Tell it like it is with Heywire 2010

Heywire – a com­pet­i­tion and a space for young people to share their ideas and be heard in the cor­ridors of power.

Enter by 8 October 2010 for a chance to have your voice on the ABC, and win a trip to the pres­ti­gi­ous Heywire Youth Issues Forum at the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra.

What is Heywire?

Heywire is an ABC Radio ini­ti­at­ive, provid­ing a space for the con­ver­sa­tion, stories, debate and ideas of young people from rural and regional Australia.

It’s a COMPETITION…open to people aged 16 – 22 and seeking stories in all forms of media — text, photos, video and audio — about life and issues in Australia outside the major cities. A winner is chosen by each of the 40+ ABC Radio regional broad­cast loc­a­tions across the country. Winning pieces are presen­ted on the ABC through ABC Local Radio, ABC Radio National, triple j and abc​.net​.au.

It’s a CHANCE TO MAKEDIFFERENCE…winners also receive an all-expenses-paid trip to the Heywire Youth Issues Forum in Canberra in February 2011, where they gain lead­er­ship skills and have a chance to pitch their ideas to politi­cians, funding bodies and policy makers.

It’s a TOOL…a resource for parents, teach­ers, politi­cians and the wider com­munity to engage young people with the con­cepts of digital lit­er­acy and social media. There are resource guides avail­able for high-school teach­ers to tie Heywire into their teach­ing curriculum.

Entries close 8 October 2010. Enter your story now at: abc​.net​.au/​h​eywire

Heywire is just amazing, not like any­thing I’ve ever done before,” says 2009 Heywire winner Amy Rhodes from Concongella in Victoria. “Attending the Heywire Forum I got to meet the most incred­ible Heywire winners from all over the country and we worked together on solu­tions to prob­lems in our com­munit­ies. We met politi­cians and decision makers and felt that we could really make a difference.”

Heywire is a chance for young Australians to be heard. Since it began in 1998, over 400 Heywire stories have been broad­cast on ABC net­works and thou­sands more have appeared on the Heywire website. Whether they are pas­sion­ate about mental health care in regional areas, or the thrill of bull riding, young people come to Heywire to debate, exchange ideas and tell the rest of Australia how they see it,” says Leigh Radford, National Editor ABC Rural.

Heywire acknow­ledges the support of the Australian Government through the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation, the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations, the Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government and the Department of Health and Ageing.

Posted Thursday, August 5th, 2010 05:19 pm Written by Left Right Think-Tank

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