Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Staff Spotlight: Maria Gandarilla Awarded at CSULB

Maria Gandarilla, Youth Institute Alumni, Y Staff

Named Outstanding Graduate of the Year by the School of Health and Human Services at California State University Long Beach

Maria Gandarilla, Youth Institute Class of 2004, was named the Outstanding Graduate of the Year by California State University faculty this March, 2011. This honor was bestowed on Maria at a special ceremony held at CSULB. Maria has grown up at our Community Development YMCA. She and her family participated in our JCPP program back in the late 90’s. She was a part of our CORAL after school programs ten years ago and was a part of our Youth Institute from 2004 to present day. Maria went to CSULB to study Social Work. She gets her undergraduate degree BSW this May and will go into the MSW program at CSULB this fall.

We are so proud of Maria’s accomplishments and wish to extend our congratulations to another one of the YMCA Youth Institute success stories during the past ten years. You are a part of our YMCA family and will always have a place here at our YMCA!

By Bob Cabeza (VP, Community Development)

Change Agent Productions Builds The Children's Institute's Technology Lab

Change Agent Production's recently finished building a new technology lab for The Children’s Institute in Los Angeles. The Children’s Institute wanted to build a technology lab for their under-served community where youth can come and create digital media pieces. Everything from music, graphics, short films, photography and much more! Change Agent Productions helped in designing the lab, purchasing the equipment and setting up all the computers. There was a lot of hard work and planning on both ends of this project and the pay off will affect many of Los Angeles' youth. For more pictures of the project visit our Change Agent Productions website: www.changeagentsproductions.org/node/541

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

AAUW STEM Career Conference Field Trip

My name is Samantha, I am an 8th Grader at Burcham K-8 School. On Friday, February 26, 2010. I went on a field trip with my YMCA/WRAP After School Program to Long Beach City College (Liberal Arts Campus) for the annual AAUW (American Association of University Women) STEM Career Conference. I had a great experience. Before we went on the field trip, we had to fill out a paper and choose which career workshops we were interested in. There were so many choices to make. The choices were architect, banker, chemical engineer, computer programmer, coroner, horticulturist, marine biologist, and public health nurse. I had to pick my top three I wanted. I picked coroner, chemical engineer and marine biologist. The conference was in the new building at LBCC. When we arrived to LBCC, there were many different girls attending from different schools. There were a lot of middle school girls and also high school girls.

In the beginning, we all went into the main building we listened to a keynote speaker. She was talking to us about what she did and that she had a very challenging life growing up and that she was not ashamed to tell us girls her story. She told us that she had a boyfriend that was a gang member and he got her pregnant and it messed up her life. She shared that she really wanted to finish her education. She said she was no longer with her gang member boyfriend and she finally did graduate from Cal State Dominguez. Her story meant something to me because she went through a lot of challenges but she pushed forward to finish her school and go on to finish college. I want to finish high school, go to college and accomplish my goals. She told us not to give up, to finish college and not to hang out with street boys or have boyfriends in high school. We should focus on school and achieve all goals.

The two workshops I attended were the chemical engineer and the coroner ones. Chemical engineering was a fun experience because I always thought that the factory would be harmful to us. The speaker was one of the employees of the factory and she told us why she works there. One reason she told us when she was a kid she wanted to create make –up and the perfect acne product. After she told us how the factory works, she then had us do an experiment that was so fun but slimy. We made some type of goo that is easy to make at home. The Coroner has a job that you have to have guts for to do. I would try to handle the job but the lady that was our teacher had courage. The fist step to take care of the dead body is that she has to check how did that person die. Second step if their friend or someone in the car survives they have to put their name on the toe tag. There are different types of death like suicide, murder, and overdose. I enjoyed the coroner a lot because I didn’t know that there was a coroner I thought that the police or ambulance paramedics took care of dead people. It really opened my eyes that people there are people in charge of just finding out how people die. The coroner was very funny and I learned a lot from her.

Both of the subjects that I attended were fun and I can’t pick a favorite. I learned so much from and I loved it. This experience gave me ideas on what kind of career I can have. It was an experience I will not forget.

For more information on AAUW, visit their website: www.aauw.org

Written By Samantha T.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Change Agent Productions Keynotes at 21st Century Learning Centers Conference in Alaska

Change Agents was asked to Keynote this year at the 21st Century Learning Centers Conference in Juneau, Alaska! It was a great opportunity for the Change Agent staff to go up north and tell their story to all of the conference attendees. Here is the link to the photos from the trip. www.changeagentsproductions.org/node/440

Monday, March 7, 2011

2011 Campaign Victory Dinner


March 3, 2011 YMCA of Greater Long Beach met once again at the Sycamore Centre in Lakewood, CA to share successes of this years campaign. The night was opened up by our very own Angel Ramirez. Angel has been a part of the Community Development YMCA since 1st grade. He is a Youth Institute graduate/alumni and was recently accepted to Cal State University Long Beach. The night continued with inspirational stories from all the branch leaders highlighting where all the donations end up. Bob Cabeza, VP of Community Development, shared about Maria Gandarilla, also a youth institute alumni, who recently received the award for most outstanding student of the year for the College of Health and Human Services at CSULB. All the stories were inspiring and left a feeling of success whether or not goals were met. The night ended with a video produced by Change Agent Productions which put a spotlight on all the hard work the association put forth.

Monday, February 28, 2011

CDYMCALB Highlighted in the March 2011 Y-USA International Group Newsletter

Story Text:
Global Program Ideas
World Service Fundraising and Education month long event led by Long Beach YMCA
During the month of November, the Community Development YMCA Branch in Downtown Long Beach organized a series of events that raised awareness of and financial support for World Service. It also provided time for families to get together and interact with each other while learning about the challenges and work of YMCA's in other countries . All of the events began with a PowerPoint that included pictures of YMCA's in other countries. Families were surprised and inspired to know that there were YMCA programs in their countries of origin. Following the PowerPoint presentation, the YMCA organized a series of events. Some of the events included a Bingo Night, a potluck with parents bringing their favorite dish from their country of origin and family nights with students creating mini presentations for the audience about the work of a specific country's YMCA. All of these events turned out to be extremely successful. The youth raised more than $800 and developed new connections of understanding and friendship within their community. They look forward to another successful World Service Campaign in 2011. Participate in our upcoming webinar to learn about the Long Beach approach to World Service and share your ideas in March.

Project headed by Al Rodriguez, Associate Program Director (Al.Rodriguez@lbymca.org)

For more info on YMCA World Service visit: www.ymca.net/world-service

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

After School Professional Development

On Monday, February 21, 2011, after school programs in Long Beach were closed in observance of Washington’s birthday. The Community Development branch took this opportunity to provide sixteen of our newest staff with training in the areas of Youth Development, Child Development, and Behavior Management. The staff were introduced to the Community Network for Youth Development model and participated in exercises designed to highlight the importance of the messages we send to our youth on a daily basis. The group then broke out into teams and assessed the current culture of Youth Development at their sites, discussing how to take the site from good to great!

After a short break, the staff came back together and explored the developmental theories of Erik Erikson and Jean Piaget, identifying how the work from these two theorists is relevant to our school-age programming. Following that, the staff worked in grade-level teams identifying both developmental markers for the age groups they work with and age-appropriate enrichment activities connected to state content standards. The workshop ended with a solution-driven conversation focused on responding to challenging behaviors. By the end of the three-hour session, everyone had the opportunity to learn something new, share a strategy that has been successful for them, and network with fellow after school colleagues!

By: Mark Marano, After School Program Coordinator/CASDP Director