Humans are amazing creatures, able to thrive under seemingly impossible conditions. An individualâs success is related to resilience and this is a quality researchers around the world want to better understand.
Enter Michael Ungar â principal researcher with ±«Óătvâs Resilience Research Centre (RRC) â who believes resilience is more than a personâs capacity to overcome problems. âItâs also all the things a person needs to make it more likely they will overcome the odds stacked against them,â says Dr. Ungar.
Polling for Justice consists of five teens and colleagues from New York City who share research far and wide â but not in typical fashion.
âJust projecting charts and stuff is so boring,â says Maybelline Santos of the Polling for Justice Project. âWhoâs going to take part in a meeting where theyâre bored all the time?â This group needs the attention of audience members to help spread their message of teens and social injustice in New York City. Polling for Justice provides a call to action for youth and young adults around the world, sharing the injustices faced by teens and seeking to understand ways to make a better tomorrow.
A combination of theatre, dance and improvisation is used to share information from more than 1,000 surveyed youth in areas of education, public health and criminal justice. âWe decided that we wanted to show them in a way that used our bodies,â says group member Jaquana Pearson. âBasically, weâre trying to embody (our data) so (people) have a better understanding of whatâs going on.â
âWe want to tell everybody what itâs like to be an urban teen, or a teen in New York City, because itâs not all as exciting as it sounds â itâs difficult,â says Darius Francis of Polling for Justice.
Michelle Fine teaches at the City University of New York and a member of the Participatory Action Research Collective. Upon being invited to present at the resilience conference she gathered performers from Polling for Justice, which she helped to develop in 2008.
âWe sought to understand what young people desire, and the ways in which state, national and global policies are dispossessing them,â says Dr. Fine. âThat is, taking away their very human rights to education, health care, housing, and what we might sincerely call human security: the ability to believe that tomorrow will be better than today.â The eveningâs opening act â Concrete Roots â is an example of teenagers who have taken another approach, which has already improved their quality of life.
âBreak dancing is a misconception,â says Drew Moore, who co-founded Concrete Roots in 2008. Mr. Mooreâs b-boy name is Daroo. âIf youâre a âbreakdancerâ it means youâre someone who doesnât fully understand the culture.â
And there is quite a culture to understand. In fact, b-boys and b-girls live an entire lifestyle. For example, â⊠we wear bright shoes because it draws attention to our feet for our footwork,â says Mr. Moore. âThey donât just become b-boys when theyâre on the dance floor, theyâre b-boys all the time. That means if youâre confident in the circle, you have to be confident all the time.â
This confidence shows. Several members of Eastern Bloc didnât speak English when they joined just over a year ago but during the conferenceâs special event, each dancer took the microphone to recount his experience as a b-boy.
âYou donât even want to go out and make trouble anymore if youâre a trouble maker,â says George Gregoryan a.k.a. Spike Nice. âYou would want to go into the studio and be with your friends because itâs that energy when you practice that keeps you out of the streets and out of trouble.â
Next month, Concrete Roots is going to the Yukon. âWe got invited to go to Cypher for Change, a national forum for youth to learn how they can enact positive change in their communities,â says Mr. Moore.
Resilience is an element shared between the Polling for Justice Project and Concrete Roots; both groups strive toward success for young people, perfectly embodying the goal of the Pathways to Resilience conference.