headline
Quick Words:
HOBY-Student-Leadership
Full Text:
HOBY: Students Learn Leadership Skills
(with photos)
BY MICHELE HOGAN
Selected sophomores from Newtown High School and Fairfield Prep attended a
full-day conference Thursday, September 25, in the Alexandria Room at Edmond
Town Hall. Discussions centered on issues of societal prejudices, summer
opportunities and drunk drivers. This conference was prepared and presented
not by teachers, but by fellow students.
The gathering was organized entirely by Hugh O'Brian Youth Foundation (HOBY)
alumni, Newtown High School students Ashwini Srikantiah, Lindsey Malloy,
Christina Dent and Courtney Lyons.
According to Ashwini, a Newtown High School junior, "the main purpose of HOBY
is to get students thinking about issues, to give them a firm understanding of
our world today."
Ashwini and her colleagues selected the topics of this local conference for a
variety of reasons.
Drunk driving was chosen because of its importance to student safety;
enriching summer programs (such as travel abroad, volunteering at Danbury
Hospital and jobs at Parks and Recreation) because of its high level of
student interest; and questions of social diversity because "Newtown lacks
social diversity, but it's a part of the world."
From the selection of speakers and the planning of leadership games, to all
the details of scheduling and acquiring of free meals for the delegates, the
students ran the show.
This process of student alumni strengthening their own leadership skills while
encouraging leadership in others is one of the purposes of the HOBY
organization.
Students Speak Up
Started by actor Hugh O'Brian, who played Wyatt Earp in a television show that
aired in the early 1960s, the Hugh O'Brian Youth Foundation (HOBY) has become
a major initiative in developing leadership potential in today's youth.
It has snowballed from one conference with about 30 young people in California
in the early 1970s to hundreds of conferences held across the country, 90
state conferences (some states have several conferences) and one national
conference annually.
To be a leader, you need to feel comfortable on center stage.
Students get a taste of being the initiators of action with leadership games,
such as the practice of spontaneously calling out "attention alert," and
clapping rhythmically while others imitate.
Students are also expected to formulate questions for panelists and guest
speakers.
Speaking Out
Justin Bandura, a student speaker at the recent meeting, commented that "if
you speak the truth, people hear that." Justin, speaking on societal prejudice
and what it means to be Hispanic, identified several common misconceptions of
Hispanics: "So many people think of Mexicans crossing the border, and a
Hispanic temper."
Justin believes in breaking these myths and is developing his leadership
potential while expressing what he believes. He said that second languages
should be introduced earlier in Newtown. "In Bridgeport, Spanish instruction
starts in kindergarten." In Newtown, it is not introduced until seventh grade.
Other issues raised at HOBY meetings have been the effects of media on
society, AIDS awareness, organ and blood donations, the role of sports in
society, and teacher's unions.
HOBY students also help as volunteers for Habitat for Humanity and by
organizing events for the Special Olympics, recently held in Southbury. They
are also starting to plan for a Senior Citizen's Prom for local area seniors.
State Conference
Two hundred sophomores attended the Connecticut State Conference last March,
and each school in Connecticut may send one sophomore to the conference
scheduled for March 12-15, 1998.
The selection process varies from school to school. At Newtown High School,
interested students fill out an application form. A panel of teachers and
students choose the top five candidates for an interview. Pomperaug School
also requires a short essay from applicants.
Steve Foss, a student from Pomperaug School and the President of the Alumni
Association for the State of Connecticut, has attended many HOBY conferences.
He hopes to apply what he has learned about leadership to a career in
politics.
Steve was one of two delegates selected at the Connecticut State Conference
last March to receive an all-expense-paid trip to the national HOBY
conference, the World Leadership Congress which was held in Houston, Texas,
last year.
At the conference Steve learned about the topic of multi-culturalism by
listening to speakers representing 17 different religions. "It makes you
realize that not everyone in the world is the same, but that is not a bad
thing."
