Generation Futures: My First Job Search

Generation Futures: My First Job Search

Generation Futures - Future professional career Jamboard

Generation Futures - Future professional career Jamboard

Hi everyone, my name is Shilah Hang (SHY-LAH), I am a 9th grader that goes to Community School of Excellence. I attend Generation Futures with Spark-Y, which is a wonderful program that can help you with your future. For example, they help us write a resume, set goals for ourselves, and job search. Generation Future is a great start for learning how to get a job. They have great leaders to help guide us to success. I joined Generation Future because I want to learn how to find a job for myself. I wanted to be able to write a resume to help me get a job without being confused about how to write one. I want to start off my career with good help from great teachers.

One lesson I enjoyed and learned from at Generation Futures, is how to job search. It was my first time job searching because it was something I've never tried doing. I was very excited and it was interesting to see all different kinds of jobs there are. What I learned from this experience is that it is hard to start a career with your dream job immediately because you need experience. You can start with a job that is a good start and then work your way up to your goal. One of the Generation Future leaders, named Kata (Spark-Y Education Director), said before she worked at Spark-Y, she was working as an educator on a boat and then she came to Spark-Y and is now helping people like me. This is a great experience and is a great opportunity. It was cool to hear all the different jobs the leaders had before working at their current job. I have met wonderful people. I highly recommended joining a program like this, trust me it will really help you.

My dream job is doing music. I want to do music because it is always something I wanted to do. I want to sing, write, play all kinds of instruments, and produce music. What I learned from Spark-Y is that I could start off on an entry level job and work my way up to what I want to do. I learn to set a goal for myself if I want to do music. It benefits me to motivate myself to try harder and never give up. It benefits me if I can find a job easily and when I need help I can email one of the teachers. Getting this experience is important because finding help like this is hard. Sometimes you might struggle and might not know what to do. It is important that I experienced it because the teachers have shown me ways to get experience so I can start to achieve my goals.

First Step: Resume - Next Step: My Future!

First Step: Resume - Next Step: My Future!

Hi everyone, my name is Jubilee, I am in 10th grade, and I go to Community School of Excellence high school. I am in the Generation Future program with Spark-Y where we meet online and work on learning new skills and becoming leaders to help our futures. I joined Generation Futures because I am focused on learning new expertise to get myself out there. I wanted to learn how to work with a team, learn job skills, and learn communication skills. Spark-Y stood out from all the other after school programs, because we get paid to participate and work together in our session meetings. It also looked challenging and fun!

A couple of weeks ago we worked on building our own draft resumes. We usually start off the sessions with an ice breaker. The week we talked about what we were most grateful for. I said I was most grateful for being able to learn new job skills, meet great staff and peers, and be a leader. Then, we started talking about resumes. I have never done a resume draft or anything like this so when we did make them I was excited and knew it could help out a lot with our real resume later in the year. Something I learned is that when you write a resume you want to make sure that your work experience is up to date. And when you write a resume you want to put down your work experience and skills so that when you apply for a job they can see how far in experience you are and if you qualify for it. I learned that formatting matters too! Spark-Y staff and my own peers helped review my resume and gave me feedback which helped me a lot.

Visual of guidelines on resume review!

Visual of guidelines on resume review!

When working on a draft resume or any draft it helps your understanding on how to actually write your real resume. In Generation Futures, staff help us work on skills so that it will be more simple and easier for us and also benefit us for our future professional career. Next week, we will be working on our hopes for our future professional career, which will be talking and figuring out what we want our career to be and look like. This helps us be ready and prepared and helps us set our goals on what we want our career to be after high school. I’m very excited to see what else we will start learning and working on because without the Generation Futures program led by Spark-Y it wouldn't be easy to do this alone. Spark-Y has helped me with my leadership, communication skills and job skills that I didn't already know how to express. And it also helped me learn skills that I will use in the future, like how to set good examples for my partners and how to lead others.

Jubilee, 10th Grader in the Generation Future Program

Resume configuration slide

Resume configuration slide

Words Generation Future students contributed about what leadership means to them

Words Generation Future students contributed about what leadership means to them

Jubilee in the virtual Generation Future classroom

Jubilee in the virtual Generation Future classroom

Aquaponic System Build with Oak Hill Montessori

Aquaponic System Build with Oak Hill Montessori

At Spark-Y, we are working with our partners to collectively navigate distance-learning, and at the same time, we recognize the importance of hands-on learning activities that engage the hearts, hands, and minds of young people. With Oak Hill Montessori School returning to in-person learning, we were able to partner with them to give students hands-on experience learning about sustainability and power tools while creating their very own aquaponic system. After creating this system, they will now be able to take care of fish and grow plants right at the school! Of course, all Covid-19 precautions were put into place during this build in order to make this happen as safely as possible. The build was outside, masks were required, and students rotated to stations in small groups. 

IMG_5517_(1).jpg
IMG_0054_(1).jpg

Why do we love building aquaponic systems you may ask? Well, it's a great tool to teach concepts such as sustainability, biology, chemistry, math, and much more. Aquaponic systems facilitate a symbiotic relationship between fish and plants. Fish waste adds ammonia to the system. Bacteria then converts the ammonia into nitrites and then nitrates. Plants use nitrates to create proteins for growth, and in return the fish get clean water. It’s an incredible way to grow fresh produce all year long!

