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Webinar: Smart Youth Work
Year of production: 2018
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all right welcome everyone to this last webinar of our series on webinar for
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connecting the dots symposium today we are talking about smart youth work and
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and everything related to it and we are accompanied by a host of lovely Estonian
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experts on the topic just a quick reminder that this whole webinar will be
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recorded and the recording will be made available online the easiest way to find
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it is to go on YouTube and and search for a youth partnership and there you
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will find a YouTube channel for the partnership and the three previous webinars all are already online there
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before we go into the topic I will just quickly tell you also that coyote
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magazine is coming up on their issue this week about smart youth work so make
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sure to also take this one into account
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that's all for me and I will give not stage to our lovely Estonian experts so
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we are further ado I give you the stage
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in our webinar that we're having today my name is Luis Ezrin and I'm gonna lead
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you through the next hour we've got some very interesting hot topics around smart
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youth work and we're here to describe the smart youth work initiative that's
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been presented by the Estonian youth work center in collaboration with the
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Estonian Ministry of Education and Research and as we're talking about the fall all of this is leading up to our
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symposium later in the month called connecting the dots young people social
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inclusion and digitalization that's happening later in the month and it's
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gonna be right now the way that we're doing this our today is that we're going
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to start with a bit of a general talk about digitalization and AI how can that affect young people what
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was happening there and then we're going to start to look at the three focus areas that the of these smart youth work
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initiative which is mainly how we accessing the people and helping young people access to services and how are
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they using it on the other side how a youth worker is getting training and education to be able to use these tools
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and the third focus area is producing systems so that our youth workers can
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gather the data and have the collaboration solutions to be able to do their job they're smart youth work
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correctly now there are three focuses for the smart youth work initiative and
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at the end of the hour we're going to be talking about a very important topic the
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covers all three which is mental health so we're going to be taking a broader look at that near the end of the hour
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and we're also going to have some questions so if you have those questions you can write them into the chat box
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there we're gonna see them and we're gonna be able to talk about them at the end now
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the first talk that we have is a gentleman by the name of Thomas mamuh and Thomas comes from model VR and there
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he's an expert in digitalization the future of AI the future of technology
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and he's going to talk to us a little bit we're gonna have a bit of a discussion about where is technology
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going and what is possibly need for youth workers so Thomas if you're there
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my friend we're gonna switch over to you right now please oh come on here we go
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looking good I can't hear what Thomas
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said let's let's try Oh beautiful afternoon everybody
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awesome so everybody can hear me that's good so yes my name is Thomas Mima I
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recently finished my master thesis with topic of religion and AI so hence I've
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been considered as inspirational speaker for this webinar and yes I want to tell
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you what I learned during my writing my master's thesis and looking into the
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topic of AI future and the current state and I would I would keep it really
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general and if you have any more specific questions then please let me know
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currently humans are considered rulers of the world and this is mainly thanks
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to our intelligence and we can consider us this modest and this gives us ability
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to apply our rules to everybody else but current developments in AI on artificial
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intelligence predict that soon there will be something else that is smarter than us and hence this something smarter
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than them can apply their rules on us let me just show you one graph here can
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you see me sure yes so we can see here two graphs
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on the left side you can see how Industrial Revolution made a revolution in our capability to grow economic
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growth and it was exponential growth from 19th century the line growth line
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that was horizontal suddenly turned into vertical and it's basically thanks to the fact that we
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changed from human labor into machine labor and now we can say it see similar
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expectation can be applied to artificial intelligence when we change from human
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thinking into machine thinking so let me
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go back there yep so we can see that let
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me just turn back so you can see that if
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1950 when artificial intelligence was started and its intelligence was pretty
