Job Posting
Eisen, Norman L.
nleisen at zuckerman.com
Mon Apr 2 14:37:21 EDT 2001
Job Posting
Associate Director
Kids Computer Workshop
Kids Computer Workshop (KCW) is an after-school enrichment program for
at-risk youth in the District of Columbia. We create safe, supportive
places where at-risk students learn technology skills and receive academic
tutoring from caring adult staff and volunteers. We work with over 300 kids
per year at our three sites in schools and community groups, and we are
growing rapidly.
We are seeking an ambitious social entrepreneur with a background in
education/youth development, who has a strong desire to work with children,
schools and the community to close the academic and digital divides in
District of Columbia. We are looking for an
individual who is prepared to make an immediate and lasting impact on our
operations. Candidate should be flexible and have the ability to balance
multiple projects.
Responsibilities include but are not limited to: assist the Executive
Director in the day to day operations of the program; teach and tutor
children; and develop and manage relationships with existing and future
community partners, parents, students, schools and volunteers.
Teachers are strongly encouraged to apply. Salary is highly competitive,
commensurate with experience. Full benefits provided.
If you are interested please contact:
Darin Kenley
Executive Director
Kids Computer Workshop
Kcwdk at aol.com
Phone:202.483.8404
Fax:202.318.3232
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<p><p>-----Original Message-----
From: Pam Mcketa [mailto:pmcketa at MORINO.ORG]
Sent: Tuesday, February 20, 2001 5:15 PM
To: YOUTHLEARN at LISTSERV.MORINO.ORG
Subject: Re: (event) Ground Hog Job Shadow Day
<p>These are great points. Leah and Dan both make the case for how important
job shadowing days/activities are to youths, especially in low income areas.
Lon's original post, from a teacher's perspective, recommends that these
type of special events be reserved for the summer.
I like how this discussion highlights how important out-of-school programs
are for rounding out what kids learn outside of school hours and outside of
the K-12 curriculum. Whether that learning is taking place after school, on
the weekends, during the summer, during school breaks...
(By the way, the chart that Dan refers to is on their web site under "best
practices")
Pam
__________________________________
Pam McKeta, Interactive Media Producer
Morino Institute, http://www.morino.org
YouthLearn, http://www.youthlearn.org
The Morino Institute's mission is to stimulate entrepreneurship, advance a
more effective philanthropy, close social divides and understand the
relationship and impact of the Internet on our society.
-----Original Message-----
From: Youthlearn Discussion Forum
[mailto:YOUTHLEARN at LISTSERV.MORINO.ORG]On Behalf Of Dan Bassill
Sent: Tuesday, February 20, 2001 4:26 PM
To: YOUTHLEARN at LISTSERV.MORINO.ORG
Subject: Re: (event) Ground Hog Job Shadow Day
<p>At the www.tutormentorconnection.org we show a chart that looks like a
wheel. The "hub" represents a child. It shows a timeline that starts on the
left with preschool and ends on the right with "career". Above the timeline
is a circle that represents the 9-3pm time each day a child spends in
school. Below the time line are two circles, representing the 3-5pm hours
and after 5pm hours.
The spokes lead out to each of the 16 career tracks which youth might aspire
to (retailing, finance, education, health care, arts/culture/religion, etc).
Our goal is to recruit mentors from each of these spokes to become part of
an on-going process that exposes youth to more career aspirations than a
poverty neighborhood normally offers, and who become people who are
advocates, coaches, tutors, (and funders) of programs and schools where the
mentors and youth connect.
It is the on-going exposure to various career opportunities which influence
youth. The more choices, the more likely one will match a child's natural
talent and expectations. In poverty areas there are too few positive choces
and too many negative career paths.
In such a process, we'd have job shadowding every day, not just one day a
year.
Dan Bassill
President
Cabrini Connections
Tutor/Mentor Connection
Chicago
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in your efforts to make a difference in the lives and potential of young
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YouthLearn (http://www.youthlearn.org) brings together youth professionals
to share information on using technology as part of learning, especially in
out-of-school programs. YouthLearn is a service of the Morino Institute,
a nonprofit organization (http://www.morino.org). We hope this list assists you
in your efforts to make a difference in the lives and potential of young people.
Tips:
· To post a message to this group, send an email to
mailto:youthlearn at listserv.morino.org
· To unsubscribe from this group (either temporarily or
permanently) or to receive YouthLearn in digest form, go to
http://www.youthlearn.org/join/subscriber.html
· To search the YouthLearn archives, go to
http://LISTSERV.morino.org/youthlearn.html
· To contact the list facilitator, send an email to
mailto:pmcketa at morino.org
Be sure to visit http://www.youthlearn.org.
We are adding content all the time!
The Youthlearn discussion forum is powered by L-Soft's LISTSERV(R) software.
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