Now that we got the biology lesson out of the way, let’s talk about why hands-on learning is so important. First of all, it's fun and engaging. I don't know about you but when I was sitting for a school lecture I often found myself day-dreaming and not soaking in a lot of the information. It is so important to facilitate learning with several senses at once. Young people need room to tinker, make mistakes, and try again. Particularly in the era of Covid, it is important to keep students from getting screen fatigue by adding some hands-on learning opportunities into their curriculum.

Of course, the students at Oak Hill were excited to not only be away from their screens doing hands-on learning, but also to be outside and using tools. They rotated to three stations throughout the day for the build. One station measured dimensions of the wood planks for the tank, another cut the wood, and the last station assembled the aquaponic tank.

While assembling the system, one student, Saphira, said, “I’m excited to have fish we can take care of in our own garden. I am grateful for Spark-Y because we get to have hands-on experience during Covid instead of just studying. It makes school so much more fun.”

Throughout this process, the students had lots of energy because they were so excited about the project. While we love the enthusiasm, I also made the point that in construction projects like this one, efficiency is key. I told them, "if you're not paying attention, you're not being efficient and potentially creating an unsafe environment for your team." To my surprise the students really resonated with that, and one student even started calling out to other students, "that's not efficiency!" whenever other students were goofing around. As time went on more students were yelling, "efficiency!" when they completed a certain task. I really got a kick out of this because in my professional experience my bosses have always harped about efficiency. This is something that was encouraged but never taught in school. This is why hands-on learning is so important to me and many others. Without it we miss the nuances between practice and theory. The aquaponics build was truly a great way for students at Oak Hill to take a break from the screen and learn about aquaponics and sustainability.

Students at Oak Hill Montessori school now have their very own aquaponic system where they can grow produce right at the school. They can now work together to care for their system and continue hands-on learning during Covid and beyond!

Written by Ryland Sorensen - Spark-Y Sustainability Educator

IMG_0076.jpg

Finding Bright Spots in 2020

Finding Bright Spots in 2020

This week the cool fall air has swept into Minnesota and for many of us that means it’s “back to school” time. Though, back to school is looking very different this year. In fact, very little has been the same for us at Spark-Y in 2020 -- as many can relate. 

Through a global pandemic shutdown and the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis (our statement here), we as an organization are committed more than ever to showing up, listening to the needs of our partners, community, and youth, and doing our utmost to evolve our work in response. We are incredibly proud of our staff and our board, who have risen to the occasion at every step. 

Over the last six months we have navigated many unknowns and witnessed many hardships on the communities we serve. Likewise, we have had the opportunity to experience so many bright moments -- including the tremendous support for moving our annual May Plant Sale online with curbside pickup, distributing 750 free Virtual Victory Gardens along with how-to gardening videos to the Northside Minneapolis community sponsored by the African American Community Response Team, creating online resources for our youth to continue hands-on learning at home, and our ongoing work at a memorial garden for George Floyd at 38th and Floyd as well as other beautification projects to areas in the Twin Cities impacted by riots. 

Executive Director, Zach Robinson, prepping Victory Gardens the day before giveaway.

Executive Director, Zach Robinson, prepping Victory Gardens the day before giveaway.

As our organization gears up for what will be our most unique year of school programming, we wanted to take a look back over the last few months and highlight a few more of these bright spots:

2020 Annual Summer Internship and Open House
This year’s Annual Summer Internship was scaled from our typical thirty or more interns to nine to comply with social distancing protocol. While small, this group was mighty! Two teams completed sustainable projects throughout the Twin Cities, including a soil kiosk, rainwater catchment system, and beautification along the Minneapolis Greenway. We celebrated their accomplishments at an outdoor Open House and Facebook livestream (you can check out a video recording of the event on our Facebook page, here.)

Internship Open House 2020.

Internship Open House 2020.

African American Community Response Team (AACRT)
Established early spring 2020, the Africian American Community Response Team was formed to provide leadership and support for the Northside Minneapolis Community in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. As a partner to AACRT, Spark-Y has worked to provide 750 free Victory Gardens, including a manual, and online resources at the start of this year’s growing season to combat food insecurity and provide at-home, hands-on education to youth.

Get On The Bus (GOTB)
Spark-Y partnered with AACRT for their Get On The Bus program, where young people are provided access to technology and a safe learning environment on buses. Spark-Y offered socially distant STEM activities to youth through the program. Read more about our work with GOTB in a recent blog post, here.

Spark-Y Receives Environmental Initiative Award
Spark-Y received a 2020 Environmental Initiative Award for our partnership with Edison High School Green Campus:  “We chose this project because it invests in future leaders regardless of race, gender, and income by providing hands on life learning experience inside and outside of classroom, it focuses on working on and becoming prepared for real world environmental problems and searching for solutions, and is replicable to other schools/community programs.”

Executive Director, Zach Robinson, named 2020 Rising Young Professional
Our Executive Director, Zach Robinson, was honored as a Finance & Commerce 2020 Rising Young Professional for his leadership at Spark-Y. We as an organization applaud his efforts and congratulate him on this prestigious award!

Kata Wolf

Kata Wolf

Spark-Y welcomes Education Director, Katarina (Kata) Rolf
In August we welcomed Kata as Spark-Y’s Education Director. Her ability to see the big picture and air-traffic-control our day-to-day operations for our mission has already made a big improvement in our organization. Kata comes to Spark-Y with a wealth of experience and passion, specifically in human-centered design and education justice. Welcome aboard, Kata!

We at Spark-Y want to thank our partners, volunteers, youth, and communities we serve for all of their efforts and continued resilience during these unprecedented times. Let’s keep looking for the bright spots.