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much zero then current predictions by experts is that we can achieve
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human-level machine intelligence by 2050 and average human intelligence is IQ of
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100 and if we consider growth of ten times per 50 years we can expect that by
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2000 and 200 artificial intelligence can have IQ of 100,000 so this is obviously
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it's a speculation but it would just give you some perspective what we can
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expect for from artificial intelligence you could really get as smart as humans
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or smarter and before I go any further I
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will try to define artificial intelligence a little bit artificial intelligence is obviously it consists on
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keywords from artificial that's man-made and intelligence is ability to achieve
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complex tasks and currently machines or
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artificial intelligence is pretty good at achieving complex tests on some narrow domains like let's say playing
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chess and if we compare it with humans
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humans are really good at achieving different goals like if take human child and giving enough time
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and training human child can pretty much achieve anything it can learn any language or or become good at some
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sports or science so we can see that currently humans are winning in breath
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but machines are much parrots and specific narrow domain and hence current
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goal in artificial intelligence is to gain artificial general intelligence
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that means capability of artificial intelligence to learn anything to be
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self learning on a wide array of things and if we go to future predictions then
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basically there are three options there is either everything is going to be really rosy it's going to be rainbows
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and butterflies middle option is that it's going to be pretty much status quo
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or that we will be working with AI but nothing generally changes much and the
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third option is is dystopia that's pretty much the frightening future and
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robots take over and kill us kill us all like we've seen in in certain movies like Terminator or The Matrix and
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humanities and slaves but already
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currently we can see how artificial intelligence is is becoming ubiquitous
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it's it's pretty much just everywhere if you use your phone for example use Google Translate it's AI there are
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self-driving cars and so forth so also
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we can we're already giving a lot of authority to artificial intelligence in the sense if we have any questions then
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we feel normal to ask first from Google and we have given this authority of
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knowledge to artificial intelligence in a sense already so we can see that if
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artificial intelligence gets smarter then it can have an X
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affected consequences it can have different opinions than us it can have
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different goals and hence it can give us just not necessarily are in our benefit
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and therefore we have to really think
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how we are we developed the artificial intelligence so that its interests will
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be aligned with powers in the future so what you say Thomas is we need to
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develop an AI that doesn't have a bad attitude pretty much we can we can look
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at this way that we are parents and AI is our child so if we wanted our
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children or our child will be will become a decent person like friendly and
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and take good care of its parents in the later in life and parents are not so healthy anymore for example or not so
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smart anymore then we want this child to have this attitude that okay it will respect its its elderly parents for
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example and and it will even if
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necessarily have the same same wishes as us as we do it at least it won't be
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hostile towards us yes very the way it
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sounds like we're creating a child it sounds like something a little work I want to raise it here now I'm gonna
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raise an AI Wow yeah and in a way it's
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it's we never know what our children will become and in the current case as
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you can see it's it's it could be really good it could be really bad and one way
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to think of it is that even if it's very bad then it's still our children and if
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they become smarter than us then isn't it still worth doing it like we have to
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choose are we are we more important and something that we create or or would it
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be worthy sacrifice if we if we but we managed to create something
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bigger than us something better than us that can give start to something totally different
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even if humankind in in the process could vanish like it could go really not
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so inspirational in that way my friend
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we do need to move on with the hour so thank you very much peering and following us anywhere what
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they were going with this thank you all
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good all right we've cut up Thomas's feet we're out this is the Oscars if you go over time we're going to start playing the orchestra I play just me
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playing a violin that's the only Orchestra be out yet now what we would like to do to start to introduce our
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smart youth work initiative we're gonna play you a short video which gives you
