.+We Operate Best Together+.

Mapping the Stories of Creativity and Social Innovation Worldwide

We Operate Best Together Update #3

Posted By Morgan on March 16, 2010

I sent this out to backers who were subscribed to my newsletter at the beginning of this month.

Just wanted to update the larger interwebs on the status of We Operate Best Together.  Been a while since my 2nd update so apologies on the late ping.  Here’s the latest…

Moved Back To San Diego

I returned successfully from Australia and within a week, got offered a full-time job at Media Arts Center San Diego!  I’m now the Lab Program Manager for our DIY New Media Lab and manage all aspects of programming, partnerships and fundraising for the Lab.  It’s hard work building a lab, but also something I’m very excited about.  I’ve always wanted to build one since I was little.

blog regularly about my work at the Lab and live just half a block away in the beautiful neighborhood of Golden Hill.

Partnering With FabLab San Diego

Currently, I’m building a stronger partnership with our friends at FabLab San Diego.  Like Media Arts Center San Diego, they are also working to bridge the digital divide using digital media and technology.  They have some of the same needs and desires as we do too  -  great workshops, fun partnerships and new revenue/funding models.  I just helped them redesign their new website with the lovely Ms. Bea.  It only seems fitting that we would operate better together:)

Reflecting on My Time With CuriousWorks

Working with CuriousWorks was amazing. They are a small and agile organization that uses technology and creativity better than anyone I have ever worked with.  Big kudos to Shakthi, Elias, Amiée, Naomi and Peter.  The kids we worked with in Newman got on got on national news (print and tv!), put on a successful film festival and discovered 33 things they can do.  You can also follow CuriousWorks’ blog.

UPDATE!: Since we left Newman, the kids have started started filming a new movie and the teachers at both Newman Senior High and South Newman Primary pulled together to purchase new computers for the kids to work with!

A Reflection on My Time With CuriousWorks

Posted By Morgan on January 6, 2010

Feet in TheseI’ve always been afraid of two things – bodies of water (in which I cannot see the bottom) and heights. At 7, I was stung by a jellyfish while swimming. That same year, I fell off a rock face and into a crevice of fresh lava rock, gouging and slicing my flesh as I tumbled to the bottom – it felt like I fell for miles. I came to dread swimming and climbing things.

Over 20 years later, I found myself miles in the air flying across the world’s largest body of water. All to work for a small organization called CuriousWorks. I’d not heard of them until just a few weeks earlier and in a few days, I was going to be helping them make media with kids in the middle of the Pilbara – a place few Australians (let alone Americans like me) ever get the chance to see.

With just a single Tweet as the trigger, I was going to be over 10,000 miles away from home, in the middle of a vast desert, in a country I’d never been to…

I dove in.

My Time in the Pilbara - 10

My Time in the Pilbara - 06

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Some mornings, I had magnificent dreams and awoke to watch the sun rise over the desert landscape.

My Time in the Pilbara - 05

Other mornings gave me a taste of the complex realities of kids in rural and remote communities.

And this was only the first 5 days of my trip…

Newman, from Radio Hill.

My second week in Australia found me in the small mining town of Newman, Western Australia. Newman consists of about 5,000 people with an extra 2,000 as ‘fly in fly out‘). It sits about 1200 km north of Perth in the heart of the Pilbara Desert. Because of it’s remote location, food and water need to be shipped in to Newman’s only grocery store weekly. Pilbara literally, means ‘dry‘.

There’s a cultural thirst here too – particularly for the young people of Newman. Pop cultural artifacts like StarWars, Twilight and Subway sandwiches are lapped up. The kids constantly talk about wanting to see ‘bands in Perth’. In deed, many young people – Newman’s potential future leaders – end up leaving.

Because of this, BHP Billiton recognized the need for a more sustainable and permanent infrastructure – something for the long term. That’s where CuriousWorks came in.

As part of the BHP Iron Ore Legacy Project and in partnership with Country Arts WA, CuriousWorks helped Newman’s kids develop a wide range of skills they could put back in to their community. Some of these skills were gained interviewing locals outside of school. Other skills were nurtured by developing a class website. Our final part of the project was putting on Newman’s first film festival.

In starting the project, Senior Advisor of Sustainability and Community Relations for BHP Billiton, Scott Bird said:

“We really want to contribute something significant to the town that demonstrates BHP Billiton Iron Ore’s commitment to creating liveable communities that people want to participate in for the long term. We expect this project will create a lasting impact on both the community members and the landscape of the Newman Township.”

