Friday 15 September 2017

Interview with Victoria Ibiwoye (Execitive Director - One African Child)

The Young Leaders Council was represented by  Olayinka Joseph Adebajo The Founder and Programmes Director at One Voice Initiative for Women(Emancipation) and Children Empowerment (OVIWCE)


TYLC: Can we meet you ma? Please introduce yourself what you do and what you’re most passionate about.

Victoria Ibiwoye: Hello everyone. Good evening
First I must say that I'm very delighted that a group like this exist for learning. 😊
My name is Victoria Ibiwoye and I am a youth educator and Peace advocate.

Host:
This is quite emotional for as Miss Victoria is my mentor 😊
TYLC: Madam, Can you tell us what ESD is and Your major Landmark achievements in ESD

Victoria Ibiwoye: As you must have seen from my bio, I work with One African Child Foundation for Creative Learning; a youth-led NGO with you goal to spread education for sustainable development in low-income communities in Africa.
Education for sustainable development is about empowering and motivating learners to become active sustainable citizens who are capable of critical thinking and able to participate in shaping a sustainable future.
ESD also aims at developing competencies that empower individuals to reflect on their own actions, taking into account their current and future social, cultural, economic and environmental impacts from a local and global perspective.


TYLC: To those who don’t know what OAC is about....can you do us a brief introduction ma? Also we know OAC is based in Nigeria, please tell us how you got OAC started in Kenya.
Victoria Ibiwoye: One African Child started 4 years ago while I was in law school and I was inspired for so many reasons. One was my struggle with learning because I'm dyslexic. Dyslexia is a general term for disorders that involve difficulty in learning to read or interpret words, letters, and other symbols, but that do not affect general intelligence.
Also, because I live in a low-income community and I know what it feels like for many exceptional kids not to be able to reach their full potentials because of poverty and other socio-economic factors.
The aim of One African Child is to help children in low-income communities discover their true self-identity through creative learning workshops focused on education for sustainable development and global citizenship.
In 2013, One African Child was founded in Lagos and gradually expanded to other parts of Nigeria
Since four years, there's been tremendous impact and steady growth of One African Child at the community level and with this, we were able to expand to Kenya and Benin-Republic.

Host: Well, i should use this platform to let you know my NGO (One Voice Initiative for Women and Children) has been learning a lot from OAC....  We started our SDG-2 Advocacy inspired by your beautiful NGO        
TYLC: What’s your perception about basic education in Nigeria through the eyes of the students? i.e. what do you think the disposition of students are to their basic education...


Victoria Ibiwoye: I believe that education is what we offer to learners. Students can only produce what they've learnt overtime. For every child, the level of basic education would vary depending on access and quality of learning received.
For some of the students I have worked with, education is about teaching rather than learning. Education should not be one-way but rather a two-way learning process that fosters partnership between learners and their teachers in exchanging different perspectives and knowledge.

Ademiluyi Sunday (Audience)
Nigeria is the headquarters of illiteracy in the world by UNESCO report 29
With 15 million children who can neither read nor write, how has OAC reacted to this?

Victoria Ibiwoye: Majority of our work is centred in low-income communities and we complement the work of the government in ensuring equal access to education by organising after-school lessons for public school children. Our approach to learning is learner-centered, acrion-oriented and transformative. Our training, facilitated by our youth educators, supports self-directed learning, participation and collaboration, problem solving and critical thinking. We bring real-world situations into the classroom and we inspire learners to BUILD ideas and projects that addresses some of the challenges they are faced with.

TYLC: What do you think the government has done as regards the advancement of education in Nigeria in the last 6 years? What have they not done?

Victoria Ibiwoye: I think that the curriculum has changed a bit and newer subjects such as Civic Education and Visual Arts have been introduced.
However, there's a wide gap in the delivery of education for sustainable development.
Education should help us think and not tell us what to think. Education impact how we think and act and raise sustainable change-makers. In promoting the SDGs, the Nigerian government need to look more into ways that education can contribute to a new vision for sustainable development.

Host: I must really comment your activities and OAC's on Social media....Twitter is fun and exciting with #OACMasterClass

TYLC: A bit of what the situation is in Kenya as opposed to basic education in Nigeria. (Similarities and perceived difference)
Also in your relationship with educators and students outside Africa, what are the differences in the perspective of students and the educators as regards Education?

