Sunday, February 22, 2009

Core Idea behind TED

I recently came across this piece where Chris Anderson tells about the idea behind TED. Check it out.

A WEB-EMPOWERED REVOLUTION IN TEACHING

Today when we think of the world's teeming billions of humans, we tend to think: overpopulation, poverty, disease, instability, environmental destruction. They are the cause of most of the planet's problems.

What if that were to change? What if the average human were able to contribute more than consume? To add more than subtract? Think of the world as if each person drives a balance sheet. On the negative side are the resources they consume without replacing, on the positive side are the contributions they make to the planet in the form of the resources they produce, the lasting artifacts-of-value they build, and the ideas and technologies that might create a better future for their family, their community and for the planet as a whole. Our whole future hangs on whether the sum of those balance sheets can turn positive.

What might make that possible? One key reason for hope is that so far we have barely scraped the surface of human potential. Throughout history, the vast majority of humans have not been the people they could have been.

Take this simple thought experiment. Pick your favorite scientist, mathematician or cultural hero. Now imagine that instead of being born when and where they were, they had instead been born with the same in-built-but-unlocked abilities in a typical poverty-stricken village in, say, the France of 1200 or the Ethiopia of 1980. Would they have made the contribution they made? Of course not. They would never have received the education and encouragement it took to achieve what they did. Instead they would have simply lived out a life of poverty, with perhaps an occasional yearning that there must be a better way.

Conversely, an unknown but vast number of those grinding out a living today have the potential to be world-changers... if only we could find a way of unlocking that potential.

Two ingredients might be enough to do that. Knowledge and inspiration. If you learn of ideas that could transform your life, and you feel the inspiration necessary to act on that knowledge, there's a real chance your life will indeed be transformed.

There are many scary things about today's world. But one that is truly thrilling is that the means of spreading both knowledge and inspiration have never been greater. Five years ago, an amazing teacher or professor with the ability to truly catalyze the lives of his or her students could realistically hope to impact maybe 100 people each year. Today that same teacher can have their words spread on video to millions of eager students. There are already numerous examples of powerful talks that have spread virally to massive Internet audiences.

Driving this unexpected phenomenon is the fact that the physical cost of distributing a recorded talk or lecture anywhere in the world via the internet has fallen effectively to zero. This has happened with breathtaking speed and its implications are not yet widely understood. But it is surely capable of transforming global education.

For one thing, the realization that today's best teachers can become global celebrities is going to boost the caliber of those who teach. For the first time in many years it's possible to imagine ambitious, brilliant 18-year-olds putting 'teacher' at the top of their career choice list. Indeed the very definition of "great teacher" will expand, as numerous others outside the profession with the ability to communicate important ideas find a new incentive to make that talent available to the world. Additionally every existing teacher can greatly amplify their own abilities by inviting into their classroom, on video, the world's greatest scientists, visionaries and tutors. (Can a teacher inspire over video? Absolutely. We hear jaw-dropping stories of this every day.)

Now think about this from the pupils' perspective. In the past, everyone's success has depended on whether they were lucky enough to have a great mentor or teacher in their neighborhood. The vast majority have not been fortunate. But a young girl born in Africa today will probably have access in 10 years' time to a cell phone with a high-resolution screen, a web connection, and more power than the computer you own today. We can imagine her obtaining face-to-face insight and encouragement from her choice of the world's great teachers. She will get a chance to be what she can be. And she might just end up being the person who saves the planet for our grandchildren.


Ref: http://www.edge.org/q2009/q09_2.html#andersonc

Saturday, February 14, 2009

TED CONFERENCE INTRODUCES TED FELLOWS PROGRAM


Fifty World-Changing Individuals to be Selected Annually for New, Prestigious Fellowship Program; 20 move to Senior Fellows Three-Year Program

Long Beach, California, February 2, 2009 -- Organizers of the TED Conference today announced the introduction of the TED Fellows program, a new international program designed to foster the spread of great ideas. Initially 50 individuals, selected for the world-changing potential of their work, will be invited to participate in the TED community each year. At the end of the year, 20 of these 50 will be selected to be TED Senior Fellows, participating in an extended three-year program will bring them to six consecutive conferences, along with additional benefits. The principal goal of the program is to empower the Fellows to effectively communicate their work to the TED community and to the world.