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an overview of this smart youth work the youth field must go hand in hand with
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social and technological change page this means that youth work must meet the needs young people identify themselves
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and provide them with access to a range
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of new versatile and attractive activities let's look now what is smart
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youth work and what goals have been set in the smart youth work concept
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how did smart youth work develop Estonians came up with the idea of smart
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solutions in 2013 when framing the development plan for the youth field for
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2014 through 2020 the Estonian government approved the youth field
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development plan for 2014 2020 and it's cabinet meeting on the 6th
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of December 2013 with one of the aims being to develop a smart Youth Work
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concept which was released in 2016 at the same time the idea of addressing the
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challenges and opportunities of the digital era for youth work was also circulating a
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but at the EU level on the 15th of December 2015 the council and the
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representatives of the governments of the Member States meeting within the Council adopted the European Union work
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plan for youth for 2016 2018 with the
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intention of taking youth work into the digital age in 2016 the European
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Commission set up an expert group with the intended outcome of delivering digital youth work and increasing youth
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workers digital skills among the targets to be achieved in the second half of
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2017 during the Estonian presidency of the European Union smart used what became one of the
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priority topics during the Estonian presidency the conclusions of smart
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youth work were adopted which among other things called the Member States and the European Commission to create
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conditions for smart youth work why is smart youth work needed there are no
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significant constraints framing young people's internet and ICT use in Estonia
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most of their daily activities take place on the internet and social media
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acts as their main communication channel the youth field needs to respond to the
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needs of youth young people as well as to this change in society it is important that smart device use and
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young people's presence in the virtual world are not seen as a problem but an opportunity youth work can provide young
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people with both competing activities and developing solutions in a technological setting what is smart
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youth work smart youth work stands for innovative development of youth work
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which involves developing and using smart solutions in youth work but also
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includes components of research quality and policy making
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smart youth work is not a practice that represents a type of youthful work nor
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does it replace any existing practices our ambitions are that smartness is an
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underlying principle of youth work in Estonia youth workers are trained
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sufficiently and extensively on how to find a safe and secure role for digital
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content and tools in their work local governments are open to new ways of
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organizing youth work based on young people's views on how to best provide it
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and they make it possible to develop or use creative solutions to engage young
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people including these solutions to increase youth participation for example
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we have composed to the smart Youth Work toolbox in Estonia with a good practices
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and opportunities have been collected to enhance smartness in work with youth
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what is smart youth work smart solutions for young people digital competencies
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and digital working methods of youth workers developing quality youth work
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opportunities through digital solutions smart youth work enables planning
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creating and implementing innovative activities for young people as well as
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offering new opportunities for them to be active and develop into adults in a
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balanced and modern way smartly virtually globally to the clouds
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okay now that was a handsome and rather familiar voice in that little clip that
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we had there sorry about the choppiness of the video don't forget you can watch this again
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online we're gonna have the whole thing recorded then have links don't worry about nothing everything is gonna be
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fine now we're going to start off we're gonna look at the three focus areas that
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we spoke about in the video and the first one is smart solutions for young
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people so that is it is an element of making sure that they can access the
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information and systems online that they need it's also about having using
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technology to help train them so they open this technology give them better skills to get out there in the workplace
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and make a contribution but it's important to understand it's not just about online service it's about the
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whole picture that we're helping young people with and talk to us more about this I'd like to invite now rains or
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bail and rain is from model we are part of me mr. memmer is not from that before
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I said that incorrectly so we're gonna switch over to rains or bail right now hope you're around we're gonna do the
