Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

  • Mood:

Do Something activist site

Teens, and parents or teachers of teens, may be interested in this activist website: Do Something aims to be "using the power of online to get teens to do stuff offline." It features many different causes to choose from. (Link courtesy of haikujaguar.)
Tags: activism, networking
Subscribe

  • Winterfest in July Bingo Card 7-1-21

    Here is my card for the Winterfest in July Bingo fest. It runs from July 1-30. Celebrate all the holidays and traditions of winter! ( See all my…

  • Birdfeeding

    Today is sunny, muggy, and warm. I fed the birds. I've seen house finches and a squirrel. After lunch, we moved the rest of the walnut logs. Most…

  • Bingo

    I have made bingo down the B, G, and O columns of my 6-1-21 card for the Cottoncandy Bingo fest. I also have one extra fill. B1 (caretaking) --…

  • Post a new comment

    Error

    default userpic

    Your IP address will be recorded 

    When you submit the form an invisible reCAPTCHA check will be performed.
    You must follow the Privacy Policy and Google Terms of use.
  • 4 comments
Cool, thank you. At least one of my teens might be inspired by this.
Networking win! I hope they enjoy it.
I showed it to my younger daughter, and she had actually heard of it and was interested. Then I was thinking of my younger son (not yet a teenager): he and I did a little cookie stand to raise money for Yele Haiti (my son's choice of destination country), and it was cool to see on the projects page a guy who was talking about making hay, etc. .... I'm being a little incoherent: what I mean is, I liked the small scale of some of the projects, which reminded me of my son's own, small, project.
Some organizations include both small and large projects. Change.org is another good one, though it mainly focuses on online petitions. Bloggers Unite aims to get people all talking about the same topic at the same time. Reduce Footprints offers weekly challenges on small practical changes:
http://reducefootprints.blogspot.com/