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The best way to predict the future is to create it. EXCITING NEWS from GIRLEDWORLD!!

March 23, 2020

Well hello!👋🏽

We hope you’re going ok. 🙏🏼

Like most people across the planet right now, we’ve been watching and wondering and madly adapting to a new #covid_19 normal in the last week or two.😷🌏

Life, school and work as we know it has been temporarily flipped on its head as we all work out what remote living, learning and working looks like.

And for our team, that has meant rethinking how we do our work best when everyone’s stuck at home.

And how we can continue to connect 1000’s of young people with the new world of work and outstanding industry mentors so they can build employability skills and pathways to thriving future careers.🚀

While we don’t know what lies ahead, we do know that the best way to predict the future is to create it.

So we did!! (The last few weeks have been VERY busy ones!! 😜)

STAY TUNED for exciting announcements 🗣 coming up with some brand new #girledworld online program launches, regional virtual events - and lots of new content featuring ✨AWESOME✨ women and girls to keep you connected, inspired, entertained and equipped with knowledge and advice about career planning, study and productivity tips, remote learning and working strategies, soft skills you can start building now, and stacks more as we skate through these temporary times and all find a new normal. 🤗

Stay safe, and fabulous.

We’re here for you.

Team girledworld XX

#girledworld #adaptation #newnormal #futureofwork #futureskills #resilience

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Acknowledging International Women's Day even in these turbulent times.

March 22, 2020

Sadly with COVID-19 and the current state of uncertainty that has swept the world, International Women’s Day came and went like a pebble in a pond this year.

Many events were cancelled and it missed much of the hype and traction it usually attracts. Understandably so given we are dealing with very significant and unprecedented times.

Our friends at One Roof Women have captured their experience of IWD 2020, lessons learnt and the possible silver lining that will emerge from the current state of affairs to advance gender equality across Australia, and the world.

See here for the full roundup.

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Just stop it! Adaptation and utilitarianism will serve us better than a roll of toilet paper right now.

March 19, 2020

This article by girledworld Cofounder + CEO Madeleine Grummet was first published in Women's Agenda on Thursday 19 March, 2020. See full article and Women's Agenda daily news hub.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has just told Australians, like a parent scolding a naughty child, to just STOP IT.

“Stop hoarding. I can’t be more blunt about it. Stop it! It’s not sensible. It’s not helpful. And it’s been one of the most disappointing things I’ve seen in Australian behaviour in response to this crisis. That is not who we are as a people. It is not necessary. It is not something that people should be doing …. Stop doing it. It’s ridiculous. It’s un-Australian. And it must stop.”

I’m not sure whether I’m Australian or un-Australian or where the binary line is drawn (my genealogy is kind of muddy at best). But I am a parent. So I hear your ‘STOP IT!’, Scomo. Loud and clear.

Ish.

But the thing is, as a (suddenly) working from home whilst concurrently home-schooling mother of four with kids who eat like locusts in a barley storm, and with growing COVID-19 panic, paranoia and the threat of home lock-down circling in, I’ve had to exercise a fair bit of self-control and a whole lot of ‘STOP IT’ in recent days in order to resist the urge to buy groceries and stockpile sundries in case our family of six find ourselves in soon-to-be mandatory home confinement.

Disclaimer: I’m ashamed to say that our pathetically urbanised family is possibly not capable of surviving for long in isolation. Our veggie patch can’t propagate a weed, our abundant succulents probably wouldn’t cut it as a stir fry, and with four teenage menstrual daughters and a little bit of perimenopause on the boil, Lord of the (actually quite terrible) Flies might soon descend on the household. (We also may need to mandate maximal social distancing. Stat.)

But as a parent and business owner trying to triage the day-to-day decision making and adaptation required to navigate a new normal in our working and schooling lives right now, under one roof, what I do know is that it feels like the collective panic has been as dangerous and contagious as the pandemic itself (now reported to be in more than 100 countries – and counting).

Because panic begets panic. And there is panic in the suburbs aplenty.

While we know, rationally, that there is no shortage of supplies, multiple WhatsApp groups and social feeds are filled with panicked texts from colleagues and friends and parents about how to survive and bunker down, where to get last stocks of toilet paper and the latest inappropriate #funnynotfunny #covidlife memes.

People we know and respect who are rational, educated, considered and usually very community-minded, have made confessions in the past 24 hours of stealth dawn missions to raid corner stores of pocket-pack tissues, kitchen wipes, sanitary items and strangely spiced couscous. (To be fair, at least they’re not panic-buying guns – a whole other level of disturbing playing out right now in the USA). But in many ways this is a pandemic of FOMO at its worst – a highly contagious and survivalist anxiety (and social-media) fuelled mental disorder epidemic, which can’t be treated with any known medication, or seemingly, conversation.

Shit got real in the past 48 hours. Black Mirror jumped the screen. We know people who have COVID-19. People do feel threatened. 