The TED Fellows program will focus on attracting applicants living or working in five parts of the globe: the Asia/Pacific region, Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America and the Middle East, with consideration given to applicants from the rest of the world. TED will seek remarkable thinkers and doers that have shown unusual accomplishment, exceptional courage, moral imagination and the potential to increase positive change in their respective fields. The program focuses on innovators in technology, entertainment, design, science, film, art, music, entrepreneurship and the NGO community, among other pursuits.

The program was inspired by the TEDAfrica 2007 conference in Arusha, Tanzania, in which 100 fellows participated in a first-of-its kind gathering that catalyzed a new generation of leaders -- all entrepreneurial, fluent in technology and vested in creating change on the continent. The Arusha fellows brought with them new perspectives, enormous energy, enthusiasm and, through their ovation-generating talks, catalyzed the launch of many initiatives with other attendees. Propelled by their energy, TED decided to develop the TED Fellows program.

Each Fellow will attend the prestigious TED Conference in Long Beach or Oxford, where they will have the opportunity to speak before or during TED and spread their ideas online through TED.com. They will also receive exclusive communications training, a private social network and the opportunity to tell their ongoing stories on the new TED Fellows blog.

Each year, 50 Fellows will be selected to attend the TED (Long Beach) or TEDGlobal Conference (in Oxford, U.K.), approximately 25 at each location. TED Fellows will be awarded the opportunity to participate in the full spectrum of TED community offerings. An international selection committee representing the target regions will then choose the Senior Fellows. Three years from today, in addition to the 50 TED Fellows, there will be 60 concurrent TED Senior Fellows, with 20 joining each year, and 20 graduating to the Fellows alumni.

The first participants include
• Erik Hersmann and Juliana Rotich, co-founders of Ushahidi.com, a website for citizen journalism covering crises such as the Kenyan post-election violence
• Faisal Chohan, CEO of Cogilent Solutions and founder of BrightSpyre.com, the leading job portal in Pakistan
• Juliana Machado Ferreira, Brazilian CSI: Wildlife biologist who uses genetic markers to track, interdict and convict illegal songbird traffickers
• Sara Mayhew, Canadian mangaka (manga artist)
• Patrick Awuah, founder and President of Asheshi University in Ghana, which specializes in economics and computer science
• Bola Olabisi, founder and CEO of the Global Women Inventors and Innovators Network
• Katrin Verclas, founder of Mobileactive.org, a global network using mobile technology for social good
• Taghi Amirani, award-winning documentary filmmaker from Iran
• Yatin Sethi, Indian design researcher and children’s education activist
• Kyra Gaunt, professor, ethnomusicologist and recording artist
• Karen Baptiste, post-doctoral fellow from Trinidad and Tobago working on environmental justice
• Tin Ho Chow, former Singaporean military officer and RISD industrial design student organizing design conferences for social change
• Gerry Douglas, founder of Malawi’s Baobab Health Partnership, which builds touch screen terminals that allow non-doctors to diagnose, treat and correctly prescribe drugs for people with HIV
• Esther Chae, Korean American actor and writer whose solo performance As the Arrow Flies draws on her life growing up in Korea and tells the story of a North Korean spy and the FBI agent who pursues her

A complete list of the 2009 Long Beach TED Fellows can be found at www.ted.com/fellows/2009


The program is supported initially by the Bezos family, the Harnisch Foundation, private donors and Nokia, with additional in-kind support from Kodak, Lightscribe and One.org. To support the program, email fellows@ted.com. Details are available at www.ted.com/fellows. For more information, please contact Logan McClure at +1 212.346.9333 or via email at fellows@ted.com.

About TED
TED is an annual event where some of the world's leading thinkers and doers are invited to share what they are most passionate about. "TED" stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design — three broad subject areas that are, collectively, shaping our future. And in fact, the event is broader still, showcasing ideas that matter in any discipline. Attendees have called it "the ultimate brain spa" and "a four-day journey into the future." The diverse audience — CEOs, scientists, creatives, philanthropists — is almost as extraordinary as the speakers, who have included Bill Clinton, Bill Gates, Jane Goodall, Frank Gehry, Paul Simon, Sir Richard Branson, Philippe Starck and Bono.

