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This final activity brings the non-formal learning cycle to a successful close, focusing on youth leadership, public presentations, and capturing practical data to make the project design easy to repeat.
1. How the learning happens: Youth-Led Public Exhibitions
The project finishes with a live, virtual community opening. Instead of the youth workers presenting the world, the young creators take complete charge of the event.
- Public Speaking & Leadership: Young people act as expert tour guides, leading live walkthroughs for parents, friends, and managers.
- The Learning Outcome: Explaining their choices, building techniques, and international teamwork to an outside audience locks in their confidence. It makes the real-world value of their non-formal learning journey completely visible to the community.
2. Future Impact: Documenting Successful Learning Patterns
To ensure the project's long-term value, youth workers analyze what worked well and what fell short during the sessions. They convert their direct field experience into simple, practical notes so that other youth centres can easily replicate the model:
- Technical Workarounds: Clear notes on how to handle multi-user server lag or headset connection hitches smoothly during a live session.
- Digital Icebreakers: A list of the specific Zoom-based games and energy activators that worked best to keep attention high before jumping into building.
- Drop-In Management: Proven methods for welcoming and integrating late-stage or drop-in youth into an ongoing build without disrupting the core team.