And the unprecedented nature of this threat to our everyday lives and health has us all worriedly looking to each other for cues and signs for what is deemed safe, and what is not. 

As hapless humans, when we see others behaving in certain ways, there is a follow-on contagion effect.

Perceived scarcity becomes actual scarcity. Anticipated consequence becomes an actual outcome in our minds. Fear fuels us, despite our rational selves.

Because however evolved we think we are, we humans are mere lemmings when we strip it down to basics. We copy each other. We’re programmed to. We can’t actually help it. 

So if we are going to stop it, we need a large majority of us to actually, as Scomo implored, STOP IT.

Consumer psychology experts report that the hoarding and stockpiling behaviour that is sweeping the world right now (with Australia being one of the most guilty hyper-purchasing nations) is driven by the part of the brain that is completely irrational.

Our unblinking, unthinking herd mentality is flamed by social media and hyperbolic news coverage, perpetuating a state of insecurity and panic buying amongst the general populace, which is stronger than our drive to desist.

You’d think our social conscience and thoughts for the most vulnerable or greater collective would override our toilet paper and plain flour compulsions. But sadly not. NFP charities like OzHarvest (which delivers food to more than 1,300 charities around Australia, indirectly feeding millions of Australians) said today they are facing an unprecedented strain on their services and calling on the government for immediate financial assistance due to lack of supply.

Many other charities are suffering from depleting staple donations and diminishing availability of volunteer staff, which means those who live hand to mouth or are reliant on charity services to survive, have no option in the absence of aid – they can’t afford to stockpile because they simply don’t have the surplus dollars in the bank.

To offset the need, earlier this week, supermarkets including Woolworths and Coles, introduced a designated shopping time for people with a disability and elderly citizens to ensure they had equal opportunity to do their budget weekly shopping and purchase staples.

Presumably, it was also to try and hold back the crowds and hose down the high emotions we’ve seen playing out in stores across the country. In the past week, Australian supermarkets have seen punches thrown, security guards assaulted and frenzied over-purchasing of staples and toilet paper, despite the fact that all the expert advice says coronavirus has no risk of rapid onset excessive diarrhoea, and we have no supply issues (most of the nation’s toilet paper rolls are made locally).

Online, the panic continues, with #toiletpapergate and #toiletpapercrisis still top trending on Twitter this week, toilet paper rolls being flogged for exorbitant prices on e-stores, and listeners calling into talkback radio stations to win packs of three-ply rolls.

Australia’s Chief Medical Officer, Dr Brendan Murphy, told parliament this week: “We are trying to reassure people that removing all of the lavatory paper from the shelves of supermarkets probably isn’t a proportionate or sensible thing to do at this time.”

But people keep doing it. Despite themselves.

Back at the ranch, as we got down to our last squares today and a fresh ripple of panic rocked the afternoon, I reminded my daughters that the ancient Romans didn’t have Sorbent. They used a communal gomph (sea sponge) on a stick. Unpatterned. (Response from daughters unfiltered, and censored here).

Case in point number two was that most countries in Southeast Asia, as well as parts of Southern Europe, favour the use of water from a hose or bucket as a post-toileting cleanser. (Again, response censored here).

Then in an impromptu afternoon (off-curriculum) lesson, a quick google of the Short History of Toilet Paper told us that toilet paper wasn’t widely packaged and sold in the USA until 1857, and that prior to that, most Americans were known to use the absorbent pages from the Sears Catalog and Farmers’ Almanac. The Almanac eventually added a hole in the corner of each edition, to make it easier for patrons to tear, read, and wipe (hopefully in that order). Notably, it wasn’t actually until 1935 that any manufacturer in the country thought to promise a “splinter-free toilet paper”. (Presumably, there was no consumer ‘paint point’ prior).

But the key take-away from our COVID-19 homeschool today was that, as Darwin apparently mumbled once: “It is not the strongest of the species, nor the most intelligent, that survives. It is the one that is most adaptable to change.”

Change because we have to. Change because we’ve been asked to. Change because toilet paper is a luxury for most of the peeps on the planet.

And because change actually begets change. 

So put the panic aside, fellow citizens. STOP IT. Stop the shopping to flatten the curve. 

And remember that in times like these, acceptance, adaptation and utilitarianism will serve us better than a roll of bloody Sorbent every will.

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COVID-19: We'll get through this. Together. Apart.

March 16, 2020

By girledworld Cofounder + CEO Madeleine Grummet

Today, like many, I begin a new phase of Humanity 4.0 existence - voluntarily social distancing, working from home, and turning down the fear dial to turn up my 'curve flattening' as Victoria is declared a State of Emergency.

As a working mother of four facing temporary school closures, the juggle is going to get very real over the next month as I stare down the barrel of remote work, kid-wrangling and adapting to a very new kind of COVID-19 normal.