Over the next 12 weeks, we worked with teachers, students and parents to build the media capacity of Newman’s young residents. We moved between 5 different locations to conduct our after school media-making workshops while teaching new media classes in the primary and senior high schools. It was hectic, but a lot of fun and the kids we worked with were very productive.

The project accomplished some great things with and for the young people of Newman:

And yes, we felt happy to call them ‘our kids’. They are awesome.

While we accomplished a lot while there, we were not without our challenges. For one, we were outsiders, not just geographically, but culturally too; a Sri Lankan, a Lebanesian, a snow white Australian with a slight British accent and an Asian-American made for some curious workers in a predominantly white town. There were even a few incidents where I wondered if I’d been discriminated against because of my ‘outsider’ ness. In a conversation I had with a local school teacher, she offhandedly referred to the film production, internet literacy development, and photography we were doing with the kids as not ‘real’ teaching.

Coming into Newman, we also expected to have a stable teaching space to meet with the youth. We had anything but. Not only did the local youth center close down a week before we arrived, but the places we’d hoped to conduct our media workshops were unreliable, in spite of the dedicated efforts of our staff and our Newman partners. The recently closed youth center hadn’t even been open a year. Where were after school programs for youth going to be held? Where were the creative spaces kids could go to continue their learning, playing and making when the schools closed? Who would lead this?

Clearly, there was and is a lot of work to do. I wouldn’t say the kids we worked with were disadvantaged in the sense that Americans (like my self) normally think – poverty, homelessness, language barriers. I’d say their greatest disadvantage is the lack of a stable, supportive center that fosters the creative skills they already have.

As of this writing, there is still no youth space for the kids of Newman to meet and make media. This is the task ahead for the teachers, residents and businesses of Newman – to grow and build on the things we developed with Newman’s youth. To stay true to our intentions as CuriousWorkers, we need to ensure the communities we work with can serve themselves.

Newman certainly deserves to.

Support “Little Brother” vs. Big Brother

Posted By Morgan on December 9, 2009

I just got an email from my friend Emily Jacobi asking for support for a cool project.  If you remember, I had the pleasure ofworking with Digital Democracy on their Handheld Human Rights project during NetSquared’s 2009 Conference.  This latest project is an extension of their project.

They’re looking to translate a book called “Little Brother” into 4 Burmese languages.  The money will support activists living around Burma’s borders who will translate the book and distribute it around the country.

Inspiring social change – through a book – using online fundraising.  This is old school AND new school activism.  How can wenot support it?

Make a pledge herehttp://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1033999452/little-brother-vs-big-brother

Books are one of the few things you can never waste money on.

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CuriousWorks Operating with OzGREEN

Posted By Morgan on November 19, 2009

Presenting the Videos the Youth Made at the Vodafone Offices in Chatswood

With CuriousWorks, I had an opportunity to work with the awesome OzGREEN folks and train some young leaders from around Australia on media making, interviewing and editing.  OzGREEN are an Australian environmental justice network that are just getting up and running with their social/digital media strategy.  Our main work with them was to train their young, regional leaders on media making tools to tell the local stories of environmental justice, challenge and opportunity in their communities.  OzGREEN simply serves as the ‘network connector’ of these stories/regions.  We did quite a bit in 3 days… Read more…

9 Things I’ve Done That I’m Proud of Out Here In Australia

Posted By Morgan on November 19, 2009

Australia has been awesome.  Here’s a quick recap of things I did/accomplished in one month.

  1. visited a tiny town called Marble Bar to take pictures with ‘feral’ 5 year olds (lots of these kids seem to be missing on any oversight running around barefoot and unattended most of the day – ‘feral’ was an affectionate term one of the locals used to describe them)
  2. did a cultural leaders workshop the first week in Newman
  3. did media classes inside the primary and high schools
  4. helped kids build a WordPress site/Facebook Page
  5. made short movies with kids using iPod Nanos
  6. hiked in a beautiful, beautiful place called Karajini
  7. met the local Martu Aboriginal people (they’ve lived here for nearly 40,000 years – the first white man they saw was in the 1960s)…
  8. helped to coordinate a youth media festival – the kids even got on the national news!
  9. learned 33 things that the young people of Newman can do

…and there’s more coming.  Awesome.