The Young Leader

  • GLA Program Blogs
  • Gamechangers
  • Newsletters
  • About The Young Leader

August 18, 2016 by The Young Leader

5 Reasons to Add Coasteering to Your Summer Plans

coasteering

Are you familiar with what coasteering is? Well, you’re about to be! Coasteering is an incredibly exciting summer activity for teens. In fact, you might already do something similar without even knowing it. If you’re looking for a neat way to spend your summer with friends and family, coasteering is something you should absolutely experience. But first, here’s a quick look at what it is!

What is Coasteering?

It’s basically a trip along any rocky coast. It includes, but doesn’t have to be limited to, climbing, swimming, and jumping. One key component is the opportunity to explore marine life along the intertidal zone. In essence, though, coasteering is a coastline adventure without a boat, canoe, or kayak.

So why is it perfect for teens? Here are five great reasons coasteering is the perfect addition to your summer plans.

It Appeals to the Adventurer Inside

If you like adventures, then you’re sure to find one in coasteering. It takes the very best of what adventures should include – climbing, hiking, traversing, swimming, and jumping into deep water – and throws them all together in one epic experience.

It Challenges Your Comfort Zone

A little scared of heights but love the thrill and sense of accomplish you feel after conquering your fear? Coasteering offers the perfect opportunity to press your limits without exceeding them. If jumping into the ocean from a rock 20 feet in the air seems too extreme, you can opt for a 10-foot jump or skip the dive completely.

It’s a Great Team-building Activity

Love working with others? Coasteering provides a social element that isn’t found in most other sports and activities. Helping hands and boosts create a sense of togetherness that’s hard to forget once the trip is over. In fact, many people wear action cameras, like a GoPro, so they can record the experience and visit it again later.

It Gets You in Shape

Coasteering is an incredibly fun, and sometimes challenging, physical activity. You’ll have to move and explore the coast in new ways, sometimes utilizing muscles you haven’t used much before. The functional fitness required to boulder, hike, climb, and jump is great and these skills are absolutely transferable to other areas of your athletic life. Further, these help you build strong upper and lower body muscles, as well as develop a strong core. So if you’ve got a big family beach trip coming up or plan to participate in fall sports, coasteering can help prepare you.

It Offers the Opportunity for Learning

In addition to all the fun, there’s educational value in coasteering as well. Coastlines are often neglected as educational opportunities in favor of tourism during the summers. However, you can learn so much about geography, rock formations, marine and animal life, and other scientific topics while on your coasteering adventure.


Contributed by Amanda Vosloh Bowyer

Filed Under: Be Bold!, Latest Posts

August 18, 2016 by The Young Leader

Ten Reasons Why a Ten Day Program Overseas is Perfect for an Adventurous (But Busy!) High School Student

4

For some, summer is right around the corner and for others it has already begun. It’s a time to have fun with friends, relax, and do the other of millions of things already planned. While you might be in summer school, going on a family vacation, or working, there is still time to go overseas and travel. GLA’s ten-day program is perfect for busy students like you and here’s why!

1. Adventure

We all have a bit of curiosity to see the world and travel into the unknown. This short trip is just long enough to give a taste of what traveling is and where you might want to go next when you have more time.

2. Life Skills

In those ten days you’ll gain a variety of skills that are helpful in everyday life. From working with others, to leadership, and problem solving – to embracing fears of heights, public speaking, or bugs – you’ll learn a lot!

3. Environment

While abroad you’ll learn about other cultures and how other people live. You’ll also learn how to be sustainable in day-to-day life, not only in that country but also here at home. These are skills that can be applied to daily life.

4. Join a community

In the time spent in this new country, you’ll not only immerse yourself in a new culture, but you’ll also become part of the community. You’ll make connections with the locals – feel like part of their family. You may even want to go back!

5. New Interests

As you go abroad, you’ll find passions you never knew you had. It could be a sport like soccer or perhaps a future career choice like becoming a doctor or an environmentalist. In the short time spent, you’ll learn what you really like and what you don’t.

6. Lifelong Friendships

Even though you’re only on the trip for ten days, the people you go with will become your life long friends. You’ll be spending time with students just like you, but from all over. They’ll quickly turn into your best friends on the trip and those you can grow old and grey with.

