Monday, November 5, 2007

Photography project puts alternative education students on a “Natural Buzz”


Agape Trust Alternative Education student Tahae Ruroa gets
his Natural Buzz from diving, surfing and taking on new challenges.


“We view this project as a good opportunity to showcase the great outcomes that are happening in the lives of these young people.”
Agape Trust Manager, Steve Reid

A group of alternative education students in Aranui are using photographs to tell the community about the positive things in their lives that develop character and build resilience.

PhotoVoice Otautahi is a joint project of Agape Trust’s alternative education programme and community action team CAYAD Otautahi.

The project has seen 12 young people gathering images from their lives and environments that represent the theme “Natural Buzz”.

Steve Reid, Manager Agape Trust, says he views the project as a good opportunity to showcase the “great outcomes” that are happening in the lives of these young people.

“We want to show our youth in a positive light. Yes, they do have bad moments in life but that does not define who they are. The positive things they do need also to be taken into account,” Reid says.

“For most of the kids who come into alternative education, their social and behavioural issues are so big they just can’t concentrate in class. We try to be an extension of their whanau by providing the affirmation they just can’t get at mainstream schools.”

CAYAD (Community Action – Youth and Drugs) coordinator Leanne McTear says the project focuses on the alternatives to drug use, those things that give a “natural buzz”.

“By focusing on the positive activities that give young people a ‘natural buzz’, we are more likely to increase their involvement in these positive activities, thereby decreasing drug/alcohol use, while increasing their sense of self worth and pride.

“The actual exhibition is fantastic, and it is amazing to see the pride on the faces of the young people. People who have seen the exhibition so far have been incredibly impressed, with the quality and content of the photographs. Many have requested that the exhibition travel throughout the communities of Christchurch.”

Reid says an important part of the programme is exposing students to healthy, positive interests – activities that capture their attention, imagination, and passion.

“Ultimately, we’re after attitude change and delivering an education based on the kids attaining greater insight and understanding of life and the options and choices they have. With each kid, we look for the open door in their life and once we find it, we put something that can grow in there,” Reid says.

Students who were struggling to make progress in mainstream schooling often advance to NCEA papers after joining Agape, a change Reid attributes to the “aroha, support, belief, and guidelines” provided by the programme’s tutors.

Reid: “Often this is part of what they need to help them settle down and get on with the job of learning.”

CAYAD project worker Michael Herman says the strong support the project has attracted exemplifies the spirit of community action.

“Community action would be impossible without the generosity of companies like H.E. Perry Ltd, Photo & Video International, VFL Finance Limited, and Barron Surfboards. Their support has given voice to a group of young people who are trying to overcome the challenges of economic and social exclusion,” Herman says.

“PhotoVoice is both a development opportunity for them and an opportunity for members of the public to question popular stereotypes.”

The PhotoVoice process has been shown to increase participation, build capability, and orient young people and communities, he says.

“After taking the photos, the young people meet and talk about what the images represent in their lives. These discussions help consolidate their thinking and provide the narrative for the exhibition,” Herman says.

“The process and the visual outputs themselves are a proven way to broaden and deepen conversation on pressing issues like illicit drug use. And when communities start talking about their problems, they’ve already taken the first step to sorting them out.”

You can check out the exhibtion online at http://naturalbuzz.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Major Turnaround for University of Canterbury Rugby Football Club Senior Division 1 Team



“They’ve surpassed all my expectations this year. A plate win would be fantastic – especially against a strong team like Christchurch.”
– UCRFC Senior Division 1 Team Manager, Andy Hill

University of Canterbury Rugby Football Club Senior Division 1 Team is piling on the pressure, bouncing back from a lackluster period to battle with Christchurch Football Club in the plate final.

The revived squad has fought its way to the top of their table, beating Christchurch Football Club two weeks ago after seven gloomy years of losses to the team.

Senior Division 1 manager Andy Hill says the prospect of snatching the plate away from Christchurch on Saturday is sweet but that either way he us thrilled with his team’s improved performance, which has seen it end on top in five out of the last six games after a winless start to the season.

“They’ve surpassed all my expectations this year. A plate win would be fantastic – especially against a strong team like Christchurch,” Hill says.

The turnaround coincides with the introduction of a team performance agreement mediated by CAYAD (Community Action – Youth and Drugs) Otautahi. Hill says the string of wins is no coincidence, though.

The process has strengthened the team, inspiring players to change negative behaviours like excessive alcohol consumption, he says.

Alcohol reduces the body’s ability to convert food to energy. It also causes carbohydrate/blood sugar levels to drop. Add these effects to the inevitable dehydration and build-up of lactic acids that happen when you drink alcohol, and performance dives while the chance of damaging on-field physiological reactions like muscle cramps soars.

“Before we introduced the team performance agreement the guys used to be down at the clubrooms every Saturday night drinking beer. Now I struggle to get them there,” Hill says.

“And behaviour has changed on the field as well. There’s a lot more discipline within the team and the guys know they can trust each other just that little bit more.”

Thursday, August 9, 2007

"Like a ripple in the community"


Associate Health Minister Jim Anderton congratulates CAYAD Otautahi
logo competition winner, Hannah Barnes.


“Hannah’s visual concept represents precisely how CAYAD works – ideas starting in communities which with support and community participation can grow into real change and have a positive impact on the issue of youth and drugs.”

14-year-old Middleton Grange schoolgirl Hannah Barnes has won a graphic art competition to produce a logo for community action project CAYAD Otautahi.

CAYAD Otautahi is part of a Ministry of Health funded initiative that works to reduce drug-related harm to young people and their communities through community action initiatives.

One of 27 CAYAD sites around the country, CAYAD Otautahi supports Christchurch community groups that are trying to address issues around youth and drugs.

The competition had an excellent response of high quality submissions and was open to all young people in Christchurch under the age of 25, says CAYAD Otautahi coordinator Leanne McTear.

“They obviously put a lot of thought into their entries but Hannah’s visual concept represents precisely how CAYAD works. To use her words: like a ripple in the community,”’ says McTear.

“That’s just how we work – nurturing and supporting ideas that come from within communities to grow participation and help focus it into real change that has a positive impact on the issue of youth and drugs,” McTear says.

Chair of the Ministerial Committee overseeing the National Drug Policy and Associate Health Minister Jim Anderton says CAYAD programmes are the best way for drug issues to be identified and dealt with at the local level.

“CAYADs make a very important contribution to helping positive social change in our communities,” says Anderton. “CAYADs focus on strengthening communities. Drugs will not flourish in active communities where everyone has a stake.”

Barnes won an ipod nano donated by Christchurch City Council. Runner-up Amanda Penman received $100 in vouchers.

Vehicle leasing specialists VFL Finance donated the cost of having the logo sign written onto the CAYAD car to help increase the project’s visibility in the community.

VFL Finance spokesman Jason Donnithorne says the company recognises the value of community action initiatives and is eager to support CAYAD get off the ground and on to the road.

"The CAYAD car is a moving billboard that will be effective in raising awareness and reinforcing the CAYAD Otautahi objectives as the team moves around the city,” Donnithorne says.