Nominations are now open for the
Commonwealth Youth Worker Awards 2016, which will recognise youth workers who
utilise sport and arts programmes to engage and empower young people across the
Commonwealth.
The Commonwealth Youth Worker Awards
celebrate the positive impact of youth workers on young people’s lives, their
communities and their societies. Youth workers can be found in a broad range of
civil society and voluntary organisations as well as government ministries and
youth departments.
Past awardees have worked with at-risk
youth, in grassroots organisations, civil society organisations, in schools and
youth clubs and also in senior levels of government.
The awards scheme was launched in 2013
as part of Commonwealth Youth Work Week, an annual
initiative by the Commonwealth Secretariat that highlights the contribution and
achievements of youth work, youth workers, and youth organisations throughout
the 53 Commonwealth member countries.
The theme for Commonwealth Youth Work
Week 2016 is ‘Empowering young people
through sport and arts’, acknowledging the intentional use by youth workers
of sport, and creative and innovative techniques, to deliver effective youth
empowerment programmes. As young people participate in these programmes, they
build personal, social and intellectual capacities that enhance their
contribution in the home, school, community, country and the wider world.
The nominations period will close on 31 August 2016, after which finalists
will be shortlisted from each Commonwealth region - Africa, Asia, the Caribbean
and Americas, Europe, and the Pacific – with Youth Worker of the Year named for
each region.
As part of an awards ceremony in London
on 10 November 2016, the overall Commonwealth Youth Worker of the Year,
drawn from the regional winners, will be named. The 2015 Commonwealth Youth
Worker of the Year was Victor Ochen of Uganda, founder of the African Youth
Initiative Network and a former Nobel Peace Prize Nominee.
If you know a youth worker who is doing
great work using sport or the arts, then nominate them by completing the
official form, available at commonwealth-youthworkers.awardsplatform.com/
Nominations will be assessed according
to:
- Impact on young people’s lives - evidence of how the youth worker has made an impact on the lives of young people
- Impact on the wider community - the impact the youth worker’s intervention had on the community and families
- Quality of their interventions - evidence of the use of youth work principles, methods and sustainable approaches
- Innovation and learning – evidence of creativity in overcoming the challenges of delivery and in application of youth work theory
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