TED was first held in Monterey, California, in 1984. In 2001, Chris Anderson's Sapling Foundation acquired TED from its founder, Richard Saul Wurman. In recent years, TED has expanded to include an international conference, TEDGlobal; media initiatives, including TED Talks and TED.com; and the TED Prize. TED2009, "The Great Unveiling," will be held Feb. 3-7, 2009, in Long Beach, California, with a simulcast event in Palm Springs, California.

BusinessWeek searches for social entrepreneurs

BusinessWeek launched its "search for the most promising social entrepreneurs in the U.S." to find the top companies aiming to both turn a profit and solve social problems.

Details
Until February 20, 2009, you can submit nominations online for BusinessWeek's social entrepreneur search. Once submissions close, "BusinessWeek staff and a few renowned members of the business and the social enterprise community will sift through the nominees and narrow the selection down to 25 finalists." The top 25 will be profiled by BusinessWeek with a public vote for the company with the most promise from April 3 to April 26, 2009. The top five will be announced May 2, 2009.

Qualifications:
For companies to be eligible, they must:
* be for-profit companies based in the U.S.
* be tackling social problems in new and innovative ways in the US or abroad
* have been in operation for at least one year

Deadline - February 20, 2009

Submit your nominations to BusinessWeek's social entrepreneur search!

Thanks to Tworque for forwarding this.

2010-12 Rotary World Peace Fellowships

The Rotary Foundation announces a call for applications for the 2010-12 Rotary World Peace Fellowships. The deadline for completed applications is 1 July 2009.

Program Synopses
The Rotary Centers for International Studies program offers fellowships for master's degree and professional development certificate study fields related to peace and conflict resolution. Beyond academics, Rotary World Peace Fellows also gain practical skills in conflict resolution appropriate to their individual careers.

Each year, up to 110 Rotary World Peace Fellowships (60 master's degree fellowships and 50 professional development certificate fellowships) are offered on a competitive basis at seven Rotary Centers, which operate in partnership with eight leading universities (centers offer master's degree unless noted otherwise):

Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand (professional development center)
Duke University and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA
International Christian University, Tokyo, Japan
Universidad del Salvador, Buenos Aires, Argentina
University of Bradford, West Yorkshire, England
University of California, Berkeley, USA
University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

You Could Be an Ideal Candidate
35 former ambassadorial scholars and GSE team members have gone on to become Rotary World Peace Fellows. Your experiences as a Rotary Foundation alumnus could make you an ideal candidate to become a Rotary World Peace Fellow.

For More Information
Please contact rotarycenters@rotary.org with any questions or to ask for more information. Program materials and participant profiles can be downloaded from http://www.rotary.org/rotarycenters.


Are You Going to Finish Strong?



Nick Vujicic has no arms or legs and he delivers an inspirational speech to these school kids that they will probably never forget.

Dell Social Innovation Competition



The RGK Center at The University of Texas and Dell are looking for college students worldwide with ingenious ideas to change the world.

Dream up a plan that combines creativity and innovation to tackle a pressing social issue, and you can win $50,000 to put your plan into action!

Students from all over the world are invited to create change at home, or anywhere in the world, with a social innovation designed to tackle a social problem and help every human reach their fullest potential. There is no limit to the imagination and any significant social issue can be addressed in this competition.

How it works
Students work in teams or as individuals to enter their social innovation online before the March 2 deadline. From the initial group of entries, a small group of semifinalist teams are chosen to write a venture plan and record a 3-minute video pitch of their idea. From the semifinalists, three teams are selected as finalists and invited to Austin, Texas to pitch live in front of a panel of esteemed judges. One winner is chosen and awarded $50,000 as seed funding to launch their venture.

You be the judge!
Along with the student competitors, we invite everyone online to comment and vote on the ideas submitted into the competition. You just need to create a username with your e-mail address to log in and get involved! In each round of the competition, vote on the projects you like the most by promoting them up in the ranking. Your vote matters! Leave comments and suggestions on the ideas you find most intriguing and add your expertise.

The competition final event is May 7. One team walks away with $50,000, but people all over the world will benefit from a few big dreams.

Special Alert
The entry deadline has been extended to 12:00 CST/18:00UTC on March 2.