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little transfer and there we go with me making it happen hi rain alright we're
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working on your audio can't hear your audio yet but we're making that happen you can just nod and smile I'll look
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good stroke that beard okay maybe your sight is muted right oh it was my
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I'm sorry okay you take it away Ryan
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you've got bored okay hello everybody my name is Ryan Sobel I'm ex film director
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now virtual content director so I prep resent the company called morovia productions and last year we made two VR
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productions for Estonian youth center
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so these two experiences that we made one was made to promote profession of
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bio analytics and the other one worse for nurses I'm gonna make that full
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screen okay I think that's better so we
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made this two experiences take consisted of 360 degrees video a 2d video and
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interactivity and then our sort of partner company called sweet Estonia has
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been making these workshops where they
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bring with them 15 sets of virtual reality headsets so the young people put
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them on top of their heads and they watch this story that we have created
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which gives them pretty much puts them
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in the shoes of of a nurse or Bionic and
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after watching that they have a practical workshop where again where they can test different kind of things
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like observe tumours through microscopes and stuff like this so our company
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created this content for them it was pretty hard to do because it's sort of a
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mix of actors and real-world professionals but at the feedback so far
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has been really positive it has been shown to 617 participate and
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as I understand these are mostly young people with a risky background so they
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often don't get to experience the
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opportunities out there regarding career choices so this gives them a very very
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personal and very you know close contact
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with with the everyday work that people do in laboratories in the ambulances in
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ER rooms where they can't be physically so we think it's a very good use of
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virtual reality also virtual reality is a very new and immersive medium so the
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feedback has been very positive because they get to experience something new technologically but at the same time
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this makes them more receptive towards content that we actually want to show
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them which is introduced professions and career opportunities and there has also
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been interest from the Estonian unemployment insurance fund because there is there is always a need for more
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nurses so they have shown interest to show this in in their events also to use
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it to educate and make people more interested in in becoming a nurse and of
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course since since the nature of the workshops is very hands-on then this is
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definitely creating more effect on people than just than just sitting in
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lecture hall and watching the presentation or watching a video a normal 2d video from the screen so I
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think that's about it for me
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right thank you very much than I'm we've switched it back on they're very good now if you are watching the webinar and
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you have some questions about anything that we're going over today I do write
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it into the chat box and we're gonna have a few moments at the end QP I'll go answer some of those questions that you
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have now the entire Estonian smart youth work initiative is summarized in this
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great book that the department has put out the Youth Work Center is put out we
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can see it there's four Grace got everything in it this picture is amazing for and I'll summarize there now we are
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going to move on to the focus area number two which is looking at youth workers so it is the other side of the
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coin as you know youth work mini queue educate youth workers we need to give them the skills and the tools that they
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need to be able to work and implement all of these smart solutions so tell us
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more about this I would now like to invite our next presenter Martin Johnson Martin we're going to switch over to you
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right now make that happen sir just a second she's coming online and there we
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go the presentation hello Martin I high seating but I try to I'll try to keep
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keep on time and I hope you're not going to play the violin before I finish so I
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would like to give a critical look at the development needs of the youth workers when implementing smart youth
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work and I'm a trainer myself so to start off I would like it to to come
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with me interests mark youth work training and just imagine you're there
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it's it's the first day of the training the participants are gathering they are
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taking out their computers their tablets smartphones getting everything connected
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to Wi-Fi and we are ready to start the training well me and my colleague will introduce
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ourselves and we'll tell a little bit about what if the smart youth were concept what do we mean by that and then it's
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it's also important to mention that within this training we are doing everything they're hands-on we'll try
