Social Activism in Youth Work
Your Course Description
The Field of Youth Work
- As a youth worker, you have an important role to play in determining the social policies and funding for youth-serving organizations.
- You are the expert and your awareness of the youth you serve is needed to spark and maintain social change.
- Learning to use your power and your voice as an activist, you’ll discover how to effectively influence elected officials. Your ability to build trusting relationships with youth is exactly the right skill to becoming a powerful advocate with and for youth.
Your Learning Objectives
- Gain knowledge about the history of activism in the United States
- Understand how power and civics influence youth outcomes
- Develop insight into the psyche and role of an elected official
- Learn strategies to make the most of your youth work activism
Your Course Details
- Completion Certificate
- Youth Worker Track
- This training will count as 1.5 CE hours for most boards. Please contact your board directly with questions on submitting. Course details for CE submissions provided.
Your Trainer

As YIPA’s lobbyist, he directly supports the mission of relentless advocacy for youth-serving organizations, collaborating with YIPA to raise awareness, build support, and drive action toward securing funding for Minnesota youth intervention programs.

Before joining YIPA’s staff in 2011, Paul was a member of YIPA’s Board of Directors and served as its vice president. Currently, Paul spends a considerable amount of time building bipartisan relationships and coalitions with lawmakers serving in the Minnesota State Legislature. He thoroughly enjoys politics and advocating for youth and the youth workers that serve them.
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Your Skill-Building Objectives
Advocacy
Standing with and for young people
What YIPA members are saying
You provided some concrete examples and steps we can take to start getting our feet wet in advocacy.
I gained a lot of knowledge about my local and state government legislators.
My assumptions of legislators were false. Since learning from the advocacy training I feel more comfortable reaching out to community leaders and legislators.