Kids
Can Make A Difference®
(KIDS), an educational program for middle- and high school students,
focuses on the root causes of hunger and poverty, the people most
affected, solutions, and how students can help. The major goal is to
stimulate the students to take some definite follow-up actions as they
begin to realize that one person can make a difference. The
program as originally developed by former World
Hunger Year (WHY) board members, Jane
Finn Levine and Larry Levine, consisted of interactive classes
conducted by the Levine's or other trained KIDS teachers. Today, there are
three major components of the KIDS program: (1) The innovative teacher
guide, Finding
Solutions to Hunger: Kids Can Make A Difference, (2) newsletter,
and (3) the KIDS web site. The
teacher guide, Finding Solutions to
Hunger: Kids Can Make A Difference, has been used in middle- and
high-schools, after school programs, religious schools, distance learning
programs, home schools, and local food banks. It features uplifting,
engaging, interactive and challenging lessons on the causes of and
solutions to domestic and international hunger. It examines contemporary
development projects, the role of the media, famine vs. chronic hunger,
the working poor, and more, as well as valuable ideas for how young people
can make a difference in their communities and in the world around them.
In the hands of a creative teacher, the guide is adaptable to a range of
ages. The guide can be ordered directly from KIDS and costs $26 plus $8
shipping. Supporting
classroom work is a KIDS Newsletter that highlights current hunger issues
and student initiatives. The quarterly newsletter features articles
written by students, teachers and others concerned with finding solutions
to hunger and poverty. It is distributed to over 2500 schools, after
school programs, religious schools and organizations, food banks/pantries,
etc. KIDS
was featured in Teaching
Tolerance Magazine (September 2007) article. The magazine reaches
600,000 educators and is published twice a year. The Kids program was
highlighted as an example of how to turn food drives into vehicles for
social change. On
December 31, 1999, Vatican Radio in Rome, Italy conducted an interview
with KIDS as they wanted to bring the program to the attention of their
listeners around the world. In
March 1998, Education World voted the KIDS Web Site one of the 20 best
educational sites on the World Wide Web. The site features information
about the teacher guide (including a sample lesson), newsletters, hot
topics, hunger facts, Kids Speak and other subjects of interest to
students and teachers. Students
at the Caedmon School in New York City participated in a "Hunger
Banquet." According to Mauve D'Arcy, a student, "The Hunger
Banquet was really powerful and helped my class to understand what it's
like to be really hungry." Her teacher, Jane Darby said, "It's
easy to become numb to the problems of poverty. City kids are witnesses to
hunger every day... this exercise helps them to realize the injustice of
it, and also gets them motivated to take some action." Fifth
and sixth grade students in Maine conducted a Hunger Fair to educate
fellow students and teachers. One student remarked, "I thought the
Hunger Fair was a great idea. It gave kids knowledge and that is important
because kids are the future. If we influenced just one person, then we did
our job." Another student remarked, "I thought the people
weren't going to believe the facts I told them about hunger. They would
stand there and say, 'Wow, I can't believe that!'" The
Maine Children's Alliance presented the 1996 Giraffe Award to KIDS. This
award is given to those individuals and/or groups who stick their necks
out for children. In
May 1999, Mayor Evelyn Sirrell of Portsmouth, NH issued a proclamation
commending the KIDS educational program. Her proclamation "encouraged
schools and communities all over the state of New Hampshire to offer this
program to their young people to show them that they can make a difference
for the better in the larger world." Home | Teacher Guide | Hunger Quiz Kids Newsletter | Kids Speak | Who We Are Hunger Facts | What Kids Can Do Hot Topics For further information on the program and how you can become involved, contact: kids@kidscanmakeadifference.org. Click here to go to World Hunger Year's home page. © Copyright 2006, Kids Can Make A Difference |