So I've been workshopping a kibbutz-style experimental home school concept, with an agile, evolving emergency curriculum including: Social Distancing - Global Virtual Greetings, How to be an Isolation Influencer 101, Interpretive Dance, Tik Tok Numeracy, MAFS Modern Philosophy, Clickbait - Practical Techniques, and a Reggio Emilia-inspired, self-directed nutritional learning class entitled: “Find your own food in the garden”.

My girlfriends and I (with nearly 30 school aged kids between us) have been entertaining ourselves coming up with inventive Black Swan lesson titles and COVID-19 life in confinement hacks on our What's App thread.

But the reality is that beyond the banter, underneath we're all grappling with the gnawing uncertainty that comes with facing the unknown of the weeks ahead, an education system shutdown, and the financial implications of a workforce and consumer economy being hit from every side, which sees some of us suddenly underemployed, trying to offset the looming lean months in the balance sheet, and readjusting to remote work and learning at home with multiple kids nipping at our heels.

Governments in 73 countries have now announced or implemented the closure of educational institutions in an attempt to slow the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, estimated to be impacting 516.6 million children and youth globally - and growing.

Hundreds of millions of learners are now experiencing education disruption, and in an effort to offset the impact, UNESCO has released a comprehensive resource list of free educational applications and platforms to help parents, teachers and school systems, and is providing immediate support to countries as they work to facilitate continuity of learning systems, especially for the most vulnerable. 

Sadly, as with most human misfortunes across the eons, those who suffer the most during this time will, as always, unfortunately be those who have the least, and when it comes to educational access, the digital divide will compound disadvantage for those without access to the internet and digital tools required to learn remotely during this time. (According to a recent report from the Australian Bureau of Statistics the “digital divide” in Australia still remains largely unchanged.)

Given our work across the education sector at girledworld and Future Amp here in Australia, we've had a rare front row seat to the unfolding chaos inside secondary schools and higher education institutions in recent weeks as they grapple with emergency COVID-19 containment contingencies and the deployment of continuity strategies for e-learning, distance teaching and digital education delivery during these uncertain times.

But there's a part of me that's watching it all with keen interest.

Because maybe the upside to this unprecedented disruption is that this crisis may rapidly accelerate the innovation long-required to rethink, redesign and recalibrate our education and learning systems, and reexamine the fundamental role of education in our ever-more complex 21st Century world (currently awash with one too many wicked problems).

Back in 2018, Gonski's landmark Through Growth to Achievement Report called for radical education system reforms, and a move from a year-based curriculum to one that’s independent of age or grade to enable student-directed, personalised and digitised blended learning models.

The report outlined a new education system designed to provide more flexible delivery models offering virtual, on-demand, digital and distributed learning to students who have for too long been subjected to an Industrial model, lock-step mass education system.

Globally, leading educators agree that Education 4.0 design and delivery needs to shift toward a multi-disciplinary, pick-and-mix personalised model based on real-life problem solving, greater learner autonomy and flexibility, and the development of core competencies in technical, creative and employability skills to meet Industry 4.0 needs.

But the education sector has been slow to move, and maybe this strange moment we now find ourselves in is our chance to shake the snow dome and work out where the education system makes sense, where it no longer serves students, and what should stay and what should go.

There are some stand-out educational institutions seizing the current situation as an opportunity to lead and fast-track decisions: For example, last week the University of Tasmania's Vice-Chancellor Rufus Black announced that UTAS would accelerate its five-year strategy and cut back its course offerings from 514 to 120 in an effort to reduce costs, decrease over-reliance on foreign students and be prudent as the impact of the COVID-19 global pandemic plays out, (and which is predicted to put a gaping hole in the balance sheets of multiple education institutions, businesses and corporations right across the country).

This gaping hole is unsurprising, given experts have long warned that the Australian tertiary sector’s over-reliance on Chinese students as an income generator in the face of cuts to higher education funding would expose the system to risk down the line. The coronavirus and subsequent travel bans from China have brought that risk starkly to the fore now.

In 2019, international students contributed $34 billion to the Australian economy and universities now face an estimated $1.2 billion hit to fee revenue from an estimated 65,800 students at risk of cancelling their 2020 enrolments altogether due to currently being stuck outside Australia.

But the meta economic, education and social systems impact of COVID-19 remains to be seen, and the coming months will show us all what a new normal in educational delivery, economic productivity and workforce value creation really means.

According to Mark Manson and other commentators across the planet, economic and societal "contractions" like these are normal and healthy things to "cull dead weight" and sort out which businesses and systems are actually creating value for society and which ones are not. Or as Warren Buffett blatantly puts it, “Only when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked.”

Economic rationalism aside, the reality is that measures to distribute and enact isolation policies for workforces and the education sector will force a digital imperative and value constraint on our systems and day-to-day ways of working, teaching and learning - whether we're ready for it or not.

