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Transitions
Volume 14, No. 1,
October 2001
This Transitions is
also available in [PDF] format.
Working with
Youth Online
By Jessie Gilliam,
Program Associate, LGBT Initiatives, Advocates for Youth
Adena,
a young bisexual woman from New Jersey, is one of 15 youth
who serves as an online peer educator for InsideOUT, the
online peer education program for Youth
Resource, Advocates for Youth's Web site for gay, lesbian, bisexual,
transgender and questioning (GLBTQ) youth.
Every morning, she and her colleagues, peer educators on Advocates'
three current Internet intervention sites, open their inboxes and read
E-mail from young people across the country who are looking for support,
resources, and information. E-mail comes from young people who have visited InsideOUT and
read the personal stories of the online peer educators. Youth write with
questions such as "Where can I find a youth support group in my
area?" "How can I start an activist group in my high school
for GLBTQ youth?" "Where can I find sexual health information
for Latinas?" The peer educators answer youth's questions and provide
research, information, links to pertinent and useful Web sites, and materials
developed by Advocates for Youth.
Online peer educators also give a personal touch that lets young people
know they are not alone. Online peer educators form the heart of Advocates
for Youth's online interventions programs. They serve on www.youthresource.com, www.mysistahs.org,
and www.ambientejoven.org.
Besides answering youth's questions about issues they face, online peer
educators also mobilize young people, develop monthly features, and refer
youth to sites and services. Advocates' peer educators are a diverse
group—geographically, ethnically, and across gender and sexual
orientation—with experience working on sexual health issues. Chosen
through a careful, online application process, they come together each
year for several days of training on working with young people over the
Internet, addressing sexual health issues, and working together to produce
a relevant and current Web site.
Online
peer educators differ from "real life" peer educators because
they work in a virtual world with young people who may never walk through
the door of a student health center or seek a "real world" support
group. Online peer educators receive E-mail in which youth
ask questions they may have asked no one else. The online
peer educators feel a responsibility
to provide youth with resources and information that will
help them become comfortable with themselves and the sexual
health issues in
their lives.
Advocates' several sites
are tailored for specific populations. My
Sistahs, a Web site for young women of color, takes a holistic
approach to HIV education and prevention. Young visitors will build
an online community around activism, culture, health, relationships,
style, and other issues that affect their sexual and reproductive health. Youth
Resource provides support, information, resources, and message
boards directed towards the issues of specific communities, including
young gay men, lesbian and bisexual women, transgender youth, and GLBTQ
youth of color. Ambiente
Joven provides community and support for GLBTQ youth of Latino
background and culture, whether the youth's first language is Spanish
or English.
InsideOUT online
peer educator, Sean Lloyd, a young gay man from Arkansas,
says it best. "It
brings me great joy when I can help someone with a problem
or educate them on something they didn't know." Invite young
people in your area to log on to Advocates' sites—online
peer educators are here to help!
Transitions (ISSN
1097-1254) © 2001, is a quarterly publication of Advocates for Youth—Helping
young people make safe and responsible decisions about
sex. For permission
to reprint, contact Transitions' editor at 202.419.3420.
Editor: Sue Alford
Click here to view the Publications Catalog and/or
to order this publication.
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