Download - Design work from February 2014
WORK I DID IN
FEBRUARY(2014)
BRANDING AND CONFERENCE MARKETINGCENTER FOR CURIOSITY
The First AnnualCuriosity Conference
ORGANIZERS:Arjun Shankar, Nanak Bhatia, Shubhrata Das, Divya Joseph,
Ranjani Polepeddi, and Divya Subramaniam
For more information call 9632860891 or 9916601348
CURIOUS COGNITION
THE CURIOUS TEACHER
THE KATHAOF CURIOSITY
CURIOUS CHALLENGES
POORNCURIOSITY
CURIOSITY WHENSCHOOL ENDS
Insights into how cognitive
processes help in building curiosity
Action identification and
its influence on curiosity
Curiosity and classroom
practices with focus on teacher
preparation programs
Classroom confessions
of a rule b(l)ender
Stimulating curiosity through
stories of exploration and travel
Story telling as a communication tool-
a journey of connecting to the roots of
culture and curiosity
Factors conducive to the expression of
curiosity in children
Curiosity in the classrooms:
What inhibits curiosity in children?
Invoking curiosity through
counter-intuitive demonstrations
and questions
Fear and curiosity
Three sources of curiosity
FEBRUARY 28, 10am - 5pmAzim Premji University | 10th floor, pixel A
The sound of curiosity
The First AnnualCuriosity Conference
Are you curious?
What: The First Annual Curiosity Conference seeks
to bring together ‘curious thinkers’ to explore two
central questions that are becoming increasingly
important for today's educators: First, how do we
harness and release the natural curiosity of our
students? Second, how might developing curiosity
help to improve classroom learning?
Each presentation will build toward the primary
focus of our discussion: to develop activities,
ideas, and concepts that can help teachers
explicitly infuse curiosity into their classroom.
Panelists will brainstorm possible curricular tools
and workshop a “curiosity curriculum” currently
being developed by the CfC team.
Azim Premji University,Bangalore, India10th floor, pixel A
February 28,10am - 5pm
Sponsored by :
FESTIVAL MARKETINGCAMRA
FESTIVAL PROGRAM
10:00AM - 6:30PM
ANNENBERG SCHOOL FOR COMMUNICATION
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
PHILADELPHIA, PA
STORY ILLUSTRATIONSYMBIOSIS MAGAZINE
COMPETITION ENTRYPENN DEFIBRILLATOR DESIGN CHALLENGE
1 OF 4 EXPERT PANEL AWARDS
AND IT WON!
NEWSLETTER REDESIGNPENN CENTER FOR PUBLIC HEALTH INITIATIVES
This document is about the five-year experience of the largest and most experimental project that Provide has ever done — LASI, the Least Access States Initiative.
In 2007, Provide launched a multi-state, multi-year program to build infrastructure and capacity for improved access to abortion in extremely low-access, politically conservative, and low-resource states. This ambitious program was the result of organization-wide strategic planning completed the previous year that committed resources and prior success in states ranging from Maine to Washington to the more difficult task of increasing access where it was needed most, and where resources were fewest. Major components of the initiative included developing stakeholder interest, stakeholder-driven assessment and planning, and implementation of key interventions to improve access.
Over those five years, we built commitment and capacity at individual and institutional levels - including among those that have not previously addressed abortion - in least access states. Overall, this has resulted in
1) a more robust and still growing infrastructure in program states for work on reproductive health and abortion; and
2) gains in abortion access that can be replicated and brought to scale in these and other states, by Provide and other organizations.
We would like to share some stories about the work that we’ve done as well as the lessons we’ve learned in the process. This project was a radical shift for Provide and we learned so much from a willingness to try anything that might work; it is our hope that there are lessons and stories here that may help others doing similar work.
Provide is committed to access to safe abortion for all women in the U.S.
We believe that by being clearly focused on abortion within the context of our broader values we will make a significant contribution to women’s health and autonomy.
To this end, Provide:
Lessons from LASI What we’ve learned from working on abortion access in the most restrictive states
FOREWARD
Looks for gaps in abortion access that no one else is addressing and seeks to create and support innovative responses to these gaps;Seeks to catalyze changes within health care and reproductive health activism that increase the participation of a wide range of health care providers in providing and connecting women to safe abortion care; and
Works with local partners to achieve locally-driven, locally-relevant goals and connects this work to national organizations also interested in expanding access.
PROVIDE
The Lasi Project
WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION
Baligh Yehia, MD, MPP, MSHP
Assistant Professor of Medicine;
Director, Penn Medicine Program for LGBT Health
NATIONAL LGBT HEALTH POLICIES AND THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
Kellan Baker, MA, MPH
Associate Director, LGBT Research and Communications,
Center for American Progress
LGBT RESEARCH AND HEALTH EDUCATION
Mitchell R. Lunn, MD
Clinical Research Fellow, Division of Nephrology, University of
California, San Francisco; Founder and Investigator, LGBT Medical
Education Research Group, Stanford University School of Medicine
LGBT HEALTH AND PATIENT CARE IN PHILADELPHIA
Nurit Shein
Executive Director, Mazzoni Center
Let’s Talk About Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual,
and Transgender (LGBT) Health
REALIZING THE UNIQUE HEALTH NEEDS OF THE LGBT COMMUNITY
ADDITIONAL DISCUSSIONS: Panel Discussion—
Best practices and policies in advancing LGBT health; Q&A
Tuesday, April 1st | 4:00-6:00pm
JOHN MORGAN REUNION AUDITORIUM
RSVP:WWW.CPHI.UPENN.EDU/EVENTS
going to play the wii by myself because I'm lonely
LONELY PROJECTCurrently lonely on twitter:
THE
A BUNCH OF OTHER THINGS
This document is about the five-year experience of the largest and most experimental project that Provide has ever done — LASI, the Least Access States Initiative.
In 2007, Provide launched a multi-state, multi-year program to build infrastructure and capacity for improved access to abortion in extremely low-access, politically conservative, and low-resource states. This ambitious program was the result of organization-wide strategic planning completed the previous year that committed resources and prior success in states ranging from Maine to Washington to the more difficult task of increasing access where it was needed most, and where resources were fewest. Major components of the initiative included developing stakeholder interest, stakeholder-driven assessment and planning, and implementation of key interventions to improve access.
Over those five years, we built commitment and capacity at individual and institutional levels - including among those that have not previously addressed abortion - in least access states. Overall, this has resulted in
1) a more robust and still growing infrastructure in program states for work on reproductive health and abortion; and
2) gains in abortion access that can be replicated and brought to scale in these and other states, by Provide and other organizations.
We would like to share some stories about the work that we’ve done as well as the lessons we’ve learned in the process. This project was a radical shift for Provide and we learned so much from a willingness to try anything that might work; it is our hope that there are lessons and stories here that may help others doing similar work.
Provide is committed to access to safe abortion for all women in the U.S.
We believe that by being clearly focused on abortion within the context of our broader values we will make a significant contribution to women’s health and autonomy.
To this end, Provide:
Lessons from LASI What we’ve learned from working on abortion access in the most restrictive states
FOREWARD
Looks for gaps in abortion access that no one else is addressing and seeks to create and support innovative responses to these gaps;Seeks to catalyze changes within health care and reproductive health activism that increase the participation of a wide range of health care providers in providing and connecting women to safe abortion care; and
Works with local partners to achieve locally-driven, locally-relevant goals and connects this work to national organizations also interested in expanding access.
PROVIDE
The Lasi Project NEED DESIGN?
LAURENHALLDEN.COM@PHILLYLAUREN