And given this whole situation is likely going to get a whole lot bell curve worse before it gets better, as the virus spreads across the planet we'll see an increase in quarantining measures with more people staying home, learning from home and working from home, so adaptability, flexibility and reinvention will be key to new systems design in the face of an ever-changing and dynamic situation.

What work looks like when we're not at work and what learning looks like when we're not at school will no doubt be an experiment with rich and surprising learnings for us all. During this time of brave new learning trials and pilots, this is therefore our real chance to test and learn.

Whichever way we look at it, across the world, educators, students and workers everywhere will need to get used to a very different looking kind of daily grind.

The upside to COVID-19 for those of us who have been working flexibly from home and casual co-work environs (and evangelising the positives) for a while now, is that we can share our WFH sanity drops, startup hacks, preferred open source productivity apps, team collaboration tools (Slack, Trello, Google Drive, Zoom, Zapier), and Deep Work anti-distraction practices with those who aren't used to working or learning this way, in order to support them in transitioning to a new work or home learning structure.

The education system with many of its legacy enterprise and LMS systems could directly benefit from rapid integration of some of these real-time group collaboration tools and productivity practices sooner rather than later, and this could be the perfect time to test and learn viabilities, feasibilities and desirabilities for these sorts of applications in the sector.

Making the most of the market opportunity that has suddenly revealed itself, the big guns have also jumped into rapid solution mode for the education sector, with Google for Education just announcing the release of advanced features in Hangouts Meet (available to schools around the globe) so that educators can continue connecting (for free) with students, and can facilitate remote learning (this will include the ability to record meetings, livestream to up to 100k people and add 250 people to a Google Hangout).

Microsoft Teams has also released remote learning startup guidance for educators everywhere, so there are plenty of resources available for trial and implementation in learning institutions across the country, and and in an act of benevolence to the scattered and home-bound workers of the world, Jason Fried is offering his book REMOTE: Office Not Required for free here. 

But it's no secret that the jury has been out for awhile on what blended learning or flexible education models look like.

How can we tell if students are actively learning remotely? How do we measure individual learner progress? Can we maintain strong company and team culture when we only see each other online? Do we take the same human cues in a virtual meeting? How's do we maintain morale in the virtual office or classroom? Will social distancing and indefinite home isolation affect our mental health and ability to work and learn? 

Who knows. Time will tell.

But maybe this State of Emergency is a chance for us all to push pause for a bit.

To slow down, go home, sit in the corner - and have a good, hard think about where we're at, where humanity's at, and where the world's at.

In the face of social crises, society learns something about itself.

And COVID-19 just might be the silver-lined warning Humanity 4.0 needs to rethink education, globalisation, automation, exponential progress and technological advancement at all costs. 

As Yuval Noah Harari wrote in TIME yesterday, the real antidote to the current epidemic is not segregation and de-globalisation, but rather cooperation, solidarity, trust and a new suite of leaders we can look to who can shepherd us through these strange, unprecedented times.

What is certain is that like viruses, all systems evolve and transform.

But only if we respond quickly to the red flags, be a first mover, apply some third order thinking and adopt an agile, adaptable mindset in our every day lives, learning systems and work practices in this brave new world.

Wherever you are, whoever you are, whatever you do - embrace the new normal, for as long as it takes.

We'll get through this. Together. Apart.

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girledworld launches Victorian Workplace Mentoring and Employability Skills Program with Victorian Government, AFL, News Corp, Square and others!

March 10, 2020

OFFICIAL MEDIA RELEASE

AFL, Slack, News Corp and the Victorian Government give teenage girls a ‘future booster’ with Girledworld’s state-wide employability skills and industry mentoring program.

10th March 2020

Off the back of the Andrews Labor Government‘s Gender Equality Bill 2019 passing through Victorian Parliament – a landmark step in breaking-down gender barriers in the workplace – University of Melbourne-founded, award-winning education company girledworld will activate workplaces across Victoria from March to June 2020 to boost future career opportunities, employability skills and invaluable industry mentorship of hundreds of female high school and tertiary students.

Girledworld Cofounder and CEO Madeleine Grummet said the girledworld Workplace Mentoring & Employability Skills Program will connect students with leading women in the Victorian business, corporate and startup ecosystem, smash workforce gender stereotypes, and provide students with critical insight into the new world of work, STEM and workforce soft skills to boost their employability and future career opportunities. 

The program is supported by the Victorian State Government, along with multiple major businesses and technology sector companies including Silicon Valley communications giant Slack, Square (backed by Twitter founder Jack Dorsey), AGL Energy, EY, the Australian Football League, News Corp and many more.

The girledworld Program will launch today in Victoria to coincide with this year’s global International Women's Day theme #EachForEqual (aligned with UN Women’s new multigenerational campaign Generation Equality) and will conclude on June 26, 2020.

Equipping, educating and empowering the next generation of women with the skill-sets, mindsets and industry mentors they need to succeed is critical to their future career pathways, and will contribute to the creation of the future jobs and industries that will drive our Victorian economy.

