Friday, June 10, 2011

Celebrating 10 Years of the Youth Institute

On May 26th 150 very important guests attended the Youth Institute 10 Year Celebration Dinner at the Grand in Long Beach. The dinner was hosted by the Youth Institute Alumni, with Phyras Men as the Committee Leader and Leo Salcido as the Master of Ceremonies. The night began with great entertainment from three very talented Youth Institute Alums, Johnny Romero on guitar, Nicole Gutierrez on violin and Ben Falealili performing his Spoken Word piece. Then we gave out awards to our supporters who stuck with us over the years such as Alan Hostrup. Ralph Hurtado and Sally Lew. We also gave awards to our long time financial supporters such as the California Emerging Technology Foundation, ZeroDivide, the California Consumer Protection Foundation, the Beneventures Foundation, Brian Kariger, Marilyn Bohl and Southern California Edison. We want to especially thank the Jeanne Giovannoni Trust for her generous donation for this event. But most of all we wanted to honor our Youth and Alumni who grew up out of the Youth Institute but always find ways to give back. A huge thanks to the YI Alumni Committee for putting on a flawless and professional celebration that the next group will have a hard time matching at the fifteen year event!! Click here to view the photos .

Thursday, June 2, 2011

CALSAC 2011

During this Years California School-Age Consortium (or CalSAC) we had 5 youth go to the Capitol Building in Sacramento to advocate for Afterschool programs. Our youth met with other students and advocates from all across the state of California. They shared conversation and ideas on how they can spread the word of keeping Afterschool programs funded in our communities. The youth then had the chance to meet with Legislators and spread their word right to the source. It was a great success and the youth are all looking forward to next year. Click here to view the pics!

Battle of the Bands 3

The Youth Institute hosted its 3rd Annual Battle of the Bands, high school bands were selected to duke it out in a very intense competition held at the Scottish Rite Cathedral Theater. Georgia Terminal, Twin Pines, The Anachronisms, and 3rd Perspective all put on their game faces to play a fifteen-minute set each that evening. Along with the competing bands, we had three very special guest performers, Fox Hollow, JL, which includes our very own alumni Leslie and John, and The Marital, which includes alumni, Kevin, Matt, and Nick. With the support of our alumni, the bands, and our community, we raised over $3000 for our YMCA and Youth Institute. Special thanks to Zumiez for supporting the event and State Farm Insurance for co-sponsoring our event! Their generosity led to a fun-filled raffle. The grand raffle prize, a new Macbook, was the ultimate showstopper! Three hours of inspiring music, fun giveaways, endless amounts of laughing and screaming, our third Battle of the Bands was no less than successful. Our packed house with over 400 guests attending the event gave us a reason to prepare for our next Battle of the Bands! Click here to view all of the photos.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Youth Institute/CAP at NAYDO 2011


Wed., April 27th – Sat., April 30th

Growing up we are usually taught to give three words that describes a significant event. I believe that I took away more than three simple words. I took back experience itself as well as life-long motivation. NAYDO is designed to, well, in a lack of better words, to get “the know” or find what’s “in” I was able to see so many people around the world who’s motives were to better their community by either establishing a program for the youth and elderly or taking what they learn back to their programs and continue building from there. Although I was one of the youngest attendees present I felt even more compelled to be a part of this event for years to come.

On Tuesday night we arrived at the Marriot hotel in Anaheim, California expecting to jump into the comfortable beds provided by the hotel. Instead we were told to sort and write inventory of the equipment. The technology that was packed into our room became important to the conference as I soon realized. Roughly an hour later everything was set and batteries where charging. The only thing we had to do was get some rest, because at 7:30 AM we had to be dressed and ready for the conference.

Even before the conference we were meeting people from other YMCAs during breakfast. I personally met a program coordinator from Stockton, California. Within twenty minutes we were introduced to the CEO and Vice President of the YMCA of Mexico City. I didn’t realize what we had gotten ourselves into. Besides Bob, we were all under the age of 25, but very willing to meet and greet with important people. Although we were told that we would be meeting important figures, in a way I felt that they were coming to meet us.

As an exhibitor I and the other interns of Change Agents managed the exhibit that show cased what we had done and the services we could provide for other YMCAs who were interested in our work. Many recognized our unique logo and cheerful, youthful, looks from the brochures that greeted there office weeks prior to the conference. We were greeted by people saying, “Yeah, I saw the flyer!” or “I just had to come by and learn more.” After blushing a little, it was time to get down to business; get them interested, but not holding their time to long ,and getting straight to the point. Surprisingly my peers and I quickly adapted to this environment easily with hardly a dull moment. I found that working with someone is a lot easier than jumping into a river by myself. We were able to feed off of each other making the conversation easier. We learned the difficulties of marketing a product and the importance of having or building abilities to network with people in hopes for them to come seeking for more. Many were impressed by the work that we were doing in Long Beach, but they were more impressed by our ages. Someone said that they simply were drawn to your booth because it felt like we were the freshest in the room. That made me laugh a little, but it showed that liveliness and presentation was as important. Besides shaking hands we were also in charge of gathering photos of the conference that would be shown the following evening. Many of us recorded footage and even got a few to shout “NAYDO rocks!!” which was one of the highlights of the conference. The work was rigorous, but for the staff that stayed up late at night to finish projects, it was all worth it. The products were beautiful and the crowd was pleased.

We were also allowed to dine with the conference and enjoy each key-note speaker each night. My most memorable experiences I had during those evening was watching Father Boyle deliver a breathtaking and eye watering speech that had everyone in the room simply moved. Beside his poetic dissertation and his heart felt stories of the kids he works with every day, he was still able to embody the importance of kinship and compassion. Every key-note speaker brought something new and unique to the podium and truly gave the audience a sense of urge to give and give to their communities the information they had taken form NAYDO.

I do hope that in the near future I could re-live my experiences I shared with my colleges here at NAYDO.


To see pictures of this event click here


Written by:

Dasire’e P. (Youth Institute Student)

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Youth Institute San Fransisco Trip 2011


Change Agents & The Youth Institute Just got back from San Francisco and it was awesome! Visited Apple Inc. where we actually got and Executive Briefing from the Apple Dream Team Engineers. Visited the East Palo Alto YMCA Youth Institute where we did a screening of our movies, played B-Ball and climbed their wall! And last, we toured the city from the Haunted Fort Mason youth Hostel. That place ROCKS! Check out the pics!

Monday, May 2, 2011

Youth Institute 10th Year Anniversary Celebration

You are invited to our 10th Year Youth Institute Anniversary Celebration. Join us for dinner and presentations to celebrate a program like no other. Hear the stories, engage with the youth and meet our funders. RSVP to Bob Cabeza: bob.cabeza@lbymca.org

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Long Beach Police Chief McDonald Visits Youth Institute

Long Beach Police Chief McDonald Visits Youth Institute - Our new Police Chief McDonald visited our Youth Institute on March 30th and had an open dialogue with our Teens about their perceptions of police in general and the police side of the story. Chief McDonald was both factual, caring, and inspirational to our Teens letting them know how police can better interact with them and how they can help the police. It was inspiring to hear that Office McDonald is a first generation American from Ireland who grew up in a poor family. "He can relate" was a comment from one of our teens.