More details at http://www.dellsocialinnovationcompetition.com

Monday, February 9, 2009

South Asia Workshop on Social Entrepreneurship - New Delhi

Workshop on Social Entrepreneurship, 16-17 April, New Delhi

Posted by: "suresh" sureshpramar@yahoo.co.uk


Organised by The Centre for Training & Research In Responsible Business And Social Entrepreneurship & The Centre for Social Initiatives and Management

(Venue To Be Announced Soon)

Since the 1970s, with the advent of Bill Drayton's Ashoka, the ranks of social entrepreneurs are increasing steadily. In India we have,
Aravind Eye Healthcare, Basix Bank, Ekal Vidyalaya, Sri Grameen Mahila Udyog (Lijjat), Narayan Hrudayalaya, Sewa, Selco, Nidaan,
Goonj, Drishti etc Social entrepreneurs are entrepreneurs with a social mission. For them the creation of wealth is a means to an end.
Typically, social entrepreneurs attempt to combine techniques, tools and values derived from NGOs and business and apply them creatively to solve social problems.

Social entrepreneurial ventures are characterized by innovation, sustainability, effectiveness and accountability. Such ventures are
operating in diverse social fields like poverty alleviation, women empowerment, education, health, disability, environment etc. The
growing success of micro-finance and micro-enterprise programs in economic and social empowerment of poor, especially women,
demonstrates the importance of social entrepreneurship in solving social problems.

Why the workshop: Though the concept has developed widely abroad in India many in social sector, media, CSR, policy and other fields are still unaware of concepts, tools and examples of social entrepreneurship. Several NGO managers are interested in social
entrepreneurship so that they can explore integration of these ideas in their work. This introductory workshop is designed to meet their needs.

Who should participate? Being socially relevant is part of being a professional. Professionals also possess social skills which can
create social value. The Human Resource Manager can use his skill to empower the deprived of the society, the sales manager can help open up markets for village artisans, the corporate strategist can help turnaround a school and the financial expert can help solve the cash flow problem of a small vendor You can participate in this event if you and/or your organisation are passionate about creating positive change the world. You could be any of the following:
a)Social Entrepreneur
b)Team member/trustee/director in a non profit
c)Team member/trustee/director in a funding or support organisation that works with social entrepreneurs or is interested in working with them
d)Team member in a corporate or its CSR body working with social entrepreneurs or is interested in supporting them
e)Faculty in an academic institution running a course in social entrepreneurship or is interested in starting a course
f)Student wanting to drive change

Description: This workshop explains one of the important breakthroughs in nonprofit development: social entrepreneurship. Participants learn what social entrepreneurship is, and how to develop and implement customized plans for social entrepreneurship, including for their own organizations.

Contents of the two days workshop:
(a) Concepts of Social Entrepreneurship Innovation
• Social benefit/Impact/Accountability
• Blending of social work and business (charity to commerce spectrum)
• Sustainability of organization and triple bottomline.
• Social Enterprises and market-based solutions for social problems
• Collaboration with other organizations and sectors
• Empowerment of beneficiaries/clients/ customers

(b) Case studies
The case studies will illustrate the concepts and application of business methods in social work. The case studies will also highlight how the social entrepreneurship is different from traditional business entrepreneurship and conventional social work approaches.

(c ) Agencies promoting social entrepreneurship, in India/Internationally, and their approaches

(d) Scope for NGOs and Corporate Organizations collaboration and resource mobilization for NGOs

(e) Meet the practitioners' session (interaction with some prominent social entrepreneurs)

(f) Group discussion (formulating approaches for further work).

Registration Fee: Corporates, Corporate sponsored Foundations, Funding Agencies Rs 7500,NGOs, SMEs and academics Rs 6,000. All registrations completed before Febuary 29, 2009 will be entitled to a Rs 1,500 discount No refunds will be allowed after April 5, 2009. Limited seats avaialble. The fee does not include accommodation or conveyance. Registration forms along with fee should be sent to Suresh Kr Pramar, 3A, Nilgiri 3, Sector 34, Noida 201301. Cheques/DD should
be made out in the name of CRBiz, Noida. Participants from outside New Delhi/Noida should make payments through Demand Draft.

For more details, contact - Suresh Kr Pramar
Phone: 91-9213133042
Email: suresh.pramar@gmail.com