YUWA from Nepal – along with three innovative
Youth Solutions – bagged regional award at the Regional Grant Competition jointly
organised by The World Bank, Microsoft and Sarvodaya-Fusion.
The competition ‘Youth Solutions! Technology for Skills and Employment’ was held in Colombo, Sri Lanka today with youth led NGOs from four nations – Nepal, Bangladesh, Maldives and Sri Lanka participating.
The competition ‘Youth Solutions! Technology for Skills and Employment’ was held in Colombo, Sri Lanka today with youth led NGOs from four nations – Nepal, Bangladesh, Maldives and Sri Lanka participating.
YUWA from Nepal, Shilpa Sayura
Foundation from Sri Lanka, YPSA from Bangladesh, Live & Learn Environmental
Education from the Maldives were the winners of the competition that sought
ideas from youth on how to use innovative and creative methods to promote
Information Technology (IT) skills amongst youth, helping them to secure
gainful employment.
Eight NGOs – two from each country –
presented their shortlisted projects with the aim of being selected for the
grant programme. A total of 80 project proposals were submitted, all
based on using ICT to address present day challenges faced by youth, such
as lack of skills development and unemployment.
Each winning project received a grant
between $15,000 and $20,000 to carry out a youth-led project for one year in
duration, with the possibility of being scaled up via other public or private
sector initiatives.
The high profile panel of judges
comprised of senior communications officer for World Bank, South Asia Gabriela
Aguilar; country manager of Microsoft Sri Lanka Sriyan de Silva Wijeyeratne; managing
director Lafarge Mahaweli Cement Anurag Kak; GM of Avery Dennison Lanka Ms Moji
Akingbade and Asia vice president of Insights, Innovation & Social at
MSLGROUP Gaurav Mishra.
Innovation and creativity of methods to
promote Information Technology (IT) skills amongst youth helping them secure
gainful employment, capacity to demonstrate solutions to challenges faced by
youth and encouraging innovation, learning and sharing were taken into consideration
when assessing project proposals.
YUWA, a Youth-led organisation with a
mission mandate of empowering Nepali Youth for gainful employment presented a
winning project which would use comprehensive e-learning methodology to equip
youth with relevant ICT skills to improve employability. It will use blended
technology organised in a comprehensive Learning Management System including
new media, such as YouTube and podcasts to educate youth.
The project proposal submitted by Sri Lanka’s Shilpa Sayura Foundation, an organisation aimed at empowering youth through ICT skills was to empower youth to produce 10 high impact films on current social issues. The project ‘Digital Rainbow’ will train at least 100 youth to become film makers, a still developing industry in the country, which will offer great potential for interested youth.
Young Power In Social Action (YPSA), an organisation dedicated to support and empower socially marginalized groups in Bangladesh, presented a proposal titled “Empowering Youth with Disabilities through market driven ICT skills. It aimed at supporting the smooth transition to work of people with disabilities through the use of ICT training, internships on ICT, relevant job search support and producing Digital Accessible Information System (DAISY) products.
The project proposal submitted by Sri Lanka’s Shilpa Sayura Foundation, an organisation aimed at empowering youth through ICT skills was to empower youth to produce 10 high impact films on current social issues. The project ‘Digital Rainbow’ will train at least 100 youth to become film makers, a still developing industry in the country, which will offer great potential for interested youth.
Young Power In Social Action (YPSA), an organisation dedicated to support and empower socially marginalized groups in Bangladesh, presented a proposal titled “Empowering Youth with Disabilities through market driven ICT skills. It aimed at supporting the smooth transition to work of people with disabilities through the use of ICT training, internships on ICT, relevant job search support and producing Digital Accessible Information System (DAISY) products.
The winner from Maldives was Live &
Learn Environmental Education, an organization aimed at reducing poverty and
working towards sustainable development with strong partnerships. Their
project aims to improve production and marketing of craft through an online
portal. Youth will be engaged in training that would equip them with the ICT
skills to make profitable employment through linking the segregated handicraft
industry with the market.
Replication of useful ideas throughout
the region, improving public awareness on innovation and investment in ICT
education for gainful employment, developing sustainable youth partnership for
development impact and effectiveness, employment for youth and using ICT as a
vehicle for promoting development objectives were important factors in the
selection criteria.
“This
grant programme conducted by The World Bank and Microsoft is an exciting
opportunity to find and fund new solutions to youth unemployment in this region,”
Senior communications officer
for World Bank, South Asia Gabriela
Aguilar said, adding that South
Asia is home to a large youth population, with over 1 million entering the labour
force every month.
According to The World Bank, South Asia
created nearly 800,000 jobs per month between 2000 and 2010. However, despite
growth, the region is still home to the largest number of the world’s poor -
half a billion people. Since labor is the primary asset of the poor, having
more and better jobs is the key employment challenge facing the region.
“We
are confident that the solutions to many of the challenges facing the youth can
come from within themselves, and we exceeded our expectations with the outcome,”
Aguilar added.
Manager of Community
Affairs of Microsoft Sri Lanka Janakie Karunarathne, speaking on the occasion said that Microsoft
is proud to have collaborated with the World Bank in this effort to capture the
youthful enthusiasm and innovative aspirations of four countries. “The youth NGOs chosen today from each
respective country would work towards alleviating the challenges, such as lack
of skills and unemployment in their individual countries through the use of
Information and Communication Technology,” she said, extending her
gratitude to Sarvodaya-Fusion, the ICT for Development arm of Sarvodaya, the
largest local Non-Governmental Organisation operating in Sri Lanka, for the
support they received in implementing the programme adding that Microsoft
shares a great rapport with both World Bank and Sarvodaya.
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