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- Competition Info
- Projects
- 2023
- The Boat People Art Installation
- Downtown Eastside Art Engagement Project
- Ears That Listen, Hands That Help
- Food For Marginalized Youth
- GenConnect: Connecting Punjabi Seniors & Youth
- Inside Out
- Mitti Vancouver
- NaloxHome Community Panel: It Takes a Community: Exploring the Forces Behind BC’s Overdose Crisis
- One Tap Away: A chatbot to bridge the service gap in gender-based violence services
- ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV BC Run
- Read For Our Lives
- Rooted In
- Solastalgia Zine
- 2022
- Knowledge Translation Re-imagining: Healthcare in the DTES
- Memorializing the First Filipino in Canada: A documentary
- Mixed-Race Community Group: Exploring Self, Ancestries, and Lands
- Documenstory - Ashcroft Youth Media Club
- The Process of Political Activism
- Happy, Connected, Resilient Neighbours
- Crafting Circles
- Trans Connect-ing Youth in Sport
- Ocean Care through Data Embodying and Behaviour Changes
- Let’s Do Breakfast
- Empowering Muslim Youth
- Peer Connect: Accessibility Meet up/ Games Night
- The Reclamation of Women's Bundles
- 2021
- ACSSPA Sewing Mask Project
- Art for Comfort: Art for Connection
- BC Newcomer Camp
- Burnaby Mountain Festival
- Generation BXY
- Glow Within Foundation
- Haida Nerds
- Hastings Folk Garden Sound Map
- Indigenous Tutoring and Mentoring Program (ITMP)
- Math Walks
- NaloxHome ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV
- OMG I have ADHD
- OneTime
- Public Health Speaks
- ReRooting Relationships
- Singing Our Truths: Telling Our Stories
- Voices 4 Reconciliation
- Young Minds Exploring Science
- 2020
- 2019
- 2018
- 2017
- 2016
- 2015
- 2014
- 2023
- News & stories
- Downtown Eastside Art Engagement Project
- Thirteen student-led teams launch impactful community partnerships.
- Your personal connection is your greatest strength
- Making your project a passion
- Cooking up a breakfast program with love
- Fourteen student-led teams win funding to realize community impact!
- Leaders & Learners
- These 18 teams are springing into action with community
- Develop your capacity as a changemaker – and have fun!
- Embracing the complexity: pivoting as a practice.
- You know what’s not scary? $3,000 to fund your awesome project.
- ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV student creates youth-led overdose education and naloxone training during B.C.’s overdose crisis
- ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV student-community partnership creates local impact in Surrey
- ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Students Exemplify the Spirit of Innovation and Community Engagement at the Annual President’s Gala
- Co-creation is difficult. And it's worth it.
- Hands-on for impact
- Congratulations to this year’s winners!
- On power and engagement – an interview with Aslam Bulbulia (excerpted)
- Herbert’s story: how one shopping cart made a difference.
- Don't wait for perfection – jump in
- Congratulations to our 2017-18 finalists and winners
- Discover what’s possible when university students and communities work together
- About
- Contact us
Hastings Folk Garden Sound Map
Team members: Cait Hurley (¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Geography), Jim Mcleod (¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Community Capacity Building Program)
Hastings Folk Garden (HFG) is a mature community garden that is cared for daily by members and residents of the DTES Community. It has provided space for access to nature and connection to the community through this pandemic, heat waves and intersecting crises. Through all of this, HFG is thriving: It is home to a traditional sweat lodge, a therapeutic apiary, a medicinal pollinator garden, cultural projects and memorial, trees, hummingbirds, a red-tailed hawk & many native bees.
Sound Map is a proposed resistance project centered on the Hastings Folk Garden that weaves together three iterative, low-barrier projects that the collaboratively co-created over the past year of organizing together. The projects build on themes that emerged from monthly meetings (Gardens of Care, Grow Your Own Medicine and Listening Slow) that question how we can individually and collectively take steps on the Truth and Reconciliation Calls to Action while pursuing impactful feedback on how to improve overall program accessibility and relevance. This process of embodying reconciliation takes its lead from our Indigenous members, amplifying the work that has been done to date on empowering informed consent and ethical research.
During this time, the CEC also developed a toolkit for community-engaged governance that we would like to action in smaller goals. With the support of the ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Student-Community Engagement Competition, we propose to resource our governance principle 'Room to Grow' by supporting a CEC member in receiving dignified lateral mentorship to embody and build a seasonal monitoring framework for the Sound Map project. We intend to use this to inform the H4H board of directors on what is working in community and how we might continue to resist extraction with greater intention. We are calling this element of the project a Bloom Calendar.
Community partners:
DO YOU HAVE AN IDEA FOR CHANGE?
Up to $30,000* is available to fund ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV students who want to work with community partners to drive meaningful, lasting impact.
Maybe you’re working on an existing idea for a class you’re taking, through a student club or another organization, or maybe you just have an amazing idea that keeps you up at night.... Whatever it is, we want to hear from you!
Start the process now by registering today and then submitting your idea before November 22 – all you need is your passion and an idea.
* Award amounts subject to change.