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out a bunch of apps new ones and old ones but the main thing is that we want
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to test them and try them out we're not just going to talk about it and then it's time to give the floor to the
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participants and we ask them to share with us some of their experiences with
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smart youth Worth and so the challenge is that they might be facing and we hear
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a lot of a lot of examples well mostly how Facebook is being used in youth centers how people are communicating
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over to Facebook but then also we hear very concrete questions for example what
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sort of application should I use if I want to make a video that I can share with the youth and all that then we get
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to a participant who says first of all I don't like technology I really hate it
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and in fact when it comes to smart youth work I think it's a terrible idea because what we should do is to get
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people away from the screens and within this training I don't want to create a
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single user account no accounts no passwords so this was an example that we
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come across pretty much every time we start a new training on smart youth work
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there's always someone who's really doubting on the ideas of smart youth
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work or who's really well simply said against technology what we call it is
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it's the digital divide and two years ago a study was done in Estonia that was
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looking at youth workers and the way they use technology in their work and from that study we can see that 44
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percent of youth workers are using digital solutions in in their everyday work and then also what we can see there
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is that there are regional differences which means that that youth workers who are
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working in the cities tend to be using more technology than people working in a rural areas so we have clearly a divide
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over there but there's more to it and when we're looking at youth workers we
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can see that there are conservative youth workers who are more or less the
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people like I describe you in my example there are people who think that technology is not really there for any
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good it's mostly problems and we need to get young people away from swiping their
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screens and then there's also innovative youth workers people who are really
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looking for ways how to engage technology into their everyday work but are it's starting off with Facebook
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going further into using numerous different applications and then we have
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youth workers who are at the beginning of their careers we could say that they are digital natives but they are very
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new to the area of work so they're not quite sure yet what to call incorporating their work and what not
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but what we can see from this research as well is that it's clearly what youth
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workers are stating is that there's need for trainings counselling and support
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and training some counselling is also needed for the people who are innovative
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already they have already started to use something but they are not yet sure how
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to go further with it what else can we do so therefore the trainings would come
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into play and in Estonia we've been running a number of workshops and
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trainings for youth workers and within those trainings we'd like to be really
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practical and hands-on and the tools that we've been teaching or sharing and
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learning in those trainings they followed three different areas first of all the tools for engaging and reaching
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out to youth because I mentioned Facebook but let's be honest young people are not in Facebook anymore in
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fact the number of users on Facebook is dropping a special when we're looking at youngsters so we
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need to look for somewhere else and you perhaps snapchat it's not your first
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option but well this is where the youngsters are and maybe it's it's a good time to start testing it then
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there's tools for collaboration with the young people but also for collaboration with your colleagues and for that slack
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and bat'leth have proved to be really good tools and also different applications for improving efficiency in
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the youth Center's and Trello has has been really amazing for when when you
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need to run a project together with a team but another picture that comes
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across in those trainings way too often is what you're seeing on your screen one thing is an empty battery that can
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be fixed but unfortunately when youth workers are coming to the trainings we
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ask them to bring their own devices so that they are feeling more comfortable with it but those devices often are not
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really up-to-date and when we ask people to download application we hear way too
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often that they can't because the device isn't letting them or the memory is full so this is a place that definitely need
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needs improvement that youth centers cannot be the places where we dump our old technology it
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needs to be a place is with the newest technology possible but one thing is to
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technology or the hardware that we have in our hands but I think most importantly at least what we've seen in
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our trainings is the mindset the way you look at the technology and the new
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technology that's out there do you see it as a possibility you see it only as a
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problem or you can have a balanced look at it and this is what we've been trying