Quote attributable to Minister for Jobs, Innovation and Trade Martin Pakula -
”We’re proud to support this program, because we recognise how important it is to prepare young Victorians for the future of work and the digital economy.”

Quote attributable to AFL General Manager Commercial Kylie Rogers -
“The AFL is thrilled to be involved in a program which supports the development of young Australian women and helps them realise their potential through invaluable industry experience and on-the-job learning.

We are passionate about providing opportunities for everyone, no matter their gender, background or ability, and to be able to inspire young women to step into a career in sport is just one way we hope to achieve gender equality and representation.”

Quote attributable to Victoria’s Lead Scientist (DJPR) Dr Amanda Caples -
“We know that hearing stories of career pathways directly from women is a powerful way to expand the horizons of young girls. We need to change the workforce of the future to achieve gender equality. Women need to be qualified for jobs of the future which will increasingly require strong STEM skills.”

Quote attributable to Slack APAC Head of Marketing Julie Walker -
”
At Slack, we are passionate about increasing the number of historically underrepresented individuals throughout the workplace. Having a diverse and inclusive workforce is the key to encouraging creativity and innovation throughout Australia. We're thrilled to partner with Girledworld on this initiative and provide young women with a window into a range of exciting new career opportunities."

Quote attributable to girledworld Cofounder + CEO Madeleine Grummet -
“The world of work is changing fast. We need to give today’s students access to workplaces, so they are prepared and equipped to step up into the jobs and industries of the future. This program is about giving young women access to real-world career education, employability skills like problem-solving and critical thinking, and the opportunity to learn from outstanding Victorian business leaders and entrepreneurs.”

Quote attributable to girledworld Cofounder + COO Edwina Kolomanski -
”Young women need to get out of classrooms and into the real-world so they can see what they can be. Best practice career education and employability education needs to provide students with immersive and practical experiences to enable students to develop critical 21st century employability skills they need to thrive in an uncertain Future of Work. This program provides students with real experiences and access to inspiring women to better inform their career goal setting and decision making.” 

###

READ MORE ABOUT THE PROGRAM

SIGN UP YOUR WORKPLACE

BECOME A MENTOR

BECOME A MENTEE

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How to sleep your way to success.

March 2, 2020

In the distraction age 📲👀 it’s easy to get caught in a cycle of too much stimulus and not enough sleep.

Research consistently shows that even though we can get used to running on empty 😩 and burning the candle at both ends, sleep deprivation means we’re not operating anywhere near our best capacity.
And from a scientific perspective, the only real remedy for a lack of sleep is - wait for it - sleep. 😴

The evidence?

▶️According to the Journal of Sleep Research, even short naps improve alertness, mood, focus, and cognitive performance.
▶️ A study published in Sleep showed that a 10-minute nap measurably improved alertness and cognitive performance for the remainder of the day.
▶️ A German study found that even a 6-minute nap improved performance on a memory recall exercise.

So if you hit the tired wall today, find a quiet corner, close your eyes, have a micro-nap - and top up your sleep tank. 🤗😁🚀

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Each for Equal: girledworld gets behind International Women's Day 2020

February 24, 2020

We're gearing up for a very exciting announcement soon, to coincide with this year's #internationalwomensday2020 ...

And we're embracing this year's #IWD2020 campaign theme - #EachforEqual - which anchors on the idea that an equal world is an enabled world, and a world in which we are each responsible for our own thoughts and actions - all day, every day.

Equality is not a women's issue, it's a #business issue.

Gender equality is essential for #economies and #communities to thrive, and a gender equal world can be healthier, wealthier and more harmonious.

The race is on for the gender equal #boardroom, gender equal #governments and #policy-making, gender equal #media coverage, gender equal #workplaces, gender equal #sports coverage, and more gender equality in #health services and #wealth distribution.

We can all actively choose to challenge existing stereotypes, fight workplace and societal #biases, broaden our perceptions and elevate and celebrate women's achievements.

Join the International Women's Day 2020 campaign as we each strive for equal. 

DETAILS HERE.

#eachforequal #girledworld #equality 

https://www.internationalwomensday.com/Theme

girledworld Tech Formation Melbourne 2020

HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO WIN TICKETS TO TECH FORMATION!! Deets below.

February 19, 2020

Are you a high school or post-school tertiary STUDENT aged between 15 - 25?

WE HAVE 10 TICKETS TO GIVE AWAY FOR TECH FORMATION ON Friday February 28, 2020!
To enter
CONTACT US HERE and tell us in 100 words or less why you need to be there!

TECHFORMATION is a conference for women and girls, shining the spotlight on female industry leaders across STEM industries in Melbourne, Australia.

Prepare to be inspired, learn, and grow as you connect with extraordinary women at the forefront of the digital revolution.

Maybe you’re looking to learn about business?
Maybe you’re looking to learn about women in leadership?
Or maybe you just want to get to know some leading tech entrepreneurs in your city?

