Stronger together – Children's and Youth Resilience Programmes
EUROPEAN UNION EDUCATION & YOUTH PROGRAMMES KÖSZEG 2006 Ed Weber GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE YOUTH...
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Transcript of EUROPEAN UNION EDUCATION & YOUTH PROGRAMMES KÖSZEG 2006 Ed Weber GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE YOUTH...
EUROPEAN UNIONEDUCATION & YOUTH PROGRAMMES
KÖSZEG 2006
Ed WeberGENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE
YOUTH PROGRAMME
The Youth Programme includes non-formal education and exchange projects of the European Union targeting young people aged between 15 and 25 are called the.
The Programme is open to 31 Countries.
25 EU Member States + 3 EFTA Countries
+ 3 Pre-Accession Countries.
Youth Programme
AustriaBelgiumDenmarkFinlandFranceSloveniaCyprusCzech RepublicEstonia
GermanyGreeceIrelandItaly Luxembourg HungaryLatviaLithuaniaMalta
The NetherlandsPortugalSpainSwedenUnited KingdomPolandSlovak Republic
25 EU Member States
Countries in the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), members of the European Economic Area (EEA):
Island, Liechtenstein, Norway
Pre-Accession Countries:
Bulgaria, Romania, Turkey
Partner Countries:1st priority: Mediterranean partner countries,
South East Europe, Eastern Europe and the Caucasus
2nd priority: Latin America
Other countries
Partner countries – 1st priority
Eastern Europe and the Caucasus– Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, Russia,
Ukraine
Mediterranean partner countries – Algeria, Cyprus, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Malta,
Morocco, Palestine, Syria, Tunisia
South Eastern Europe – Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Aims of the YOUTH Programme
Facilitating the integration of young people into society and encouraging their spirit of initiative,
Helping young people acquire knowledge, skills and competences, and recognising the value of such experience,
Allowing young people to give free expression to their sense of solidarity in Europe,
Intercultural learning, mobility, tolerance, solidarity, European dimension on local level,
Active participation of young people.
Promoting a better understanding of the diversity of our common European culture and shared heritage as well as of our common basic values,
Helping to eliminate all forms of discrimination and promoting equality at all levels of society,
Introducing a European element into projects which will have a positive impact on youth work at local level.
Aims of the YOUTH Programme
Target Groups
Youth groups
Young people with fewer opportunities
Young people who want to get involved in European Voluntary Service
Youth organizations
Youth leaders, project managers or organizers,
Local authorities, NGO’s,
People who work in the field of youth and non-formal education.
Young people who dont have abroad experience
Youngsters wıth fewer opportunıtıes
Disabled Young People (Physically or mentally disabled)
Young people from the cities having the a certain priority in respect for development
Young people who come from families having fewer socio-economic opportunies
Young people who haven’t benefitted from the Youth Programme before
Priorities in the Youth Programme
Priority Themes
Environment
Heritage protection
Art and culture
Rural development
Urban development
Equal opportunities
Anti-racism/xenophobia
Health
Anti-drugs/substance abuse
Social exclusion (in general)
Measures against delinquency
Youth information
Youth policies
Youth leisure
Youth sports
Media & communications
European awareness
Other
How to apply?
Youth Programme project applications are generally* submitted to the National Agency.
Project application forms obtained from theEU website or National Agency are filled.
Delivered to the National Agency by postal mail, cargo or by hand.
Project dates and activity dates
ACTION 1 YOUTH FOR EUROPEACTION 1 YOUTH FOR EUROPE
ACTION 2 EUROPEAN VOLUNTARY SERVICEACTION 2 EUROPEAN VOLUNTARY SERVICE
ACTION 3 YOUTH INITIATIVESACTION 3 YOUTH INITIATIVES
ACTION 4 JOINT ACTIONSACTION 4 JOINT ACTIONS
ACTION 5 SUPPORT MEASURESACTION 5 SUPPORT MEASURES
Youth programme actions
ACTION 1
YOUTH EXCHANGES
How is the YOUTH programme structured?
Action 1 – multilateral group exchanges of young people aged 15 to 25
Action 2 – voluntary service for young people aged 18 to 25
Action 3 – young people developing an initiative on a local level
Action 4 – Joint actions between non-formal and other types of education within Europe programmes
Action 5 – a package of possibilities for support measures to develop new YOUTH projects and to improve
their quality
ACTION 1
ACTION 1
YOUTH EXCHANGES
Action 1 – Youth exchange
Youth exchange brings together groups of young people from different backgrounds from two or more countries
Gives the opportunity to discuss and confront various themes
Learning from each other’s countries by discovering similarities and differences between their cultures
Combat negative prejudices and stereotypes
International impact on local communities
ACTION 1
YOUTH EXCHANGES
Who can participate?
