MEDIA | NEWS ARTICLES
Over the last 5 years the Awards programme has generated
considerable media attention. By profiling the Awards programme,
and the individual winning projects, Childnet hopes to
encourage "best practice" and draw attention
to the individual winning projects.
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CBS
News, 25 April 2003
WEB PROJECTS FOR KIDS GET THEIR DUE
For the past five years I've had the privilege of being
a judge at the Cable & Wireless Childnet Awards. Childnet
International, a London-based nonprofit group, scours the
world for Web sites and other online projects that benefit
children. British communications company Cable & Wireless
provides financial support for the awards, but the decisions
are made by an independent panel of judges from around
the world.
The judges look for projects that benefit children across
borders and strongly prefer programs that deeply involve
young people. To that end, many of the Web sites recognized
are actually run by people under 18.
Separate awards are given for projects run by individuals,
nonprofit organizations and schools. There is also a "New
to the Net" category to recognize projects with great
potential -- sometimes from developing countries -- that
have not yet had a chance to fully demonstrate what they
can accomplish.
I'm writing from London, where this year's awards ceremony
took place on Thursday, April 24. Previous ceremonies have
been in Paris, Barbados, Washington, D.C., and Sydney after
a London debut in 1998. (Disclosure: Judges aren't paid,
but our travel expenses are covered by Childnet.) Don't
expect this to be a dispassionate "objective" report.
I don't mind sharing the fact that I love this organization.
Unlike some other Internet awards programs, Childnet does
not reward glitz, flash or commercial prowess. The emphasis
is on a site's impact on children in both the country where
the site was created and in other countries. Unlike the "webbies" and
many other Internet awards programs, there are no commercial
categories. That's not to say that there isn't value in
commercial sites, but this space is reserved for those
who are motivated by achieving social, not financial, rewards.
Awards organizer Stephen Carrick-Davies calls it the "dot
hope effect."
This year's competition attracted entries from 50 countries
on all continents; 12 projects were selected as first-,
second- or third-place winners.
My job was to judge the individual category where three
outstanding projects were selected. First-place winner
Heather Lawver of Virginia was one of the few Americans
recognized at this year's ceremony. Her Web site, The
Daily Prophet, at first resembles a Harry Potter fan site, but
when you examine it closely you realize that it’s
actually an educational site that encourages Harry Potter
fans around the world not only to read the works of J.K.
Rowling and other authors, but to contribute to the site
as columnists. Heather manages a volunteer "staff" of
100 writers and, as my editors can testify, managing writers
is a difficult task for anyone, let alone a teenage "Web
mistress" who founded the site three years ago when
she was 14.
The second-place winner in the category is 16-year-old
Andrew Fei from Australia, whose Web site KidzDom is an
outstanding example of how kids -- not just corporations
-- are capable of creating great entertainment sites. The
KidzDom site includes animated cartoons, coloring books
and short films. But it doesn't just display cartoons.
It teaches children to create their own animations.
Third-place winner Sarah Bowler, a 13-year-old from the
United Kingdom, has succeeded where other environmentalists
have failed. Her Web site Cool
Kids for a Cool Climate has finally
given me a concrete sense of the environmental impact of
my travels by pointing out how "burning
petrol, diesel and aircraft fuel contribute to global warming." The
tree calculator on Sarah's Web site shows that I need to
plant more than seven trees to make up for my 10,720-mile
round-trip flight between San Francisco and London. A commuter
who drives 20 miles a day, 200 days a year is in debt for
1,600 trees. Take a bus or train to work and you'll spend
500 trees a year. If you can't plant your own trees, Sarah
will plant them for you in exchange for a donation to cover
costs. Her site isn't as sophisticated as some of the others,
but it remains an example of how a young person can turn
concern into action.
First place in the not-for-profit category went to Britain's
largest children's hospital, Great Ormond Street Hospital
here in London (www.gosh.nhs.uk/kidsandteens). There is
nothing fun about being sick, yet this child-friendly site
is both entertaining and educational. It also gives young
patients an opportunity to interact in a secure environment.
The No. 2 spot went to YouthNOISE.com, a Washington-based
group that believes that teenagers should be heard as well
as seen. The site provides a forum for "noisemakers" to
raise their voice on social, personal and political issues.
The site has quizzes, polls and forums for kids to talk
with each other and recently began offering members an
opportunity to deliver messages of support to Iraqi children
victimized by war as well as the children of service men
and women who have been affected by the conflict. Third
place in this category went to a very creative project
that integrates live theater, technology and internationalism.
WebPlay.org links schoolchildren in Los Angeles and London
who collaborate on plays that they write and perform.
A syndicated technology columnist for nearly two
decades, Larry Magid serves as on air Technology Analyst
for CBS
Radio News. His technology reports can be heard several
times a week on the CBS Radio Network. Magid is the author
of several books including "The Little PC Book."

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