Wherever you’re at, here are 6 GOOD REASONS you need to get to Techformation in Melbourne!

1. HEAR FROM INCREDIBLE FEMALE SPEAKERS
We have an amazing lineup of women who will share their stories with you. We are committed to only showcasing female speakers to keep true to our values.

2. MEET & MINGLE WITH OTHER PURPOSE-DRIVEN WOMEN
Make new meaningful connections in a room of like-minded women.

3. AMAZING GIFT BAGS FILLED WITH GOOD STUFF
You won't find a bag full of flyers in our gift bags! Expect to see some goodies from the likes of Moxie, Shopify,  Food For Health and more.

4. LEARN FROM THE BEST
Gain insights and practical tips and tricks from women who have been there and done that. Make sure you take notes!

5. SUPPORT A VERY IMPORTANT CONVERSATION
We know that women are underrepresented in the tech industry, so its important that we empower each other through events like these.

6. INSPIRE THE NEXT GENERATION
Every year we invite 100 secondary school girls for free so that they can see female leaders in the space and broaden their horizons to a possible career in tech.

FOR MORE INFORMATION SEE TECHFORMATION HERE.

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girledworld STEM, Soft Skills + Career Education Workshops 2020: BOOK NOW!

February 17, 2020

GIRLEDWORLD CAREER EDUCATION WORKSHOPS FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS. BOOKINGS FOR TERMS 2 - 4, 2020 OPEN NOW!

A rapidly changing world driven by #bigdata, #digital, #exponential technologies, #coding, #artificialintelligence, the #internetofthings and the rise of #STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Maths, Medicine) is radically changing the way we communicate, consume, live and work.

A recent study by ​@PwC reveals that in order for Australia’s population to realise our potential for innovation and create the new industries and jobs that will secure our future economy, we need an appropriately skilled workforce and more STEM-trained employees.

The research also shows that 75% of the fastest growing occupations now require STEM skills, 70% of Australian employers identify STEM employees as the most innovative, and cross-sectorally there is a growing need for the broad 21st Century skills that STEM fosters including critical thinking, problem solving, analytic capabilities, curiosity and imagination - all identified as mandatory ‘survival skills’ in the workplace of the future.

Our GIRLS IN STEM School Workshop gives female high school students the access they need to STEM industries and job knowledge, STEM role models, and information about STEM career pathways, so they can better shape their choices about subject and post-secondary study opportunities, and start their STEM skilling whilst still at school. ✔️


TO LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR CAREER EDUCATION WORKSHOPS OR BOOK US FOR YOUR SCHOOL CLICK THIS LINK or paste http://www.girledworld.com/school-workshops in your browser, and one of our friendly bookings team will be in touch.

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Sacre Coeur Year 10: girledworld Brave Leadership Workshop

February 15, 2020

We spent the afternoon exploring #leadership with 90+ Year 10 students at Sacre Coeur in Melbourne.✨

Students worked in sprint teams to ‘Design the Prime Minister Australia needs in 2022’ 🙋🏽‍♀️🙋🏻‍♀️🙋‍♀️; discovered leadership styles and #softskills ✔️; built themselves as leaders in a high-paced, hands on @legoseriousplay activity🙌🏽; and reflected on themselves as emerging leaders. 🤔

(We’re secretly hoping one of today’s students becomes Australia’s future PM :)

In 2020 we’re working with schools all over Australia delivering award-winning Career Education Workshops.

Our interactive workshops are led by expert facilitators, and get students inspired by expanding their industry knowledge, helping them build leadership and employability skills, and supporting them to explore future career pathways through exciting real-world, industry backed learning contexts.

CLICK THIS LINK TO LEARN MORE about our 2020 Career Education Workshops for high school students, or to inquire about us coming to your school.

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Happy International Day of Women and Girls in Science!

February 11, 2020

Yep. Currently, according to data from UIS, less than 30% of the world’s researchers are women, and women (and girls) continue to be disproportionately under-represented across the #STEM sector worldwide.

Today, on #InternationalDayofWomenandGirlsinScience - let's celebrate and elevate the women and girls who are paving their way in #STEM studies and careers, and shine a light on the systematic barriers that hold #WomenInScience back! 📲 

To find out more stats on the work the world needs to do to increase diversity in #STEM fields see this article.

And to learn more from UN Women about what you can do to support STEM women and engage with science see here. 

#STEMcareers #WomenInSTEM #girledworld #careers 

Atlassian Work Futurist Dominic Price: “Our overfocus on productivity is the illness our economy is suffering right now". PICTURE CREDIT: Jess Middleton The Australian

Atlassian Work Futurist Dominic Price: “Our overfocus on productivity is the illness our economy is suffering right now". PICTURE CREDIT: Jess Middleton The Australian

What will work look like? How many hours will you work in an average week? Atlassian Work Futurist Dom Price shares his predictions ...

