Posts

We are hiring: Chief Executive Officer (CEO)

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  CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER National Youth Development Outreach, NPC RECRUITMENT PACK Closing date: 10 June 2022 at 16:00 (GMT+2)   Growing diligent, responsible citizens in South Africa.   Thank you for your interest in joining our team.     We are proud to offer a unique post within a community outreach organisation where you can be part of the solution to bring social change to youth.   National Youth Development Outreach (NYDO) is a registered Non-Profit Organisation and was established 30 years ago. We provide training, education, and development programmes to children, youth, and their families in Mamelodi, Eersterust, Cullinan, and Bronkhorstspruit through preventative and restorative initiatives.   NYDO delivers youth skills development programme and activities inspiring, motivating, and promoting community safety. In partnership with the Department of Social Development, our accredited community-based diversion services have an 85% success rate ...

We are Hiring – Social Worker

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  National Youth Development Outreach:   Social worker NYDO is seeking to appoint a Social worker based in Eersterust, Pretoria, Gauteng Province.   National Youth Development Outreach (NYDO) seeks to recruit a social worker (out of school youth focus) to join and contribute to our mission, thereby ensuring that the organisation has the capacity and skills to transition to the next phase of our strategy. NYDO exists since 1990 to actively build diligent, responsible, contributing youth for the future. Our social justice activities aim to address underlining causes of crime as it is essential to prioritise protecting children and youth from drugs, violence, and corruption in our societies. The deterioration of our communities that are overwhelmed by drugs, crime, and unemployment impacts the safety of children at schools, on playgrounds, and even at home.   As a social justice organisation, our mandate is to work on holistic training, education, and developmental pro...

Diversion - A testimony

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  #Myjourney (unedited) My life hasn't been as easy as I wished it to be. I grew up thinking my parents loved my siblings more than they loved me, one of the reasons being because I was always wrong in my parent's eyes; I was always whipped for playing, eating extra chips in one day which I always asked myself why can't my parents sit down with me and talk to me like they did with other kids, but I honestly moved from whatever hurt they caused in my heart because I was a child I couldn't understand why?!! Growing up always feeling like I was the "black sheep of the family", feeling excluded from my family especially after I lost my grandmother, which I am still hurt from, I always wish she is was alive but fate decided otherwise. There was a point in time when I felt like I wasn't loved at home. I then went looking for love in the wrong places. Then I made a mistake that led me to go to NYDO, a mistake I learned from; a mistake that changed my life. I got ...

Rise and shine diversion programme

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  “If you’re going to rise, you must as well shine” – words that still echo in Karabo’s mind, a 16-year-old boy who attended the Rise and Shine programme at NYDO and chanted those very words before and after every session. Karabo acknowledged that the programme came at the right time in his life – a time his behaviour was spiralling out of control. He says that should he had not been enrolled in the programme, he would have either dropped out of school, been homeless, or worse, dead.   Karabo was not doing well in his studies, he had also started experimenting with drugs (dagga) and stealing. He started off by taking money from his mother’s purse to stealing a classmate’s cellphone until he graduated into mugging people in unsecured public spaces. He reported that he wanted money and did not know any other way than taking it from people or stealing items that he could sell for money. He gambled the money by playing a game of dice (a popular street gambling game in townships) a...

Bullying

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  Bullying comes in different forms. It is important that we familiarise ourselves with acceptable and unacceptable socialising manners so that we may avoid being bullies. Some people are aware of their offending behaviour (bullying tendencies) while others are genuinely unaware. Knowing types of bullying will help us identify and choose our actions towards other people.   6 types of bullying: (Ref: Gordon & Morin 2019) Physical Bullying (physical bullying includes kicking, hitting, punching, slapping, shoving, and other physical attacks). Verbal Bullying (verbal bullying uses words, statements, and name-calling to over-power the victim and also have control over them). Relational Aggression (sometimes referred to as emotional bullying, relational aggression is a type of social manipulation where people try to hurt or sabotage others' social standing). Cyberbullying (cyberbullying includes posting hurtful images (pics), making online threats, and sending hurtful emails or ...

Covid-19: Common mistakes to avoid

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  The Coronavirus pandemic has affected the way people work, connect with others, and how they carry out daily activities. Necessary measures were recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the health sector for people to adhere to such as sanitizing and washing hands regularly, wearing mask at all times, and keeping social distance.   It has been increasingly observed that people get used to these regulations and start ignoring most of the guidelines. In the midst of everything, there are common mistakes that people continue to make. This article therefore aims to remind us of the mistakes we should avoid.   People focus on what is allowed rather than what is safe People often feel like they can get into contact and mix freely with friends (especially young people) because they believe they are not at high risk. They then go back to their homes where there are elderly people whom research has proved are at a higher risk. Fact: Social distancing rule a...