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to create in our trainings is that the youth workers can see the positive the
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possibilities of different applications and tools to be able to use in smart.you
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youth work but also are well aware of the downsides of it thank you here we go thank you very much
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my a very very interesting talk and raising some I believe these issues we
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could see them we understand this and definitely stuff in these few dresser thank you thank you very much now we are
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going to move along to our focus area number three right now of the smart
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youth work initiative and focus area number three has the full unofficial
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title of the developing quality youth work through digital solutions meaning we need the infrastructures in place to
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give the correct tools to our youth workers to do the correct job and we can
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we because the the youth work field is typically something that has lower
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regulation from government and standardization and that's because each youth work solution is very customized
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for region even down to the particularly young post now that actually gives a lot
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of power to youth workers to really customize their young also keep
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responsibilities as well so one of the things that we may need is systems that
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collect a lot of data about youth about young people that youth workers can access we need great collaborative
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solutions like Myron was just talking about before and we also need great
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nationwide top-down strategic guidance from regulatory and government side so
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the youth workers understand the bounds which they are working inside of so it's
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a very very interesting area and that's why it's a whole focus for us focus number three and to talk to us more
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about this I would like to introduce madatha this palü stick pardon me for the pronunciation Simon me eager
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Australia and from the bus Athena youth center and Meredith is going to be
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talking to us more about these digital solutions take it away now thank you
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hello so I'm going to tell you about one
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project what we are right now developing in so and I'm giving you a little
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background about our organization so mostly now I'm working in was Selina and
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I'm head of personnel you'd said you'd Center so was silly nice small race in
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southeast of Estonia region in the region lives I guess two thousand people
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and we have youngsters from seven to twenty six almost like four hundred
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youngsters and we have a quite big Youth Center if we think about this Tony so we
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have a huge center where is a thousand square meters and we have a gym we have
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skate park and every day there is sixty youngsters visiting us and in Estonia we
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have we have able to collect model or
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apply money to develop and youth and then we write some project what is about
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this digital at all so what was our needs or reach was that we don't have
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our youth they don't have enough good youth information so they don't have we
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have like different kind of websites and like social media pages where we share
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information but we don't have like one place where they share the information
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and then sometimes in our village things are happening unexpected unexpected
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things for example some haughty activity trainers or teachers they are sick and
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today is a no like hockey activity so
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you need to let the know your youngsters that today there is no hockey activity
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or the passes are going earlier today or something and since in our youth center days like
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gym and in the skate park and in the ridge and there is no skate park and a gym then lots of people are using and
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it's full all the time so youngsters they need the information about when is
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the best time to go the second lead was where are our youngsters because I in a
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Celina we have like 40 different activities what yet rock stars can do but actually we don't we don't get like
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really good statistics every organization has their own information
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and statistics about the research but we don't have like a information in one
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place so this was the problem and then the last problem was for parents that
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they are all the time we're calling the Youth Center and asking that where is my youngster so is my son or daughter in
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the Youth Center so we wanted to solve this problem too so and then we thought
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that we have to work out some kind of registration system and then without
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that in Estonia we have already won so a sip Association of Estonian open youth
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center has their own law book where you can register a youngsters in when they
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come to you centre or if they come to event but this law book is developed in
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2013 and it's it's developed for all the youth centre so different youth centers
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they are totally different and it's hard to make one tool for everyone so we
40:20
thought that we want to make our own doll so what we are making tent so we we
40:28
are like four five different biggest organization like musical school culture
40:33
house sport club youth center and school so we put every organization one touch
40:40
screen registration screen so when youngsters are coming to hockey activity
40:45