February 6, 2020

So here at #girledworld we're a little bit obsessed with what work will look like in the 21st Century, and since 2017 have engaged with 30,000+ high school and tertiary #students across Australia to equip them with #industry #knowledge, workplace #mentors and #softskills for the #futureofwork.

So we leaned in when Atlassian Work Futurist Dominic Price took to the stage at Pause Fest this week to share his predictions on the #evolution of #work ...

According to Price, the traditional working hours of 9 to 5 will soon be obsolete, because that's not how companies will get the BEST out of their people.

Instead, Price believes work-life #balance is critical for the new workplace which will see individuals work in batches and bursts to suit their #energy, #tasks and #skills.

Interesting then, when we look at the average Australian worker today, as data shows that due to the 9 to 5 24/7 nature of modern work today's worker is doing 240hrs (six weeks!) of unpaid overtime p.a, but these extra hours are NOT actually increasing #productivity (The Australia Institute 2019).

For a round-up of Dom's predictions see this article from Work and Careers Reporter Natasha Boddy at The Australian.

FOR MORE ON OUR CAREERS + SOFT SKILLS WORKSHOPS see our 2020 School Workshops here.

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Zoos Victoria Youth Leadership Program 2020 - APPLY NOW!

February 6, 2020

It's been a strange, unsettling sort of start to 2020 in Australia, with our leaders (mostly kinda) MIA, the catastrophic flames of climate change forcing us to collectively face new realities about the future of life on this patch of planet - and now an unprecedented global health emergency declared...

It's a reminder that as Martin Luther King said, the real test of leadership does not occur during times of comfort but during times of crisis and challenge.

For Australia to solve for the long-term, it's clear we need a new breed of Next Gen leaders who can think big, start small and create the real change we need to see in our climate policies, environmental practices, new economy business conduct and engagement of increasingly diverse and marginalised communities.

Zoos Victoria just may have the answer to that with the launch of the 2020 Youth Leadership Program designed especially for students in Years 9-11.

The 13-day intensive application-only program is designed to upskill and immerse young change-makers in conservation issues so they can inspire others to create local action and catalyse global change.

If you’re a student in Year 9, Year 10 or Year 11 and interested in applying SEE DETAILS HERE.

Applications close Monday 24 February, 2020.

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How will students develop the soft skills they need for the future of work?

February 5, 2020

In 2020 we're working with 1000's of high school students across Australia to equip them with employability skills, access to amazing industry mentors, and best practice career education so they can start planning and building their future pathways now.

One of our key focus areas is teaching students about the development of soft skills - those fundamental social, emotional and technological skills - which are becoming more crucial as intelligent machines and automation take over more physical, repetitive and basic cognitive tasks in our global workforce.

This latest research from McKinsey & Company shows that current HR professionals report difficulty in recruiting candidates and recent graduates who possess the necessary soft skills for an automating world, and that today's students critically need to acquire these skills to ensure they successfully gain employability beyond school or tertiary study.

See the article here.

And to learn more and book our NATIONAL CAREER EDUCATION and SOFT SKILLS WORKSHOPS visit our School Workshops page here.

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TEENAGE GIRLS! JOIN US IN MARCH 2020 + MEET YOUR CAREER MENTOR!

January 14, 2020

WANT TO MEET AN INCREDIBLE FEMALE MENTOR + GAIN WORKPLACE + CAREER INSIGHTS!

We’re now accepting applications from female students (aged 15-18) for our national WORKPLACE MENTORING + EMPLOYABILITY SKILLS program happening across Monday March 2 - Friday March 13, 2020 to coincide with global #internationalwomensday 🙋🏿‍♀️🙋🏼‍♀️🙋🏽‍♀️🌏 

This powerful mentoring program enables female students to take part in open workplace #education and #career pathway discovery through joining leading #business, #corporate and #entrepreneurial women for ‘Day in the Life’ experiences.

Engaging young people in real-world workplaces is crucial to informing subject selections and post-school study and tertiary choices, developing deeper understandings of #jobs and emerging #industries and equipping them with the critical mindsets and enterprise #skillsets required for successful transition into the future workforce.

Since 2016 girledworld has engaged with 30,000+ high school girls through our careers and employability events, school workshops and #futureofwork educational campaigns.

Join us to kickstart your future in 2020!

See link here to learn more and sign up, and scroll down to watch video of last year's highlights.

#girledworld #futureofwork #employability #skills

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Think BIG in 2020. Apply for the GirlUp Leadership Summit!

January 13, 2020

ARE YOU THINKING BIG IN 2020?

Well - have a think about this!

From July 7-9, 2020, more than 400 passionate youth advocates from around the world will gather for the 8th annual GirlUp Leadership Summit in Washington, D.C, USA. 

For three days, young female leaders will learn from influential speakers, thought leaders and celebrity champions, engage in skill-based workshops, and participate in a day of action to catalyse defenders of gender equality.

