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For
Immediate Release
New
YouthLearn Guide Offers a Comprehensive Blueprint for
Inspiring Young Minds With Technology-Enriched Learning
Guide
is part of larger initiative to support youth development professionals
and educators
(Newton,
MA, December 17, 2001) After seven years of fieldwork, the Morino
Institute has joined with Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC)
to release a guide designed to help after-school programs create and
implement high-quality, technology-enriched learning activities. The
guide provides user-friendly tools and resources that have proven
effective at inspiring young people's curiosity and creativity in
a range of community-based settings.
The YouthLearn Guide: A Creative Approach to Working With Youth
and Technology is a manual with more than 160 pages of hands-on
lessons, worksheets, and sample activities. This guide helps practitioners
combine new technologies with proven teaching techniques in ways that
can make their work even more rewarding for them and the children
they serve. The Boys & Girls Clubs of America and PowerUP are
partnering with the Morino Institute and EDC to share The YouthLearn
Guide with thousands of their technology-enriched sites across
the country.
"We are witnessing an explosion of technology-based programs
in both after-school and in-school settings," said Mario Morino,
chairman of the Morino Institute, whose YouthLearn Initiative created
the guide. "The leaders and instructors of these programs are
in great need of quality materials to help them enrich these learning
programs and introduce new ones. We believe The YouthLearn Guide
will go a long way toward fulfilling this important need."
The YouthLearn Initiative is rooted in seven years of work by the
Morino Institute to help community organizations use new technologies
to strengthen their youth programs. The most intensive of these efforts
began in 1998, when the Morino Institute joined with four respected
community organizations in Washington, DC, to launch a two-year pilot
project that established high-quality technology-based learning centers
as core components of youth development programs.
"The emphasis was not on teaching technology but on using technology
to spark project-based learningcollaborative activities that
inspire students to connect their work with real-life experiences,"
said Tracy Gray, Vice President of Youth Services at the Morino Institute.
The publication of the guide marks the beginning of a collaborative
effort between the Northern Virginia-based Morino Institute and the
Massachusetts-based Education Development Center. After incubating
and building the YouthLearn Initiative into a thriving online learning
community and web-based resource center frequented by thousands of
after-school instructors and classroom teachers, the Morino Institute
focused its efforts on finding a strategic partner to assume the ongoing
leadership of YouthLearn and ensure its growth and advancement. The
Institute found the ideal partner in EDC, one of the nation's leading
nonprofit education organizations, with hundreds of quality learning
projects around the globe. In the coming months, the Morino Institute
will continue on in an advisory role as EDC expands YouthLearn's offerings,
including new training sessions for practitioners.
"The Morino Institute built YouthLearn into a highly valuable
online source for quality materials and inspiration for out-of-school
professionals and teachers," said Janet Whitla, President and
CEO of EDC. "This collaboration builds on the important work
of practitioners in the field and is a natural extension of our long-standing
history in human development. Ultimately, we hope to establish a national
center of excellence on youth, learning, and technology anchored around
YouthLearn's unique approach."
About the Morino Institute
Created in 1994, the Morino Institute (www.morino.org)
seeks to enhance the lives of children of low-income families by working
to improve the effectiveness of nonprofit and philanthropic organizations
that serve children's needs. Entrepreneurial ventures of the Morino
Institute include the YouthLearn Initiative (now led by EDC) and Venture
Philanthropy Partners (www.venturephilanthropypartners.org),
which provides sustained financial and management assistance to boost
the strength of youth-focused organizations.
About Education Development Center, Inc.
Education Development Center, Inc. (www.edc.org)
is a nonprofit research and development organization dedicated to
improving education and health worldwide. Founded in 1958, EDC manages
more than 350 projects around the globe. EDC's work strengthens nearly
every facet of society, including early child development, K-12 education,
learning technologies, health promotion, workforce preparation, community
development, and social justice.
To find out more about the YouthLearn Initiative and The YouthLearn
Guide, please visit www.youthlearn.org,
contact info@youthlearn.org, or call 800-449-5525.
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