there coming to youth center then that they have a ref ID card and then they can go
40:52
to the screen and they can register themselves and on the screen there is
40:58
that weird tone patterns with what you can push so there is team for example if
41:04
for our youth center there is there going to be chilling skatepark kids room
41:09
handicraft or some other half of the activity hanging and chilling and or for
41:16
examples of unit some event so it's going to be really easy to register yourself and when somebody wants to see
41:23
like open statistics for example how many youngsters are inching more inside
41:28
part then you can view the open statistics and the d'ampton we're going
41:35
to have two smart screens in school and in in a Youth Center and on those
41:43
screens we have coming events unexpected and important things as so when for
41:51
example when Opie activity starts today from when they start earlier or they
41:59
started so some another place then you can see this information then we wanted
42:05
to add the pastimes hoppy activity Stein table so you can see all the time when the activities are
42:11
and you can push the buttons and the right screen is opening and then the
42:16
last thing what is related with all this one is the smartphone app so the smart
42:22
phone app gives us the same information that the smart screen is giving you but
42:31
beside that you can you have chance to register yourself at a youth center or
42:37
hobby activity when something is changing and you are in some hoppy
42:42
activity then you get a specific information for example if when you are going to the skiing or skateboard
42:49
hoppy activity then and today there is no hoppy activity then you get push up
42:55
notice that today there is nothing and and we then we know that
43:01
we can share the information with parent when he or she wants to see you see
43:08
where is the youngster than when the youngster is in the Youth Center then you can you can see that he or she is in
43:17
youth center and when he is in a Hopi activity then you can see that he he or she is in a hobby activity so this is
43:24
the system what we are one we want to develop and what is the goals or
43:29
outcomes we what want it with this project is better statistics about youth
43:35
behavior so then it's easier for us to plant near event events and hobby
43:40
activities or even say military quality that we need some extra pastimes because
43:46
youngsters take and get home then we want the youngsters get relevant information and the first information
43:55
then we want the parents know where their children are and and our visitors
44:01
youngsters or even adults can plan better their visit so this system is
44:07
just beginning and we are making like technical a capability to develop the system so this year we want to want to
44:16
have the technical things and the next year we are we want to do more we want
44:25
to develop more things so this is just the beginning and yeah so this is it
44:31
this is our system what we are developing right now
44:45
hey sorry about that man sorry about that part of me just dealing I clicked on the message to a quick part
44:52
of me thank you very much for your talk very very interesting to hear about what's happening in South South Estonia right from the front line so thank you
45:00
and have a good now into our chat we
45:06
pasted a link where you can download the PDF of the overview all our smart youth
45:11
work initiative and so you can get that PDF in there we will be out but if you
45:17
can't open up we're gonna help you with that in a moment because also what the public does is give us some terms of an
45:25
activity plan so be smart you over not just some high level ideas it's not just
45:31
some general are we think this is a great idea let's do something like that they've listed real steps and actions
45:38
that we will be taking to implement these ideas and that I think is extremely extremely important now
45:46
they're the three focus areas that we have with the smart youth work initiative really what our how our young
45:53
people accessing our systems how are they using that technology how are we training youth workers to be able to use
46:01
that technology and learn how to do their job in this environment and as we just heard their hair how are we working
46:07
on systems to support both sides of that both the youth and the youth workers all
46:14
those three come together for our three focus groups now at the end of our talk
46:19
we also wanted to touch on a very very important area that goes across all
46:24
three of our focus areas and that namely is mental health and that's something
46:30
that we need to be wary of it all of the things that we do because this is certainly something that can be very
46:37
common with the young people that we're reaching out so to help us understand
46:42
more about this we're gonna welcome in now Martha Rutles and Martha is a mental
46:48
health activist and a founding member of the Estonian youth movement of mental
46:53
health to talk to us for a moment a little bit about this Martha let's switch over to you right now
46:58
do the mouse through the buttons here we go we're making a connection beautiful
47:09
we can see you son now we can hear you lovely you can see me as well oh so good
47:19
afternoon everybody my name is Martha I am the vice chairman of External Affairs of the Estonian
47:26
youth movement of mental health and I'm here to talk a little bit about our
47:31
organization and some of the practices we use so our organization began in
47:39
August 2015 when a youth Mental Health website viz held a workshop to find new
47:47
solutions to support young people and their mental health and at this workshop the idea to create an organisation was
47:55
born for two years we existed under the same NGO but since late 2017 we have
48:04
been an independent organization so who are we we are young people from the ages
48:12
15 up to 30 with some supporting members who are over 30 years old as well but
48:19
our target group is under 30 most of our members have experienced some sort of
48:26
mental health problems but it is not a requirement to join we welcome everybody
48:31
who are motivated and want to raise awareness regardless if they have had
48:38
any personal experiences or nuts oh okay
48:49
yes so what do we do our goal is to
48:55
create an environment that supports mental health and we are trying to reach
49:01
that goal by sharing our personal experiences we do believe that our experiences are the most powerful tool
49:09
we have and we are trying to implement in almost every activity we do we give
49:16
lecturers we have some public discussions and private events and also
49:22
we have a Facebook group that I think kind of sets us apart from other
49:28
organizations because it's very special we use it as our main communication
49:33
channel and also as a safe space for our members so a little bit about the
49:41
lectures we give them with the Estonian Medical Students Association usually we
49:49
have two to three lecturers one of them shares a personal experience story then
49:57
we have some information about the most common mental health problems how to get
50:02
help and how to help yourself and one of the things we have started to
50:08
use one of the tools is Google Forms where you where the audience can send us
50:17
their questions or comments because mental health is still very stigmatized
50:23
topic and especially for young people it is very hard to talk about so we have
50:29
found that having the option to send your question anonymously works really
50:37
well actually so and we have used it at our other
50:42
events as well not only at the lectures for example this is a picture from a
50:48
public discussion we had about eating disorders where Elise Crick or who wrote
50:55
the book about her experiences with an eating disorder and me we we talked
51:01
