In Save It for Later you’re getting a brief run-down of each
week's stand-outs from things I've bookmarked to "read later" either
from my Diigo "Read Later" list, Pulse News, Twitter, and/or
Pinterest.
I haven’t blogged for a month, so my read later list is
quite extensive. I’ll spare you the lot
of it and share with you what I think is most important. All happen to be relating to April.
April is National Poetry Month. This week BlogHer gave us 6 Amazing Last-Minute Ways to Celebrate National Poetry Month. I really like #5 which is an
online app called That Can Be My Next Tweet that mashes up your own Twitter
stream to create tweets that are somewhat poetic. I tried the app. Here are some of my mashed up tweets:
I Want and comment. I Want and the lights go. Do I pay my
friend, Anna Mahler....
Linking up with a great info you've been posting here and
doing nothing.
Couldn't be happier to one's courage. - I am now a
difference in the great women making history?
Number 7 on the BlogHer list, spine poetry, is also fun. Stack up a few books, take a photo of their
spines, and voila, their titles make poetry.
Here’s one that I attempted:
You can share yours on Twitter with the hashtag
#spinepoetry.
For more ideas on last minute National Poetry Month
celebrations check out the BlogHer article or Poets.org
April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month. As a survivor of child sexual abuse this is
an awareness campaign close to my heart. Like most of these month-long campaigns,
I feel it is one that should be at the forefront of our awareness all
year.
In the pursuit to eradicate child abuse the most important
tool is prevention. Prevention can only
happen through education, answering the question of “how do we stop this from happening?” The Child Welfare Information Gateway has a
wealth of information on prevention geared towards parents, professionals and
educators. I also have been curating information
on prevention on Pinterest for over a year. There are several organizations working towards the prevention of child abuse. The video below is from one such organization, Darkness to Light.
April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month. In light of the Steubenville rape case
getting so much media attention, this campaign couldn’t be more timely. I have been gathering information on
preventing sexual assault at Pinterest and you can check out some very
informative links by clicking here. The National Sexual Violence Resource Center is always my first stop for solid, accessible information. Their current campaign is "Talk early, talk often. Prevent sexual violence"
Also,
check out the newly launched NO MORE, “The first unifying symbol to express
support for ending domestic violence and sexual assault,” which provides tools
for individuals to get involved locally and on social media in order to shed
light on the invisible problems of sexual assault and domestic violence. I downloaded their free toolkit containing sample social media posts, email templates, and more. I think it's great and you should download and use it, too: Activate NO MORE
April is just about to turn into May but don't expect this to be the last you read here about the prevention of child abuse and the awareness/prevention of sexual assault. Beware, I just may subject you to the torture of my own poetry, too!
I love it! I had no idea it was poetry month and now feel inspired to try my own book spine poetry :) Thank you for sharing all the great resources for child abuse and prevention as well. I totally agree; while I'm glad they have a month dedicated to awareness, education and getting conversations started, this really is an issue that needs our attention all year long.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate this wrap-up! You saw some things that I missed. I applaud you for being vocal about your causes. Working in education, I couldn't agree with you more.
ReplyDelete