7. Independence

This is a time where you’re on your own with a chance to learn about yourself and how you work with others. Traveling to a new country for ten days gives you just the right amount of freedom without feeling homesick. It’s a great next step towards adulthood.

8. Resume/College Apps

As cliché as it sounds, you’re in high school, soon to be thinking of college or applying for jobs and putting a trip like this on your resume is sure to make you stand out!

9. Bucket List

It may sound silly, but we all have a bucket list, whether it’s written down on paper, in our iPhones, or just thought of. Traveling, zip-lining, inner tubing down a river, or snorkeling are most likely somewhere on the list, so why not do them now you have the chance. All that is needed is ten days. Ten days out of summer (or your vacation break if your school goes year round). Now that’s doable.

10. Memories

Yes it’s a short trip, but the memories made on it will last forever. Whether it’s simply remembering the experience or looking at the photos you’ve taken, those ten days will be something you’ll never forget.


Contributed by Samantha Watkins

Filed Under: Latest Posts, VIVA

August 18, 2016 by The Young Leader

6 Things High School Girls Can Do to Build Leadership Skills

3

You are a leader. You can lead. The question is, how do you develop that ability to lead? While there are leadership programs for girls that teach the basics, there are also alternative routes to success. Here are six ideas that you can do to build leadership skills!

1) Get Passionate!

What do I mean by “get passionate?” Well, study your passions. Read about them. If there are opposing views to what you are passionate about, study those, too, so that you will know both sides. Do a lot of reading. For instance, do you want to manage your own business? Read biographies about those who have done so and been successful at it. Do you want to be a leader for girls’ education in Africa? Study the history of girls’ education and what is currently being done to support it. After you research, take action and blog/vlog about what you are learning. Not only will others start to see your initiative, but you also will grow in wisdom and leadership. And remember, as Lisa Kleypas put it, “[a] well-read woman is a dangerous creature.”

2) Take an Entrepreneurship Class or Attend a Camp!

Even if you are not planning on opening your own business, studying entrepreneurship as a teen is a great way to build leadership skills. You will learn about strategic plans of action, how to develop back-up ideas, how to manage assets and work as a team with people, how to make ethical decisions, etc. Skills such as these make influential leaders because they translate across all areas of leadership, not just business management. Check to see if your school or local college offers a basic entrepreneurship class, or even a summer entrepreneur camp for teens!

3) Start Martial Arts!

What? That’s just for ninjas or boys, right? Wrong! Martial arts teaches some great leadership skills. You will start from the bottom like everyone else, but as you work your way up, you will soon be helping others learn their kicks and punches. You will develop discipline, focus, and a greater respect for others, plus some really great friends. A couple of years ago, I never would have imagined myself teaching both children and adults martial arts, but now I help lead whole classes and have grown more confident in my ability to lead others. And not only will you be developing good leadership skills, but you will also have a lot of fun! If you do decide to start, make sure you find an accredited school with people who are constructive and encouraging. These two factors make or break your martial arts experience.

4) Start a Campaign!

Help raise money and support for the things that you care about. Use your interests to guide you. Like to run? Create a 5k to raise funds. Do you prefer theater? Direct a play to build support for your cause. Your leadership skills will grow tremendously through your creativity, your teamwork with those who help you, and your hard work.

5) Volunteer to Teach!

What are your hobbies? What are your unique skills and talents? Help others enjoy what you love, too. Take time not only to learn from others, but also to teach. If you love sports or politics, volunteer as a coach at a youth sports camp, or tutor debate skills at a girls leadership camp. Or if sports and leadership camps for girls aren’t your thing, and you, say, draw all the time, offer to lead an art class at a local art or community center. Do not feel awkward or afraid. Enjoy helping others learn, and learn from your mistakes. This is one of the best ways to develop leadership skills.

6) Get Out of Your Comfort Zone!

Leaders become leaders through initiative and experience. So take the initiative, and go experience the world! GLA offers several programs all over the world which partner with you to help communities and families, while also beckoning you to learn and to lead. Whether you are participating in a social entrepreneurship program in Africa or playing with kids in Peru, your leadership skills will be taken to the next level through being forced out of your comfort zone and jumping into leadership, even if you do not feel you are totally ready. That is how leaders lead, and you can do the same.

