Tool Kit: Useful Stuff
Tool Kit: Useful Stuff
great links
Worldstudio Foundation
www.worldstudio.org
forms
New York Department of Education
bibliography
references
“Art, Culture & Ethnicity.” 1990. ed. Young, Bernard. NAEA.
Art, Culture & Ethnicity.” 1990. ed. Young, Bernard. NAEA.
Reston, VA. p. 277.
Males, Mike. 1996. “The Scapegoat Generation: America’s Tinsmann, M.B. and J Hixson. “Who Are the ‘At-Risk’
War on Adolescents.” Common Courage Press. ME. p. 330 Students of the 1990s?” NCREL, Oak Brook, 1990.
McLaughlin, Milbrey and Shirley Brice Heath. 1994. “The Townsel, Kim. 1997. “Mentoring African American Youth.”
Best of Both Worlds: Connecting Schools and Community Preventing School Failure. 41:3. pp. 125–127
Youth Organizations for All-Day, All-Year Learning.”
Educational Administration Quarterly. 30:3. pp. 278–299 Weinreb, Maxine. “Be a Resiliency Mentor: You May Be a
Lifesaver for a High-Risk Child.” Young Children. January
Miller, Darcy. 1997. “Mentoring Structures: Building a 1997. pp. 14–19
Protective Community.” Preventing School Failure.
41:3. pp. 105–111
about us
AIGA, the professional association for design, is the oldest and largest organization for professionals engaged
in the discipline, practice and culture of designing. AIGA was founded in 1914 and now represents more than
18,000 designers through national activities and local programs developed by 55 chapters and more than 150
student groups.
AIGA supports the interests of professionals, educators and students who are engaged in the process of
designing. The association is committed to stimulating thinking about design, demonstrating the value of design
and enabling success for designers throughout the arc of their careers.
Through conferences, competitions, exhibitions, publications and websites, AIGA inspires, educates and informs
designers, helping them to realize their talents and to advocate the value of design among the media, the business
community, governments and the public.
Worldstudio Foundation is a nonprofit organization that offers scholarships and mentoring programs in the fine
and applied arts. Acting on the belief that creativity holds enormous power for social change, graphic designer
David Sterling established the organization in New York City in 1993 and developed it with his business partner
Mark Randall. Since its inception, the Foundation has launched several programs dedicated to helping the
next generation of artists, architects and designers realize their dreams while being proactively involved in their
communities. Mentoring programs pair at-risk high school students with creative professionals to work on
collaborative projects. Scholarships are aimed at increasing diversity in the creative professions and building a
more socially responsive creative studio of the future. The first nonprofit in the United States devoted exclusively
to encouraging social responsibility in the design and arts professions, Worldstudio Foundation dares young
artists to dream—of new lives, new careers and new solutions for the world in which we live.