-faculty-associations-commitment-to-social-unionism/

successblMore Than A Bargaining Unit: York University Faculty Association’s Commitment to Social Unionism
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Hip Hop STEMposium: Why Are We Talking About Hip Hop and Education?

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STEMposium

 

The classroom has long been the exclusive domain of the traditional teacher. Educators, in this traditional sense, have been cast as human repositories of all essential knowledge: as sole experts in the classroom. Outdated teaching methods have been inherited, recycled and modeled by mentor teachers passing this model on to candidates about to begin their journey in the teaching profession. Textboxes and worksheets operate as the primary tools for teaching.

 

So what does Hip Hop have to do with education, and in particular STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics)? Dr. Chris Emdin a tenured professor at Columbia University’s Teachers College, in the Department of Mathematics, Science, and Technology shared key characteristics he found in brilliant scientists to demonstrate links between hip hop, education and STEM. He notes brilliant scientists are skeptics, great at observation and analyzing by analogy. He argues the part of the brain that buzzes/lights up when scientists are problem solving in the laboratory is the same part of the brain that is hyperactive when rappers are freestyling (improvisational rhyming). A prime task of his research: to search for brilliant scientists, he shared that those who demonstrate the key characteristics cited above, he finds them in rappers while performing their craft.

 

Many of the workshops that were part of the Hip Hop STEMposium – put on by Toronto District School Board – made central the key characteristics, creativity, higher order analytical reasoning and critical thinking – to Grades 7-12 TDSB students from across Toronto. SBL staff and mentors facilitated a workshop called ‘Hip Hop Tech.’ The workshop laid out the historical context of the South Bronx in the 1970s and 1980s – a period hallmarked by post-industrialism, “urban renewal”, and de-investment in urban centres  – all of which are significant in the birthing of Hip Hop culture. The lack of resources available to young people during this time played an integral part in the creativity and ingenuity in the birthing of four of the elements of Hip Hop culture – DJing, MCing, Breakdancing, and Graffitti Art.

 

Highlighting the creative technical innovations ushered in by Hip Hop practitioners, students had the opportunity to learn first hand the basics of DJing, demonstrating the importance of timing and the measurements of beats. As students would look for breaks (moments of instrumentation) to mix, it blended into the next section of the workshop, which was sampling.

 

Sampling has been a cornerstone of Hip Hop music with prominent records like ‘Rapper’s Delight’ by The Sugar Hill Gang becoming a major hit. As Hip Hop grew in the 1980s, Disco and Funk became part of the backdrop of the music ushering in new technology like the Sampler. This section of the workshop provided students with the opportunity to identify samples and the sampling tracks while analyzing and pinpointing similarities and differences between the two.

 

The third section of the workshop was focused on Graffiti Art. During the 1980s, the canvas of many young artists were derelict buildings and subway trains. Subway trains traveled through various parts of a city making them the ideal canvas for young people who may not have access to a museum or gallery space to exhibit their art. They had the city and the trains and they made use of them. Students were narrated a time period and setting then presented with the words Hip Hop Tech – creating visual art pieces and signing them with their own graffiti tag.

 

As our workshop wrapped up and staff and students headed to lunch, a student approached me, she asked, “Does this happen every year?” By this she was referring to the Hip Hop STEMposium. My immediate thought was to say it should, but rather I elected to utter, “This is the first one.” The next words out of her mouth were “I hope these teachers are taking notes and listening. Using music in the classroom makes things more interesting and fun.”  Before heading downstairs for lunch, she was in the hallway teaching her friends Hip Hop dance steps. As I was watching, my colleague approached me and whispered, “She’s a trained classical ballet dancer.” The excitement and enthusiasm the student spoke with, I have witnessed over the years when bringing Hip Hop into the classroom. Young people who are part of SBL have championed for the Hip Hop Literacy Program that has been operating as a core component of our after-school program for the last four years.

