Latest news with #Three2Six

The Star
3 days ago
- General
- The Star
Small ideas, big impact at St Benedict's 2025 Embrace Symposium
The 2025 St Benedict's Embrace Symposium highlighted how small, intentional actions can spark meaningful change in education. Under the theme 'Small ideas, big changes,' educators, learners, and changemakers gathered to explore how advocacy and innovation can reshape South African schools and communities. Executive head André Oosthuysen said the symposium reflects the school's commitment to social justice and advocacy: 'The fight for advocacy and social justice demands relentless commitment, and it's inspiring to witness so many schools stepping up to lead these vital conversations year after year. Through events like our Embrace Symposium, we're building momentum for lasting change.' The event began with a practical advocacy workshop led by Dr Lynn Edwards and Linda Greeff, who have collaborated on cancer advocacy since 1987. Participants learned hands-on strategies for driving change in their schools and communities, creating advocacy templates they could implement immediately. Breakaway sessions allowed smaller groups to focus on specific areas of transformation. Delegates explored multimodality in education, sports policy in schools, refugee support programmes through Sacred Heart's Three2Six initiative, brave-thinking classrooms, and stress management techniques. These sessions underscored that incremental improvements in individual areas can create wider institutional change. Dr Lynn Edwards, advocacy expert; Kass Naidoo, South Africa's first female cricket commentator and founder of Gsport4girls; Geraldine Pillay, co-chair of St Benedict's Transformation, Diversity and Inclusion Department; and David Edwards, co-chair of St Benedict's Transformation, Diversity and Inclusion Department, at the 2025 St Benedict's Embrace Symposium. Image: Supplied Kass Naidoo, South Africa's first female cricket commentator and founder of Gsport4girls, shared her journey from noticing the struggles of female athletes to building a national platform celebrating their achievements. 'Everyone has ideas. The challenge is having the courage to start. If you take small, consistent actions, you'll create incredible impact,' she said. Political cartoonist Zapiro (Jonathan Shapiro) presented a retrospective of South Africa's democratic journey through his cartoons from 1994 to the present. His talk highlighted how visual advocacy can influence public discourse and engage young people in social issues. Roundtable discussions provided delegates with opportunities to share challenges and solutions across schools, fostering collaboration and reinforcing that meaningful transformation is a collective effort.

IOL News
3 days ago
- General
- IOL News
Small ideas, big impact at St Benedict's 2025 Embrace Symposium
The 2025 St Benedict's Embrace Symposium highlighted how small, intentional actions can spark meaningful change in education. Under the theme 'Small ideas, big changes,' educators, learners, and changemakers gathered to explore how advocacy and innovation can reshape South African schools and communities. Executive head André Oosthuysen said the symposium reflects the school's commitment to social justice and advocacy: 'The fight for advocacy and social justice demands relentless commitment, and it's inspiring to witness so many schools stepping up to lead these vital conversations year after year. Through events like our Embrace Symposium, we're building momentum for lasting change.' The event began with a practical advocacy workshop led by Dr Lynn Edwards and Linda Greeff, who have collaborated on cancer advocacy since 1987. Participants learned hands-on strategies for driving change in their schools and communities, creating advocacy templates they could implement immediately. Breakaway sessions allowed smaller groups to focus on specific areas of transformation. Delegates explored multimodality in education, sports policy in schools, refugee support programmes through Sacred Heart's Three2Six initiative, brave-thinking classrooms, and stress management techniques. These sessions underscored that incremental improvements in individual areas can create wider institutional change.


The Citizen
20-06-2025
- General
- The Citizen
24 hours in pictures, 20 June 2025
24 hours in pictures, 20 June 2025 Through the lens: The Citizen's Picture Editors select the best news photographs from South Africa and around the world. People ride a roller coaster at the new LEGOLAND Shanghai Resort, at the Jinshan district in Shanghai, on June 20, 2025. The largest LEGOLAND in the world will be officially opened in Shanghai on July 5th. (Photo by Hector RETAMAL / AFP) PETA animal rights activists stage a protest outside the venue of Ajinomoto Co. Inc.'s annual shareholder meeting in Tokyo, Japan, 20 June 2025. Animal rights organization People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) activists are protesting Ajinomoto's animal-testing policy and the alleged use of animals in food tests. Picture: EPA-EFE/FRANCK ROBICHON Minehle Wanyoike from Zimbabwe prays in the school chapel during morning classes as part of the Three2Six Refugee Children's Education Project at the Sacred Heart Collage in Johannesburg, South Africa, 19 June 2025. The Three2Six Project, founded in 2008, is a bridging education programme for refugee and migrant children unable to access state schooling. Three host school communities including Sacred Heart College, Observatory Girls Primary School, and Holy Family College, make their facilities available to Three2Six each afternoon from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., after their regular school day ends. The children come from seven African countries, with the largest proportion from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Zimbabwe. Many of the learners are undocumented refugees who moved to South Africa with their parents. Picture: EPA-EFE/KIM LUDBROOK A priest baptizes a child during a mass baptism ceremony, sponsored by local officials, at the San Martin De Porres Church in Bacoor city, Cavite province, southwest of Manila, Philippines, 20 June 2025. More than 200 children were baptized in a mass baptism ceremony, a significant religious and cultural event in a predominantly Catholic country like the Philippines, where the baptismal certificates issued afterward often serve as a de facto birth record for newborns in communities lacking easy access to civil registration. Picture: EPA-EFE/FRANCIS R. MALASIG Students take part in a Yoga session on the eve of the International Day Of Yoga in Bhopal, India on June 20, 2025. International Day Of Yoga is celebrated every year on June 21 to promote the physical, mental, and spiritual benefits of yoga worldwide. It was first proposed by India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the United Nations, which officially declared it in 2014. Picture: Matrix Images / Sanjeev Gupta Israeli Home Front Command team members walk at the site where Iranian ballistic missiles struck residential buildingsat the site where Iranian ballistic missiles struck residential buildings in Beer Sheva, southern Israel, 20 June 2025. Israel and Iran have been exchanging fire since Israel launched strikes across Iran on 13 June 2025 as part of Operation 'Rising Lion.' Picture: EPA-EFE/ABIR SULTAN EPA A staff member remotely controls a bionic arm using force-sensing gloves at the 2025 World Semiconductor Conference & Expo in Nanjing, in China's eastern Jiangsu province on June 20, 2025. (Photo by AFP) Local people clean debris off windows at the site of a drone strike on a residential building in Kharkiv, northeastern Ukraine, early 20 June 2025. At least 4 people were injured, including two teenagers, following an overnight Russian attack by shock drones on Kharkiv and its suburbs, according to the State Emergency Service (SES). Picture: EPA-EFE/SERGEY KOZLOV Chinese-made cars are seen before being loaded onto a ship at the port in Lianyungang, in China's eastern Jiangsu province on June 20, 2025. (Photo by AFP) A visitor attends 'Yolngu Power: The Art of Yirrkala' winter exhibition at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, 20 June 2025. Picture: EPA-EFE/DAN HIMBRECHTS MORE: 24 hours in pictures, 19 June 2025