Sunday 6 August 2017

INTRODUCING THE YOUNG LEADERS COUNCIL - TYLC

THE YONG LEADERS COUNCIL.
Youths Leading Change and Innovation……



The Young Leaders Council is a global organization with focus on Africa and based in Nigeria...


  THE YOUNG LEADERS COUNCIL (TYLC): was founded on February 14, 2017 from a passion and desire to see youths from Africa and beyond rise beyond their challenges and take responsibility for the progress of themselves and the society. It was founded on an ache from seeing our contemporary youths, abdicate responsibility and blame the government, their background, or their immediate environment for the woes that may have befallen them. It was established out of a heart cry to see youths understand the very truths and essence of leadership and position their selves to be great and revolutionary leaders in a fast emerging world.
   The Young leaders’ council is poised to be the largest and most formidable leadership organization in the world with a constant drive for measurable impact and youth development. We have our focus on thematic areas of Civic Leadership, Personal Leadership, cooperate Leadership, Public administration, youth Advocacy, Public Speaking, Sustainable Development, Access to quality Information and Education, Sustainable cities and communities, Open policy making, open and transparent Governance, Peace and Justice Human Rights. We are positioned to build an alliance of the most enterprising young achievers in the globe and develop every young mind who aspires to reach such enviable height of impact and achievement.
   We would work with governments’ civil societies and sister organizations to ensure that the young people are adequately given an opportunity in the development space. The youths of any nation are the building blocks on which such a nation will stand and in like manner if the youths are deranged and in need of direction then such a nation is headed towards destruction. It’s our responsibility as youths who have come to realize our stake and indispensability in nation building to steer the wheel of the nation towards the path of progress by rising of to the global challenge of veritable leadership and start putting in our quota and planning our pathway. We have the mandate.
 It is on the foundation that we call on every youth in Africa and beyond to the table of leadership. Leadership is not in a position or title. It’s in the heart of responsibility and drive for positive change. We reach out to every individual and society to join as we organize for the development of leadership in every youth across our continent and beyond.

 Vision

To be the flagship alliance of established and veritable youth leaders within the globe and the equipping and rallying point for every emerging young leader.

 Mission


  • To identify, raise, equip and sustain youth leaders all across the globe.

  • To teach and certify young minds on the need for responsibility in leadership.


  • To safeguard the quality and essence of leadership among youths


  • To rise up to the challenges of youth around the globe.


  • To ensure youth participation in the governance of Nations and societies.





Channels for engagement with The Young Leaders Council

Websitehttp://theyoungleaderscouncil.org/

Twitter
https://twitter.com/tylcafrica/status/892120338489892864?s=08

Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/tylcafrica/?hl=en

Facebook Page
https://m.facebook.com/groups/1791683761088553?ref=bookmarks&soft=search

Facebook Group
https://m.facebook.com/groups/1791683761088553?ref=bookmarks&soft=search

Internet Address (Website)
http://Tylcnigeria.blogspot.com

Telegram group
https://t.me/youthsleading

Wish to be a member?  - Fill out this form

https://goo.gl/M4knfz

#YouthsRising

For Enquiries participation and Correspondence send a mail to.
Tylcafrica@gmail.com

Thursday 22 June 2017

Announcing the Launch of TYLC

The young leaders’ council is an international organization that saddled with the responsibility of institutionalizing personal leadership among youths all around the world. We deeply believe in the saying that everything rises and falls on leaderships. 
    Benjamin Disreali said the youths of a nation are the trustees of posterity and if the youths of any nation have lost the cause of genuine leadership then the future of such a nation is in jeopardy.
 we seek to reach out to every youth in every locality, in every community, in every province, in every state, region and country and get them grounded in what leadership essentially is. To make them understand the ideals of responsibility, personal management and emotional intelligence, cultural intelligence and a lot more. The youths of our Nations today have an inimical practice of abdicating responsibility and blaming the government and their immediate society for the woes that might befall them.
If the youths of our time fail to rise up to the challenge of leadership then our future lies only in uncertainty and jeopardy


see more at http://theyoungleaderscouncil.org/