Well, are you ready to develop your leadership skills? Dive into these ideas or your own, and tell us about your adventure in the comments below!


Contributed by Addie Davis

Filed Under: Bright Futures, Latest Posts

August 18, 2016 by The Young Leader

Helping Haiti and its Children: 5 Social, Political, and Economic Challenges Facing Haiti’s Children

Remember the 2010 earthquake in Haiti and the global media coverage it received?

Have you ever wondered what after effects children in Haiti still face today?

y

Following the 2010 earthquake, this Haitian child received aid aboard the USNS Comfort (Public Domain Image)

Welcome, global volunteers! Let’s dive into the story and rippling effects of the 2010 earthquake on Haitian youth.

The earthquake was a catastrophic natural disaster that affected an estimated 3 million Haitians. The actual death toll is widely debated and ranges from 100,000  to 316,000 people with many more injured. Findings from the Haitian government suggested that about 250,000 residences and 30,000 commercial buildings were damaged. But that’s only the initial effects, Haitian children have experienced ongoing challenges that were made worse by the earthquake. Here are 6 social, political, and economic aftershocks facing Haitian youth today:

x

Haiti Map created by the UN OCHA and modified under a Creative Commons License

1. Sanitation and Clean Water Access

Following the mass destruction in Port-au-Prince, all of the capital’s hospitals were destroyed along with 50 health care facilities in total. Public utilities also suffered severe damages which greatly limited Haitian peoples’ already scarce access to clean water. Despite the efforts of volunteers worldwide over many years, Oxfram International expressed the difficult challenge facing Haiti’s youth in their 2010 briefing paper: “Well before the earthquake, Haiti suffered from extreme poverty, gross inequality, chronic political instability, and weak, corrupt state institutions.” Haitian youth live within this reality: recovery is a slow process and will still take many more years to happen.

2. Disease Outbreaks

Haiti’s lack of public health resources and earlier political challenges made them especially vulnerable to disease epidemics. Beginning months after the earthquake, Haiti experienced a devastating cholera outbreak that continues to threaten Haitian youth today. Since the media and most relief efforts stopped reporting on Haiti around 2013, recent information about the disease’s impact isn’t readily available. Although, a Boston Globe Editorial claimed that by August 2015, more than 700,000 Haitians had cholera and over 9,000 people had died. Given what we already know, Haitian youth today are probably vulnerable and likely suffer from illness on a wide scale.

3. Forced Migration

The immense destruction following the earthquake uprooted millions of Haitians. Considering that Haiti already suffered from extreme poverty and gross inequality, many Haitian families might still be homeless.


Want to help us design a Global Health program based in Haiti? Your feedback can have an impact on our program itinerary. Click here to participate in our survey.


4. Educational Access

Consider that half of Haiti’s schools (more than 1,300) and three Port-au-Prince universities collapsed. Since Haitian youth lack basic necessities—clean water, healthcare, and homes—that certainly affects both their ability to attend school and learn if they’re lucky enough to have one. Haiti’s inequality also makes it more difficult for students in poverty to do well in school. Educational resources are probably still scarce for many Haitian children.

5. Unemployment and Underemployment

The earlier social, political, and economic challenges facing Haitian youth today are complex. What’s unfortunate is that these many challenges work together and make an already difficult situation even worse. Since educational access is limited, Haiti’s youth also faces the risk of unemployment and underemployment. The destruction of Port-au-Prince and its slow recovery today have left a gaping whole in Haiti’s economy that is slow to fill.


Interested in other mission trip-style programs in the Caribbean? Check out GLA’s Dominican Republic programs for both spring break and summer.


6. Spring Break, Haiti Style, Just Doesn’t Exist

It may be an unfortunate truth, but tourism is still one of the primary drivers of funds to Caribbean nations. Families spending summer or spring break in Haiti could help to provide essential funds to this island country, but because of the pervasively negative media coverage of Haiti, it doesn’t see nearly the numbers that its island-sharing neighbor, Dominican Republic, sees. While tourism can bring about its own potential issues for youth (think exploitation of youth at cruise ship ports and the like), it does offer significant advantages socially and economically.