Groups of young people, in principle aged between 15 and 25 and legally resident in a Programme country ,
Priority is given to projects that involve more than 2 countries and the ones involving young’s with fewer opportunities,
A youth exchange can be organised with a host group and one or more sending groups, involving at least 1 EU Member State.
Minimum 16 and maximum 60 participants
- group leaders not included.
ACTION 1
YOUTH EXCHANGES
Participants
The duration of the exchange activity should be between 6 and 21 days, excluding travel.
ACTION 1
YOUTH EXCHANGES
Duration
How to organize a Youth exchange ?
Planning visit
Thematic concept (music, films, local heritage, environment, information, technology, racism, xenophobia and drug abuse)
Learning process (working in groups, field visits, simulation or role-playing games, round-table discussions, practical work, presentations, cultural or sports activities linked to the main theme)
The preparation - follow-up: before, during and after the exchange.
ACTION 1
YOUTH EXCHANGES
Promotional value to the YOUTH programme
Intercultural learning process
General debates and workshops for exploration of the chosen theme
Debates during youth encounters must clearly focus on:– the general and annual priority objectives and themes of the
YOUTH programme– the political priorities identified in the field of youth – the future of Europe.
Action 1 - Youth encounters
ACTION 1
YOUTH EXCHANGES
Must be multilateral, i.e. involve partners from a minimum of 8 Programme countries (of which at least two must be EU Member States)
60-200 participants, aged 15-25, + group leaders (balance)
Priority to projects that involve more than 2 countries and the ones involving young’s with fewer opportunities
Action 1 - Youth encounters
ACTION 1
YOUTH EXCHANGES
Community’s Grant
Type of expense Community grant
Travel costs 70%
Advance Planning Visit 100% of travel costs + € 48 / day per person per sending partner
Preparation of activities and participants
€ 480 per country
Activity costs € 960 or 1920 € (Bilateral and Trilateral) + € 18 flat rate / participant / day
Exceptional costs (vaccination and visa costs etc.)
Up to 100%
ACTION 1
YOUTH EXCHANGES
ACTION 2
An EVS project allows a young person to be a volunteer in
another country for a specified period, normally between 6 and
12 months.
3 Partnersin
EVS Sending Org. + NA
Volunteer
Host Org. + NA
ACTION 2
EUROPEAN VOLUNTARY SERVICE
Action 2 – European Voluntary Service
1. To provide a non-formal intercultural learning experience for young people;
encouraging their social integration and active participation,
improving their employability,
giving them opportunities to show solidarity with other people.
2. To support the development of local communities.
3. To encourage the establishing of new partnerships and the exchange of experience and good practice between the partners.
ACTION 2
EUROPEAN VOLUNTARY SERVICE
The 3 fundamental objectives of an EVS
be non-profit making and unpaid
be planned, implemented and followed up jointly in a spirit of partnership between the volunteer, the sending and the host organisations
bring an added value to the host organisation and the local community
not involve job substitution, nor be a substitute for military service or alternative service formulas,
involve at least one EU Member State.
last for a limited period (between 6- 12 months), (in exceptional situations, it can be 3 weeks-6 months).
ACTION 2
EUROPEAN VOLUNTARY SERVICE
European Voluntary Service should
EVS – fields of interest
Fields of interest could be
Environment Arts and culture Activities with children Young people or elderly, Heritage Sports and leisure Civil protection
ACTION 2
EUROPEAN VOLUNTARY SERVICE
Evaluation and follow-up Advance Planning Visit (actual cost + for max. 2 days 48 Euro fixed amount per day)
Exceptional costs
Arranging visa and insurance Contribution to SO (480 Euro flat rate to be used for sending costs + 18 Euro fixed amount to be used for communication cost) In projects involving young people with fewer opportunities:
Staying in contact with the volunteer
Visa and vaccination cost
Volunteer recruitment and preparation
Volunteer’s international travel cost
Responsibilities of SOSending Organizations:
Contributions from Community
ACTION 2
EUROPEAN VOLUNTARY SERVICE
EVS financing
Volunteer’s accommodation and food
Mentor Exceptional volunteer costs (actual costs, backed up by invoices / receipts) in projects involving young people with fewer opportunities
Personal support Volunteer’s allowance
Task-related support Contribution to the host activities (fixed amount + flat rate / organisation)
Obligations of HOHost Organizations:Contributions from Community
ACTION 2
EUROPEAN VOLUNTARY SERVICE
EVS financing
ACTION 3
Youth Initiatives supports young people’s initiative, creativity and active participation.
ACTION 3
YOUTH INITIATIVES
To support projects at local, regional or national level.
Facilitating the integration of young people into society.
Disseminating the good project ideas & practices all over Europe by the help of networking projects.
ACTION 3 – Youth initiatives
ACTION 3 YOUTH INITIATIVES
GROUP INITIATIVES
NETWORKING PROJECTS
FUTURE CAPITAL
Youth initiatives have 3 subgroups
Any group consisting of young people can apply.
