• Blog
  • Archives
  • Bio
  • Awards
  • Speaking
  • Book
  • Contact

YouthActionNet Global Fellowship Preparations

Published: Thursday, 29 September 2011

On 17 May this year, over two months after I'd submitted my application, I received an exciting email in my inbox.  "Congratulations!  You have been selected as one of 20 YouthActionNet Fellows out of 600 applicants!"

I was stoked!  The YouthActionNet (YAN) Fellowship exists to strengthen, support, and celebrate the role of young people in leading positive change in their communities.  In order to achieve that aim, it includes a weeklong retreat of skill-building, networking and resources and advocacy-training, at a selected location (this year, it's in Mexico City!) followed by a yearlong mentorship.  It's run by the International Youth Foundation and is backed by companies such as Nokia and Starbucks.  In total, my fellowship is worth over $20,000!  There are over 400 young social entrepreneurs from more than 60 countries who have been YouthActionNet Fellows in its 10 year history.

 

Since then, there's been heaps of emails to organise things.

 

A month ago, we were sent a homework assignment to complete before next week.  The first task was to construct the work I do into a story, including a 4-page guideline of how to do that.

 

That activity was surprisingly really useful.  I used a variation of it for a speech I gave shortly afterwards, to great reviews, and I've used the structure for interviews since then as well, including this one:  Brains Matter .  I've probably given a variation of that speech 5 times publicly in the past month, so I found that activity really useful and I'm glad I got that task done early!

 

The second task was to consider what I wanted to learn from my fellow participants during the week, and what I could offer.  This is the list I came up with.  (I like lists).

Can teach at YAN:

  1. Setting up an advisory board
  2. Managing a team across the world
  3. Growing an organization globally
  4. Growing an organization exponentially
  5. Time management
  6. Bootstrapping
  7. Setting great goals
  8. Really achieving your goals
  9. How to make people do what you want them to do
  10. How to have efficient meetings

 

Want to discover new ideas for the following at YAN:

  1. Sustainability - creating a structure whereby the organization can live without me and I can exit gracefully
  2. Raising money
  3. Structure for having staff next year
  4. Way in which we can engage all the female engineering students in the world in the organization
  5. How to make people really engage with and advocate the organization
  6. Ideas for acknowledging people so they keep volunteering
  7. Ideas as to how to create a community?
  8. How to recruit superstars teams in other locations (recruiting a whole team at once for another location over the phone/Skype)
  9. How to find an executive director/successor?
  10. How to have a greater mainstream impact

 

I am flying to Mexico tomorrow for the retreat, and I can't wait to meet all the other participants from all over the world and am so excited to be joining such a large and inspiring organisation.

About Me

Marita ChengForbes named me a world's top 50 woman in tech & 30 Under 30. I founded Robogals and Aipoly and was Young Australian of the Year 2012. Currently working on robotics company Aubot. I'm the youngest Member of the Order of Australia (AM) and I give speeches around the world.

I tweet @maritacheng and I'm on Facebook.

Subscribe

Enter your email address to receive my latest blog posts: 

 

Random Articles

  • The Impostor Syndrome

    I first learnt about the impostor syndrome at the Grace Hopper Celebration for Women in Computing in 2011.  A Stanford student asked a question...

  • How successful are you?

    “I go to Imperial College”, “I’m applying to MIT”, “I play bowls for my county”, or “I’m a pro-series gamer” means nothing to the person who doesn’t know...

  • Remembering my piano teacher Mrs Langtree

    When people ask me abut my influences growing up, I tell them about my piano teacher, Mrs Langtree. I went to my first piano lesson when I was 7...

  • Robogals: Handing on the CEO baton

    There comes a point when it's time to move on and seek out new challenges. On 31 December 2012, after a year of transition process, I handed over my...

  • Don't kid yourself on your priorities

    What are your priorities?  Work?  Family?  Relationship?  Start-up?  9-5?  Non-profit?  Volunteering?  Watching television?  Reading blogs?  Eating?  Meetings? Don't...

  • YouthActionNet Global Fellowship Day 0: The "best" and "better" plans

    A month ago, I came up with a list of the things I wanted to consider during my YouthActionNet Fellowship retreat.  In the 24 hours that it took me...

  • Dianne's Garage

    This is how I spend the majority of my time:  Hanging out with my mentor Dianne in her awesome workshop.

  • A regularly pleasant airport experience

    One day, as if overnight, all the airport check-in people and desks disappeared.  In their place appeared computerised self-tagging stations.  Across the...

  • Aipoly at Singularity University

    Aipoly aims to help the blind navigate the world. Our first application enables blind people to take a photo of their surroundings, and have it...

  • SBS Small Business Secrets

    SBS came and filmed a short segment at the 2Mar Robotics office for their SBS Small Business Secrets program.  It aired on 23 October. Watch the...

Enter your email address to receive my latest blog posts: 

 

Scroll to Top