Without visiting Haiti and experiencing the realities facing Haitian youth, it’s hard for us to know what’s really happening. But we do know that these challenges are complex and persist long after their media coverage ends.


Contributed by Nick Fochtman

Sources:

Numbers and statistics mentioned can be found within the 2010 Haiti earthquake wiki references

Oxfam International’s 2010 Supporting good governance in post-earthquake Haiti briefing paper

Boston Globe 2015 Editorial UN must step up, apologize, and help drive cholera from Haiti

Filed Under: Be Bold!, Latest Posts

August 18, 2016 by The Young Leader

Youth Empowerment for Sustainable Development: Four Ways Teens Can Take a Stand for a Sustainable Future

1

Perhaps the previous generations haven’t been too kind to you guys. We’ve wasted, we’ve polluted, and we’ve ravaged our home planet’s climate. Facing the hottest temperatures ever on record just this year, the threat of climate change and the disastrous fallout that would come from it is very real. But not all hope is lost. Your generation is inheriting this planet. Despite the mess previous generations may have left it in, there’s still a lot you can do individually and collectively as a generation to help out and reduce waste. Your planet thanks you.

1. Use Laptops, Not Desktops

It sounds silly, but laptops on average use about 80% less energy than desktops, according to reports by Energy Star. If you really want to help out with the environment, the smaller the better. A smartphone can cost as little as $1.50 per year in electrical costs, while a desktop PC can cost up to $600 a year! That’s a huge difference in energy use! Luckily, this is something you’re probably already doing, so keep it up and our planet will be in better shape.

2. Recycle, recycle, recycle!

Recycling really is important for the environment. Why? Well, less waste means less creation of products that harm the environment, such as plastics. If we just keep reusing the ones we have, we won’t have to make more and more and more. Harmful gases are released as waste decomposes in landfills, and those chemicals have a severely negative impact on our environment.

If you can’t recycle it, repurpose it. Take those plastic bags from your shopping and use them as garbage bags or bags to pick up animal waste instead of buying them from the store. Often these bags aren’t recycled by the government, so you need to do it yourself.

Be creative guys! There are also a ton of websites out there as well that will show you how to make useful or cool things out of materials you would usually throw out!

3. Carpooling leads to cleaner air

Emissions from cars are one of the biggest sources of greenhouse gases emitted into our atmosphere. As you enter your driving years, consider taking turns carpooling to school or work with your friends or co-workers. By carpooling, assuming everyone was going to drive separately anyway, you can cut emissions down to a fraction of what they would have been. You’ll also get to engage in some great companionship before the drudge of the day starts, so that’s a bonus. So grab a friend or three and jump into that carpool lane. The planet will thank you.

4. If you don’t need it, turn it off

If you aren’t using it, turn it off! It’s amazing how many people leave lights on in rooms they aren’t using or leave TVs on when they go out. That adds up people! The U.S. Department of Energy recommends shutting off the lights in any given room if you’ll be out for more than 15 minutes. Lights waste a lot of energy, especially incandescent bulbs, which give off about 90% of energy as heat and only 10% as light.

Bigger things like air conditioning we often don’t think about, but if you leave it running all day, you’ll use 317% more energy compared to those who turn it off. If you can, set your A/C to kick on about an hour before you get home. You’ll save money, and you’ll still be cool when you get home.

Get to it

The time is now. Get out there and spread the word. Make sure you follow the plan as well. If you’re still living at home, sit down with your family and work out a green plan for your household. Your parents will thank you when they see their energy bills, and you’ll know you’re contributing to a better future for yourself and future generations.


Contributed by Nick Bartholomew

Sources:

http:// michaelbluejay.com/electricity/ac-on-or-off.html

http:// www.greenenergytimes.net/2014/06/15/teaching-your-teens-to-embrace-a-sustainable-lifestyle/

Filed Under: Be Bold!, Latest Posts

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • …
  • 31
  • Next Page »

Give Back to the Community

Donate to the GLA International Foundation and help support projects and grant recipients around the world.

Brought to you by

Copyright © 2026 · Executive Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in