The Healing Generation
- Pre-Seed
The Healing Generation seeks to create a better world where the locals are empowered and educated enough to solve their challenges. We will provide young people with education, challenges, mentors, and ideas but they will be required to then go out and use those skills to better their own societies.
I am an Iraqi-Australian. We came to Australia as refugees in 2003, a few months after the American invasion. In January this year, I went back to Iraq and saw the devastation that war after war had caused. What angered me the most was how disrupted the educational system was. If any country needs competent, skilled young people to ‘fix’ it, it’s Iraq. However, Iraq’s young people were not being educated properly or empowered or positioned to succeed. Due to the destruction of infrastructure, schools catered for thrice the amount of students as before, textbooks were completely outdated and teachers were demotivated.
Ever since my trip, I’ve been speaking to Iraqi street kids, my cousins who still live there, teachers, management-consultants and getting as many opinions as possible on how the issue can be solved. The Healing Generation is the culmination of all those reflections, conversations and focus groups.
The most pressing need identified in Iraqi society is the need to make money. Thus, if we create an online platform which financially rewards young people for learning, then they will engage with it and learn.
The idea is to choose a topic at the start of a fortnight that will be relevant to Iraqi young people and their future (solar-power, coding, artificial-intelligence, Middle-Eastern Politics, famous poets), and then ask the young people to learn the content and produce something original (e.g.video). Everyone who produces a great video will be rewarded financially ($50AUDs/video).
The content will be skewed towards entrepreneurial skills to encourage the young people to start their own projects (e.g. a solar company).
Eventually, it is hoped that the platform will be self-sufficient through selling videos to news networks or through advertising. Secondly, the online platform can then be launched in different countries as we continue.
- The worrying state of the Education system in disadvantaged countries
- Disengagement from Education
- Squandering of human potential
- Children spending their lives on the streets
The outcome we desire is a world in which all young people from all background are engaged, fulfilled and their potential is utilised. The Healing Generation seeks to do this through challenging young people. We will give them tasks, ideas, role-models and mentors and compel them to think and grow. We hope that after learning about innovation, start-ups, technology, coding, their own social and political context and several other topics, these young people will be inspired to go on and start their own projects. They will become the generation which will ‘heal’ Iraq and the whole world.
We hope to work with every disadvantaged child around the world. However, to begin, we will launch in Iraq. We aim to equip the next generation with the technical, critical thinking and research skills to be able to lead successful personal and professional lives. This should benefit the young people themselves, the communities and societies they live in, their country and the world as a whole.
The Healing Generation will be accessible through social media and as a website. Most young people in Iraq have access to wifi and smart phones. It will be promoted via those channels and word-of-mouth.
Measure how many videos we've received & their quality. We should have dispensed 100 payments by the first six months - 100 young people actively engaged as learners in first six months
Check social media trends and engagement patterns - Online success: 1000 liked on Facebook in first six months; 500 followers on IG; 500 followers on Twitter; 500 people on mailing list
1- Ensure we have the students' contact details for follow-up evaluations
2- Ensure that we have good relationships with the students and that they have good relationships with their mentors so that we know what they're doing and can support them. - 5 young people have began to think of their own businesses/ social enterprises
- Adolescent
- Lower middle income economies (between $1006 and $3975 GNI)
- Low-income economies (< $1005 GNI)
- Secondary
- Middle East and North Africa
- Consumer-facing software (mobile applications, cloud services)
- Digital systems (machine learning, control systems, big data)
- Management & design approaches
Our solution is unique for many reasons:
- Focuses on empowerment of young people and equipping them to shine and thrive
- Focus on entrepreneurship rather than waiting for a solution from an authority figure or government. The way forward for disadvantaged countries is through innovation and creativity
- Seeks to solve a country’s issues in the next generation
- Utilises technology to connect people within the country to each other and to the outside world
- Many educational resources don’t exist in Arabic (and some other third world languages), so this solution will produce and share them
One of the core aspects of education is the personal connection which forms between a teacher and a student. For students who are really engaged with The Healing Generation’s work, we will try to connect them with a local or online mentor (this may be when we are more established and have mentors all over the world).
We will endeavour to have an easy to navigate website which will personalise the experience for the young people using it.
We will have editors in Australia who will help students with editing and ensuring that the quality of the videos is acceptable.
Access: Website, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram
The smartphone market in Iraq is booming. The mobile phone market itself only launched after the 2003 invasion of Iraq, and now the penetration rate is a very high 78% and there are 27 million mobile phone users in the country. Smartphone penetration is lower, but is increasing at a steady pace, MOSTLY amongst the young (Jarrad, GA 2014). From my observations on my trip, most street kids had smartphones. They will be asked to make content/ videos on these smart phones and then share them with us via Google Drive, Dropbox or email.
- 0 (Concept)
- Non-Profit
- Australia
We will ask young people to learn content and then produce something out of it. They will be paid for what they create out of their learning and, in turn, we will use what they create to generate further scholarships and revenue for the organisation.
We will try to have several streams of income, depending on the type of work that we receive, and we will try to remain self-sufficient. Some streams of income could include: selling videos to news companies or other outlets; advertising on social media and our website; creating products such as cups and t-shirts; and making effective use of philanthropy and donations as we are a non-profit entity.
there are a number of factors which can affect our ability to succeed. We will try to identify all of those in the pilot and rectify them prior to scaling internationally. Some issues to consider include:
- Marketing to enough students
- Quality of videos/ content produced by the students may not be of a high-calibre and may not be successful on social media initially (volunteer Australian video-editors can rectify this)
- Young people may stop at the learning step and never go on to become the 'healing generation' and fix the social problems of their society.
- Less than 1 year
- 6-12 months
- 6-12 months
- Future of Work
- 21st Century Skills
- Online Learning
- Refugee Education
- Finding like minded people
- Working on an international scale
- Meeting people who can teach me about how to utilise technology to solve social problems
- Supporting others who are trying to make the world a better place
- Being exposed to the latest, best ideas in the world
- An Orphanage in Iraq
- Happy Brain Education, a charity in Melbourne, Australia
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