The SDG Youth Worker Fest brought youth workers together for creativity, connection, and inspiration. Everything about the day was focused around the Sustainable Development Goals, including:
- Sustainable food served at the Decent Work & Well Being Café
- Lanyards and name badges made from upcycled denim by One World Week seed grant recipient Change Clothes Crumlin
- Posters around the venue to keep us focused on the meaning of the day
Host and Global Youth Work Trainer Olive Ojo helped us break the ice, setting intentions and getting our bodies moving before moving on to the day’s workshops.
What’s in your personal first aid kit?
Warmed up in mind and body, it was time to get deeper. Sally Daly from our Capacity Development, M & E, Youth 2030 Global Youth Work, and Development Education Team stepped up. Sally had an important question for our group to ponder: What do we carry in our personal first aid kits? These are the things we reach for to look after ourselves and make us feel grounded and whole. Some answers from the group were:
- The smell of rain
- Running around a football pitch
- A warm welcome
- Reminding yourself why you do what you do
- A hug from a friend
- A good cup of tea
- And a coin that’s never spent
Workshopping the Sustainable Development Goals
Speakers April Tamblin, Fiona Creedon, Hernán Tena Cortés, Chris O’Donoghue, Jacob Sosinsky, and Deirbhile Craven led the day’s workshops, which were split into two parts.
For the first part of the day, the group worked together. First, through a spoken word workshop in which they brainstormed the meaning of power. A few brave people even gave impromptu performances! Then, we got competitive with the Funky Food Quiz, answering quick fire questions for sustainable prizes. Next, the group took part in a roleplaying exercise that explored equality and opportunity seen through the lens of access to water and other resources. Finally, participants learned the difference between misinformation, disinformation, and fake news. This workshop gave participants tools to investigate online information with young people and respond to fake news related to LGBTQIA+ issues and immigrant rights.
After breaking for a nourishing and sustainable lunch, the group split up for the second part of the day, each choosing one workshop:
What does hunger say?
Participants were tasked with getting curious about hunger as both a personal feeling and a global issue. Considering food through this wider lens can be used to help young people see and understand the systems involved in their food. How is our food produced? How does it arrive on our tables? What happens when a cog those systems stops spinning?
The uneven chocolate bar
In this hands-on game, participants grappled with fairness, chocolate, and fair trade! As an extra added bonus, everyone went home with a specially-wrapped bar of Tony’s Chocolonely chocolate. Designed by our team for One World Week 2024, it highlights the SDGs, global youth work, and the joy of exploitation-free chocolate.
My bedroom was a lake
In this game, focused on SDGs 05: Gender Equality and 13: Climate Action, the group imagined waking up surrounded by a lake. The game was designed to help participants understand the relationship between climate change and gender inequality.
Reflecting
Our final in-person event of One World Week 2024, the SDG Youth Worker Fest was a celebration of passion and creativity. As fulfilling, important, and rewarding as youth work is, it can also be personal and heavy. Holding space for those feelings and spending time with other youth workers is critical for health and well-being. The heart of this festival was about sharing, coming together, and bringing the SDGs to life for the young people we work with.
One World Week and the Youth 2030 programme are supported by our funders Irish Aid and our partners Maynooth University, Trócaire, and Concern Worldwide. The Youth Summit was supported by Fairtrade Ireland and the Communications Workers Union.