The Summit is an enriching, cross-cultural experience that aims to empower, educate, and activate the potential of young female change-makers across the planet. 

For more info or to apply see this link.

#GirlUp #girledworld #leadership #futureleaders

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Do you know who you are?

December 21, 2019

Knowing who you are and what you stand for takes a while.....

But if you go with your gut, try and tap what’s coming up for you, what you naturally move towards and what lights you up 💡, you’ll begin to see more clearly just WHO you are and WHAT you want to stand for because it’s what makes you uniquely you. 🙋‍♀️🙋🏾‍♀️🙋🏿‍♀️

Strive to be that. Not a watered down version of someone else. 💦💦💦🙅🏽‍♀️

Thanks for the reminder @tyler_spangler

FOLLOW US ON INSTA @girledworld

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All we want for Christmas is a female Prime Minister.

December 19, 2019

Last week Finland found a potent ambassador for gender equality when 34-year-old Social Democrat #SannaMarin was sworn in as prime minister, heading a coalition and a cabinet dominated by women.

She is the youngest serving premier in the world (Jacinda Ardern is 39), mother to a toddler, and heads a coalition of four other parties that are all led by women. Three of them, like her, are under 40.
These women are all brilliant role models for the women and girls of today.
But we need many more.

Because when you look at the stats, we can’t see enough women at the top.

▶️ Women currently lead just 12 of 195 countries worldwide. 🌏🤷🏻‍♀️

▶️ As of September 2018 the International Parliamentary Union ranks Australia down at 50th in the world on its Women in National Parliament tally. (We sit just above South Sudan and just below the Philippines.) 👎🏽🤷🏽‍♀️

▶️ Only 28.7 percent of seats in the House of Representatives are occupied by women and only 6 out of 23 Cabinet posts.🏫🤷🏿‍♀️

▶️ And despite the fact that Australia is one of the world's oldest continuous democracies and has held 47 federal elections since 1901, we have had only ONE female prime minister - Julia Gillard, who served as the 27th Prime Minister of Australia and Leader of the Australian Labor Party from 2010 to 2013.

The good news is an increasing number of Australians are calling for institutional interventions: be they gender quotas, targets, education initiatives, party preselection rules, or electoral reform.

But we need to do much more to shift the dial, level the playing field, make our democracy truly representative, and create more pipelines for women and girls to participate in politics and parliament.

We’d love to hear what’s working for you, or what we can all do to bring the numbers up.
Please comment below.👇🏽

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girledworld introduce Future Amp at Social Garden education technology conference

December 17, 2019

We recently shared our girledworld startup growth story and the early stage journey of Future Amp at the Social Garden #education #technology conference ‘HOW WE DID THIS’.

The conference brought together some of the best student recruitment specialists, digital marketers and Australian university and VET CMOs to discuss, share and develop long-term student acquisition strategies.

Speakers included Will Egan, Founder of @ausmededu (one of Australia’s largest online learning platforms for the #healthcare industry); William Stubley, Founder of @year13 (Australia’s largest digital platform for high school leavers); and the @girledworld team, who shared the journey from idea to enterprise, and announced the launch of a new #edtech #careers platform - FUTURE AMP 🚀 - which has just successfully received private seed funding and won a partnership with the University of Melbourne through the #InnovatEd Chancellory program.

Future AMP 🚀 is scheduled for BETA release in early 2020 and we can’t wait to bring it to students to help them better access the knowledge they need to shape their future career pathways and step into the new world of work. #watchthisspace

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Madeleine Grummet talks startups and innovation at KPMG with Allens and Airwallex

December 12, 2019

Innovation and startups are messy.

You're operating in the constructive conflict zone - a grey space where pragmatism meets rapid #productivity, there are no straight lines and no maps, and bias to action is rewarded by results: whether positive or negative, the main thing is you're still moving (and learning) along the way.

Today our Cofounder and CEO Madeleine Grummet shared the #startup story of girledworld and the newly launched Future Amp at KPMG for the ‘New Kids On The Block’ #innovation series, alongside Rylan Dawes of Airwallex and Kate Woodlock of Allens.

Whilst all three growth and innovation stories had different characters and settings, the reality narrative was the same:

1. Start with a good #problem.

2. Stay problem focussed before jumping to #solution.

3. Get outside the building and inside the lives and minds of your #users.

4. Engage with market stakeholders and gate-keepers early.

5. Build a #team who share your passion for the vision.

6. Adopt an all-in, all-hands approach.

7. Go to market before you're ready.

8. Let your users lead you to what's next.

9. REPEAT.

Thanks to KPMG's Anthony Ozan Idehen and Anthony Hernandez for the great conversation starters - the consensus in the room was that when it comes to innovation, the 'doing' not the 'saying' is the work that should be done.

Future Amp - a world of work career education platform for students - will launch in 2020.

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