 

The Hip Hop STEMposium was a conference that robustly acknowledged and expanded the ways we define the term educator by inviting Hip Hop practitioners, social activists, teachers, and community workers to demonstrate non-traditional pedagogical methods of engaging young people in their learning. If what we are doing as educators is not working for all students, why continue to do it? Hip Hop based education is not the end all be all answer, but it’s a piece of the puzzle.

successblHip Hop STEMposium: Why Are We Talking About Hip Hop and Education?
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Previous SBL Mentor Moose Featured in Toronto Life

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Previous SBL mentor shares his story of growing up in Jane and Finch. See the story below:

 

Abdul Nur, 19
Jane and Finch

 

I grew up in a five-bedroom townhouse in the ­Edgeley Village community housing complex. My whole life I had neighbours and friends who looked out for me. I have seven ­brothers and sisters, five older than me and two younger. My dad was a veterinarian in Somalia, but he now works in a shipping department. My mom keeps me on the right path.

 

When I was 16, I hung around with guys who would just roam the streets; we were like a flock of sheep, all following each other. Then one day in 2012, two of my friends got arrested on robbery charges. Police ransacked the community centre, taking them out in handcuffs, shoving them inside cruisers. And I’m watching this thinking, “Yo, these are the people I’m running around with.” I realized that would be me soon, getting carted away. I stopped hanging around with them after that.

 

Instead, I spent my time volunteering with a community group, Success Beyond Limits. Some of my older siblings had been involved in the program, which uses youth leaders to teach other kids about education and life goals. I worked with them as a peer mentor over four years. Today I teach a spoken word workshop once a week, and we’re taking a group from the community to perform at the Parapan Games this summer.

 

I graduated high school in 2013 but returned for another semester to improve my grades. I’m now in my first year at York—it’s a 10-minute walk from our house. I’m studying business management but thinking of switching to poli-sci. My mom always wanted me to be a doctor, but I want to be a teacher so that I can go back and teach in the community. I want to have a hand in how young people at Jane and Finch will grow up. They don’t have enough role models. If you’re a teacher, you’re going to be with them through some of the crucial points in their lives; you can have a huge influence.     – as told to Lauren McKeon

 

http://www.torontolife.com/informer/features/2015/01/21/toronto-is-failing-me-i-want-to-teach-kids-that-this-neighbourhood-isnt-a-curse/

successblPrevious SBL Mentor Moose Featured in Toronto Life
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Sharing Stories about Abshir Hassan on CBC Metro Morning

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It has been 6 months since the tragic passing of Abshir Hassan – a TDSB teacher, a community activist, graduate student and SBL family. As we continue to mourn his loss, we have been thinking about what it means and what comes next.

 

In continuing the important work Abshir was doing in the Jane and Finch and Lawrence Heights Community, in partnership with York University, SBL has established an awards fund looking to invest in young people who share first and foremost a similar passion in the uplifting of their communities. The award is being organized by two of Abshir’s closes friends and SBL staff Tesfai Mengesha and Sam Tecle.

 

Sam Tecle was on Metro Morning speaking to Matt Galloway sharing stories about growing up with Abhsir Hassan or has he refers to him Ab.

 

Here’s a link below:

 

http://www.cbc.ca/metromorning/episodes/2015/01/20/abshir-fund/

 

You can donate to Abshir’s Award Fund at the following link:

 

forabshir.ca

successblSharing Stories about Abshir Hassan on CBC Metro Morning
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Sam Tecle – New SBL Team Member

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ST

 

With Toota going back to school, we posted a position for our After School program and Youth Space at Westview.  The pool of applications was incredible, and there were a number of candidates who would be phenomenal, ready to hit the ground running.

 

We are excited to announce that Sam Tecle is the newest member of the SBL team.  Sam has a long-history with our program as a teacher in our summer program, as well as a consistent volunteer and mentor to many of our mentors.  Currently working on his PhD through the York University Faculty of Education, Sam brings a wealth of experience having grown up in the Jane and Finch community, working as a teacher, and deeply involved in community initiatives.

 

Most importantly, he will be a welcoming face in our programs.  He will begin on Monday, January 19th and will be reachable through s.tecle@successbl.com as of Monday.

successblSam Tecle – New SBL Team Member
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