Thursday, December 18, 2014

December Youth Champion - Alice Weber

Each month The Real MCCOY will be shining a spotlight on hard working Youth Development
Professionals and the great work they and their organizations do. This month’s interview is with the Ransburg YMCA’s Alice Weber. Like YMCAs across the nation the Ransburg’s mission is to put Christian principles into practice through programs that build healthy spirit, mind, and body for all. Check out the interview below to learn more about Alice Weber and her work with the YMCA:

1)    Why did you want to go into this line of work?
This began as a part time job. I have a passion for working with kids. So when I first came into town with my young children working at the YMCA presented an opportunity where I could work with kids and spend time with my own. Eventually my position grew and I had the opportunity to do more and more.

(her)I started out working part time at YMCA. I was new in town and had young children and working had opportunity to bring them with me and it expanded from there. I have a passion for working with kids. Have a passion for working with kids. And working at the YMCA gave me a chance to do that. Eventually my position grew and allowed me the opportunity to do more.

2)    What was your first day on the job like?
It was exciting. I was working with six to twelve year olds and I had to figure out how to interact with children in this age group. My children were young so I had no experience with children in this age group. Since then I’ve been able to grow, and gained more experience. The more time I spend with children, the better I can understand them and their development. With kids, you never know what each day will be like. You can organize an entire day, and may not go according to plan.

3)    What is most rewarding about your job?
It is the opportunity to make an impact on so many lives. Outside of this position I wouldn’t have this opportunity. I work with kids ages six weeks to eighteen years old, and it is a lot of fun.  There is one youth I have known since he was 8 years old. I followed him through high school, and then attended his first college football game. I can step in and fill role of adoptive parent and I can be positive person in their lives. I can be a parental figure, but I don’t have to be the one who has to say no.

4)    What is the most challenging part of your job?

One of the challenges I face is not having the resources to do the activities I would like to do. Dealing with teenagers and their attitudes is also challenging. They’re a little headstrong and it’s their way to do things. They have to learn the hard way.

5)    How has MCCOY helped your organization succeeded or grow?
I have only recently learned about MCCOY. I would like to get more involved with the organization based on what I’ve read. It seems like an amazing opportunity and partnership.

6)    Where do you see yourself and your organization in five years?

I hope that I am impacting more youth and that I am able to expand some of our programs in the community in order to make impact on more youth. This past spring we started a man-to-man mentoring group for boys thirteen and up. We have a group of boys who regularly attend and we want to expand this group into the community to have bigger impact. And even though it is a male mentoring group I still like to support and help with the group.

We’d like to thank Ms. Weber for taking the time to answer our questions. For more information about the Ransburg YMCA check out their website: http://www.indymca.org/centers/ransburg/center-news/.

Monday, December 15, 2014

Creating Creativity

Written by Leon Golden

Creativity is becoming a major key to success in today's workplace. Many modern careers require employees to step outside the confines of their formal education, and embrace a more interdisciplinary approach to problem solving. Unfortunately, the innate creativity and curiosity of childhood is generally squelched by the time the child reaches adulthood. Many have made the observation that formal educational systems worldwide were designed for industrial societies. Education author and speaker Ken Robinson has said that “our education system has mined our minds in the way that we strip-mine the earth: for a particular commodity.” So the question is posed here, how can we foster creativity in ourselves and in our children?

Rather than yielding to despair, let's be creative and take a more divergent path; where we are is often the framework within which we must work.

•    Emphasize the process, not the product. It's increasingly important that people be taught not what to think, but rather how to think.
•    Encourage exploration and play. Engaging an individual's innate curiosity aids in the development of the mind and imagination.
•    Be observant of the world and nature. Encouraging thoughtful observation helps develop capacity for divergent thinking by making connections that may not initially be obvious.
•    Encourage reading. Studies have shown that reading fiction helps to expand the reader's imagination; reading nonfiction helps to broaden the reader's perspective of the world.

While not an exhaustive list, these ideas will help to exercise the "creativity muscle" in our brains. Research in neuroscience and cognitive psychology has shown that the brain is highly plastic and can change for the better, regardless of age. While a child's impressionable mind is easier to form, we can all benefit by fostering an environment of creativity, curiosity, and wonder.