Tuesday, February 27, 2007
IDAHO
SHineSA Kensington is moving
From mid-April all SHine SA services located at Kensington and Bower Street will move to Woodville. Services include: clinics, library & resource centre, professional education, counselling and community education. Our last day at Kensington will be Friday 20th April 2007.
Services and staff will be re-located to the new Woodville GP Plus Health Care Centre at:-
64c Woodville Road
Woodville, SA 5011
(car park entrance via Bower Street)
PO Box 76
Woodville, SA 5011
Telephone: (08) 8300 5300
Some of the agencies providing services from the Woodville GP Plus Health Care Centre will include: Adelaide Western GP Network psychologists, Child & Adolescent Mental Health Service, Drug & Alcohol Service South Australia, GP Solutions (after hours emergency GP service), The Second Story Youth Health Service, Central Northern Adelaide Health Service and Pregnancy Advisory Centre
The Library and Resource Centre will be closed from 5th April 2007 – 30th April 2007. Please ensure books and resources are returned by 5th April 2007.
Thursday, February 22, 2007
ARE PLACES THAT PROVIDE PREGNANCY ADVICE PROVIDING ALL OPTIONS?
please before you refer people on to so called 'advice service - or counselling services' make sure that they counsel in ALL options
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Monday, February 19, 2007
BOOK REVIEW -
I've been reading this book and find it FANTASTIC. It is just sooo easy to read and has some great information (but beware it is NOT a scientific study and the numbers of young people that it questioned are quite small)
Below are some of the stats that you will read about in this book:
28% of girls and 11% of boys have been pressured or forced into having sex
76%of girls and 60% of boys said when asked whether what they learned in sex ed classes at school helped them with thier actual sexual experiences said 'Not much' or Not at all'
65% of girls and 83% of boys said thier parents had 'not much' or 'not at all' influence on them re whether or not they have sex.
86% of girls and 84% of boys said religion had NO influence on whether or not they have sex.
As you can see some great reading and interesting stats for all of us. SHineSA has 2 copies of this book
Check it out
Gender Workshop
The SHineSA Sexual health Awareness week (SHAW) event 'Understanding Gender' was held last week with over 40 attendees from organisations thrioughout Adelaide.
The workshop outline was:
Introduction
“Why is it that so much research shows that gender is one of the key issues in addressing young peoples sexual health”? Ø
Model
Accepting and Resisting
Statistics
Review model
‘rewards’ for accepting and resisting
Somersault
Personal History
Conclusion and evaluation
Two main points of the workshop were:
1) Understanding gender is one of THE keys to the sexual health issues facing young people through out the world.
2) A model of gender to help this understanding was presented ( and can be viewed below).
•Gender Model, a work in progress
•Formulated by Ralph Brew, Jane Flentje and Lud Allen, January/February 2007.
Key Reference: Wilchins, Rikki (2004) Queer Theory, Gender Theory; an instant primer, Alyson Publications, California
Here are some notes to help understand the model:
•Gender Expression refers to the manifestation of an individual’s fundamental sense of being masculine or feminine through clothing, behaviour, grooming, etc.
•Gender Identity refers to the inner sense most of us have of being either male or female.
Key Reference: Wilchins, Rikki (2004) Queer Theory, Gender Theory; an instant primer, Alyson Publications, California
•Gender Identity is about the degree to which one identifies (or not) with the biological sex to which you are born and the expectations of people of that biological sex in society.
•This can be anything from identifying more closely with the physical body of the same (or opposite sex) to celebrating (or loathing) aspects of the ways in which men or women tend to behave and relate to others.
•Our gender identity will be heavily influenced by the ways in which other’s perceive our gender and the penalties and rewards we experience as a result.
•Gender expression is about ways in which we express our gender both deliberately & consciously as well as unconsciously.
•Gender expression might be stereotypically “masculine” or “feminine” but can be anywhere on a continuum between these extremes.
•Gender expression is more realistically a personal, individual grab-bag blend of what some may be considered to be “gendered” qualities.
•These blends will shift over time from day-to-day and from one life-phase to the next.
•Our gender expression will be heavily mediated by the rewards & penalties which are imposed and expected from our culture and society.
•Our experience of gender does not exist in a vacuum and will be different from person to person.
•We exist in a culture, family, institutions which value different forms of gender expression and identity above others.
•Our ability to have a healthy gender identity and to freely express our gender consciously or unconsciously is influenced by both rewards and penalties.
•Our gender is therefore a dynamic quality which involves rewards and penalties for accepting and resisting the expectations of others around our biological sex.
•Risks and penalties may appear similar but both rewards and penalties carry risks to ourselves and the broader community.
The model was then used to help deconstruct a scene from the movie Somersault.
Finally the workshop moved from the theoretical and 3rd person to a more personal critique of how each one of us is programmed by the same factors that are explored through the model. and... how each of us may empower or disempower the people wer work with based on our own gender assumaptions and unconciouss actions.
Wednesday, February 07, 2007
IDAHO PLANNING DAY ROCKS
Hi everybody,
Thank you to all those who attended what was a fantastically motivational and exciting IDAHO planning day on Thursday last week. Your ideas and enthusiam was electric and we at Northern Voices all feel that IDAHO 07 is definitely going to be bigger, better, more exciting and definitley more participatory than 06.
For those of you who were unable to make it, the planning day entailed a meet and greet component for all in attendance, a brief description of the network and the initiative we undertook last year as well as a brief discussion of the evaluation and what people wanted to get out of the day. After the break we then split in to two groups and discussed either what kinds of resources we can produce as a working party for IDAHO that services can use AND what kind of events we can plan for May 17 to try and build the reputation of IDAHO in SA and get as many agencies, communities and individuals involved. The ideas that the groups came up with were fabulous, really creative and also really practical.
We then discussed 'Where to from here'? How do we continue this work and develop these ideas..... the planning day was partly to get other people involved to share the work for IDAHO with Northern Voices, with the idea that a working party might eventually be developed with people from different regions around Adelaide. This is almost the case already, and so we would like to invite you, both those already involved and those who want to jump on board, to the second IDAHO 07 planning day which has been set for Wednesday, February 21 at The Second Story Youth Health Service, 57 Hyde Street, Adelaide from 10am - 1pm.
The plan for this day will be to take these ideas and strategise about how we can make them a reality and to then share the tasks around.
IDAHO 07 is going to be an exciting event which hopefully grows bigger each year.... and we would love for you to help us make it grow!
Please RSVP to a member from the Inside Out team if you can make it on 8232 0233.
Cheers!