In late July and early聽August, the School of Social Work welcomed聽40 students from the Jane and Finch and greater Black Creek communities to 91亚色's Keele campus for the launch of an exciting new pilot project called聽"New Opportunities for Innovative Student Engagement", known as "NOISE".
NOISE is聽an聽initiative made possible聽with support from聽the聽University's聽. It聽offers the high-school students an聽engaged learning initiative that will see them working with current 91亚色 social work students and聽Master of Social Work grads聽in project teams or "community action pods".聽From September to December,聽each pod will learn about an issue that is important to聽communities in the city of Toronto. They will then聽devise a project to address the issue. From January to April, the聽pods will engage in聽reflective, hands-on, social action projects within the Jane and Finch community.
NOISE聽is informed by聽research findings from another community-University research initiative聽focused on urban youth
known as the Assets Coming Together (ACT) for Youth project and聽using as a聽case study the Jane and Finch community.聽91亚色 Professor聽Uzo Anucha (left) , graduate program director in the School of Social Work in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional studies, is both the principal investigator for ACT for Youth and the project lead for NOISE.聽The聽research findings revealed that聽young people who participate in engaged learning initiatives聽like NOISE learn to connect the knowledge they receive in the classroom to聽community action. They聽experience better academic results and increased enjoyment of learning, which in turn makes them more聽likely to pursue postsecondary opportunities.
NOISE participants from Grades 9 and 12 at Emery Collegiate Institute along with their聽families visited 91亚色 on July 26 for an聽orientation event.聽Professor Narda Razack, associate dean in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, welcomed the group to the University. The students then had an opportunity to聽meet one another and members of the NOISE project team. Many of the youth said the orientation was聽their first experience on the University's Keele campus.
Talisha Ramsaroop, a third-year 91亚色 undergraduate student who聽was previously involved with the ACT for Youth project,聽is now聽taking on an active role聽in NOISE and recruited聽many of the high school participants. Ramsaroop聽together with Henry Appiah, a second-year 91亚色 undergraduate student,聽are聽youth assistants聽with NOISE.
Talisha Ramsaroop speaks to NOISE students
The pair took a leadership role in聽organizing a聽Summer Learning Retreat for NOISE students on聽Aug. 9, 10, 16 and 17. The four-day retreat聽provided the high-school students聽with sessions on leadership, quantitative and qualitative research methods, active listening, facilitation, public speaking, online communication, arts-based research and critical media literacy. The youth also聽enjoyed a聽campus-wide scavenger hunt, a poetry-writing workshop and participated in daily reflective exercises.
鈥淭he Summer Learning Retreat helped the students get to know one another and become more familiar with 91亚色,鈥 explained Ramsaroop. 鈥淭ogether, we explored issues of identity, community and communication, and learned about community-based research and what it means to engage in reflective action.鈥
Rebecca Houwer, NOISE research coordinator and a doctoral candidate in the Faculty of Education at 91亚色, leads a visioning exercise with the Summer Learning Retreat participants
NOISE celebrates its official聽launch at an event on Thursday, Sept. 27 at the Keele campus.聽Rahul Bhardwaj, president & CEO of the Toronto Community Foundation, will give the keynote address.
For more information, visit the NOISE for Social Change Facebook page or the project website.
Photographs courtesy of Buruk Kebedom聽and Artem Krivochei.