ACTION 3
YOUTH INITIATIVES
ACTION 3 – Youth initiatives
1. Group Initiatives
A group should consist of at least four individuals
The project should have links with the local community.
It should provide a new learning experience for the group of young people carrying out the project.
Duration of the projects: Between three months and one year.
ACTION 3
YOUTH INITIATIVES
ACTION 3 – Youth initiatives
Financial Opportunities: The maximum amounts are:
10.000 € (priority 1), 7.500 € (priority 2), 5.000 € (priority 3).
Financial opportunities comprise related payments (Transportation costs, meeting & training costs, trainer/expert fees, accommodation costs, CD / pamphlet / booklet / magazine / website publication costs, etc.) that are necessary for the realization of the projects.
A Group Initiative doesn’t involve young people’s transnational mobility.
ACTION 3
YOUTH INITIATIVES
ACTION 3 – Youth initiatives
2. Networking ProjectsA Networking project aims at identifying good practices and transferring the outcomes resulting from a successful Group Initiative to other groups in other countries. It may involve young people’s mobility. Examples:
Establishing a common web-site,
Preparing a common performance/festival on music, dance, theatre, paintings,
Preparing a joint meeting/seminar to exchange good practices, etc.
ACTION 3
YOUTH INITIATIVES
ACTION 3 – Youth initiatives
Financial Opportunities:
The maximum amounts are:
12.000 € (priority 1),
9.500 € (priority 2),
7.000 € (priority 3).
Networking projects may include young people’s transnational mobility.
ACTION 3
YOUTH INITIATIVES
ACTION 3 – Youth initiatives
ACTION 4
ACTION 5
SUPPORT MEASURES
ACTION 4 – Joint Actions
Joint Actions
– promote a “Europe of knowledge”– are developed together with:
SOCRATES(funding, exchange, professionals, students in formal education)
LEONARDO DA VINCI (vocational trainings) Non-formal Education (Youth)
No Joint Actions Call for proposals have been organised in 2005
ACTION 5
ACTION 5
SUPPORT MEASURES
Support Measures are instruments aimed at helping all those involved in youth activities or interested in youth matters to prepare and develop projects and initiatives.
Support Measures have two main aims:
To assist the development of the Action 1,2,3 through the support of training, cooperation and information projects.
ACTION 5 – Support Measures
1. Practical training experience (job shadowing)
2. Feasibility visits
3. Contact-making seminars
4. Study visits
5. Seminars
6. Training courses
7. Youth information
8. Transnational partnerships and networks
9. Support for quality and innovation
ACTION 5
SUPPORT MEASURES
ACTION 5 – Activity Types
1. Practical training experience (job shadowing)This activity allows youth workers to acquire the skills for organising a transnational project by working in a partner organisation for a limited period of time.
2. Feasibility visitsThese allow project managers to discuss a project idea before submitting an application under Actions 1 or 2.
3. Contact-making seminarsThese bring together potential partners for YOUTH projects.
ACTION 5
SUPPORT MEASURES
ACTION 5 – Activity Types
4. Study visitsThese activity provides an opportunity to learn about youth work provisions in other countries.
5. SeminarsThese are a tool for the exchange of experience and good practice, consultations or policy development etc. with regard to the YOUTH programme and youth policy.
6. Training coursesThese help those involved in youth work and non-formal education to acquire advanced skills and knowledge for their activities.
ACTION 5
SUPPORT MEASURES
ACTION 5 – Activity Types
7. Youth informationThis activity supports the production of and innovative ways of communicating information relating to the objectives and priorities of the YOUTH programme.
8. Transnational partnerships and networksThis activity supports the creation of new networks under the YOUTH programme.
9. Support for quality and innovationThis activity aims at involving young people with less opportunities in the YOUTH programme at national, regional and local levels.
ACTION 5
SUPPORT MEASURES
ACTION 5 – Activity Types
How is a project financed?
Activities 1-6These activities are co-financed on the basis of fixed amounts and flat rates, as they are characterised by a limited duration and a limited number of participants. These fixed amounts and flat rates are maximum amounts.
Activities 7-9
For these activities, YOUTH programme funding is based on actual costs and should not exceed 50 % of the total project cost.
ACTION 5
SUPPORT MEASURES
ACTION 5 – Support Measures
One of the partner organisations takes the lead in submitting the application as well as in implementing the project.
For activities 1-6 the application has to be submitted by the host organisation to its National Agency.
For activities 7-9 the application can be submitted by any of the partner organisations, which will take on the role of coordinator, to its National Agency.
ACTION 5
SUPPORT MEASURES
ACTION 5 – How to supply
November 1
September 1
June 1
April 1
February 1
Application deadline
February 1 and June 30
December 1 and April 30
September 1 and January 31
July 1 and November 30
May 1 and September 30
Projects starting between
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
TO THE YOUTH PROGRAMME
Application deadlines