about her experiences and you can't really see it very well from the picture but we had a link where you could send
51:09
your questions and we did get some questions and something that was very
51:16
heartwarming from the from this
51:21
discussion was that there was a mother in the audience who said that thanks to
51:26
Alysse being so open about her experiences her daughter also sought
51:32
help for her problems so that was very hard
51:38
warming moment for us we use the stories
51:44
to to reach our target audience through
51:49
campaigns as well we teamed up with peyote for hashtag super gun blessed which means superheroes in Estonian this
51:58
campaign lasted for one month in April of May and during this campaign we
52:06
posted stories that were sent to us by a young people about their experiences
52:12
with mental health problems and we posted them up on our Facebook page with some quotes to illustrate the posts
52:21
and here are some examples I could translate them as well so the left one
52:27
is my sister had a new teacher who bullied her her friends didn't talk to
52:32
her much either because she did not have much time to go anywhere because she went to music school
52:37
her best friend met up with her after music school and her parents were very supportive if she didn't have them she
52:44
would have killed herself at least that's what she said so this one was sent to us by a 13 year old boy about
52:51
his sister and the other one was sent by a 17 year old girl and it says
52:57
depression should not be a topic that people are afraid to talk about it should be as normal as any other
53:04
physical injury after all it is important to be happy they actually
53:11
reached surprisingly a lot of people and we gained a lot of likes on our Facebook
53:17
page and we could make ourselves more visible through that campaign so a
53:24
little bit more about our Facebook group it is a closed group we have 73 members
53:31
at the moment most of them are members of our organization and some of them are are closer partners from reality
53:41
we do have some rules to ensure the safety of our members we do not share
53:49
the posts outside of the group unless you have a permission I will be sharing
53:55
some examples but I have permissions for them and all the names and faces have
54:00
been blocked out for safety reasons we respect each other and if we share
54:07
something in a group a short description must be written and if it includes some
54:13
sensitive topics a trigger warning must be added as well again to protect our
54:20
members here are some examples how we use our Facebook group
54:26
so here are two polls where we try to find suitable times for events and we've
54:34
found that this works quite well so a lot of people will not a lot of people
54:41
but people could attend our events that will weigh more
54:47
here are some posts from the group on the left you can see a little
54:55
interesting post about the advances in psychiatry that was shared in a group
55:00
and on the right there is a discussion about which tips you have gotten from
55:10
psychologists or psychiatrists have been the most useful for you so there was a
55:15
discussion and people shared what has been useful for them and this is actually a common theme in our group
55:22
that people share what has helped them here's just the left a beam a member
55:31
posted about a panic attack and on the
55:36
right there is a post just to remind the members to take care of themselves here
55:45
are some quotes by our members I hope you had time to read them but I don't
55:53
have much time to to pause for a for a long time here so maybe if you didn't quite read
56:02
everything you can catch up later on YouTube and here's another quote by
56:08
Elise well ready mentioned she wrote the book about her experiences and now she
56:14
has become a member of our organization as well and it's actually very cool that
56:19
her mother is also a member of our organization a supporting member so I
56:25
think it's very awesome so I hope you
56:32
got some ideas and you have a little bit clearer overview of what we do and how
56:40
we use smart youth work and if you have
56:45
any future partnership ideas you can contact me and there's also a link to our public Facebook page where you could
56:52
leave a like thank you very much for inviting us to this webinar all right
56:59
Thank You Martha very interesting insights there now we need to wrap it up
57:05
very soon as I promised got a couple of questions it's easier than a few minutes of spoken to our expert here and I had a
57:13
quick summary of that from captain oats was asking us about some of the possible
57:19
negatives that can also happen from our adoption of all these technological tools of particularly when it comes to
57:25
AI and the algorithms of this selecting things how do we know that they're
57:30
making the correct selection and how do we know that this computer there's Google this whatever that we're using to
57:37
help us isn't biased and it's a great question because when we're programming
57:44
these AIS to help us out but like humans they can have bias as well an actor would be
57:50
biased against a gender religious group sexual orientation all sorts of stuff
57:55
and that will come down to the data that we use the trained individual artificial
58:01
intelligences if we're heading Donna that is biased or not he has human bias because we all are
58:08
then the algorithm can actually turn out biased results and it's absolutely something we need to be watching out for
58:16
it's a very important thing we can't just trust that we need to understand something about how it's making these
58:22
decisions so certainly a very important word warning there and the last one was
58:28
Gabrielle from Romania as I said just a quick few ones and it was the very
58:33
interesting point about well if youth workers need to use phones or devices
58:40
which have enough memory and you can load the apps on and have all the things
58:46
that you may need um that's expensive that cost us money
58:51
and what are you doing countries that are less well-off and I guess in Romania
58:56
particularly outside cities no doubt see that I would think that it is also a
59:02
reflection of the greater community if the young people in your community all have iPhone 7 how did they get iPhone 7
59:09
this is not an advantaged community so I would imagine that your technology that
59:14
you use just needs to reflect what the young people are using in your particular community and that might help
59:23
you it doesn't have to be great or higher just a steep level I think now there's still financial challenges there
59:30
but we're certainly not saying that everyone needs a kinder 7
59:42
they to make these solutions happen so I thought you were hope that you'd learn
59:49
more about the smart youth work initiative here in Estonia my name is Luis says I've been the host thank you
59:54
very much for logging on you could check it all out later see you later everybody
1:00:10
hello everyone before you look off I would invite you to fill in a little
1:00:17
poll so please rate rate this webinar
1:00:23
how you felt today in case you can see
1:00:29
it I can see myself off air for some reason so I do not know what is going on
1:00:38
you know
This webinar introduces the main aspects of Smart Youth Work. It was organised in view of the Symposium “Connecting the Dots: Young People, Social Inclusion and Digitalisation” (26-28 June 2018 Tallinn).
Link to the Symposium page
Webinar: Smart Youth Work
www.youtube.comAvailable in EN
Authors
The EU-CoE youth partnership is a co-operation programme between the European Commission and the Council of Europe in the field of youth, created in 1998. It is based on the principle of a balanced involvement of the partner institutions in terms of political priorities, management, funding and visibility.
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