• Blog
  • Archives
  • Bio
  • Awards
  • Speaking
  • Book
  • Contact

YouthActionNet Global Fellowship Day 2: Look for what works

Published: Thursday, 06 October 2011

Two Saturdays ago, I was in Adelaide taking a late-night stroll by the beautiful, still, River Torrens with 3 member of my Robogals Global team - Mun-Xin, Shu Jie and Makiko.

Eventually, our conversation lead to the organisation and how we could motivate our chapters to achieve more in terms of number of girls taught.

 

 

The Melbourne chapter of 2010~2011 produced amazing work, having taught 279 girls in the past year, with more visits planned for the remainder of the year.  We spoke about our past experiences volunteering with the Melbourne chapter and our observations about their team.

 

The Robogals Rural and Regional (RRR) programme achieves amazing results having already taught 801 girls since it began five months ago - again with more visits schedules by the end of the year.  We spoke about the key drivers that produced that result.

 

The Melbourne chapter of 2009~2010 was the best-achieving Robogals chapter ever, in my opinion.  They taught 206 girls, organised a community event "The Robogals Science and Engineering Expo" that had major media coverage, and held multiple social events for their volunteers to get to know each other and form a community.  We examined the key drivers of success there too.

 

 

Two-and-a-half hours after our walk began, and two hours after we first started talking about the topic, having brainstormed solutions as vast as changing the structure of the roles, putting in different incentive systems and restructuring the entire organisation, we weren't finding any practical solutions.

 

I wasn't going to let our hours of discussion not produce a solid action though, so in the last 15-minutes, we formulated a very simple solution where different roles in the committee are accountable for different statistics; there are 4 key statistics in the committee and our mentoring conversations will focus only on these 4 key areas.

 

We implemented the structure the next day, and I am excited by the fruits of our discussion.

 

 

Today, I learnt why our method of discussion worked.  Rather than focussing on the negatives:  how do we patch up this problem here and there so everything runs smoothly, we focussed on the positives:  what made this project successful and how can we replicate it everywhere with only a few, small, behavioural changes.

 

It's about looking for which works, not what doesn't work - the solution is already in the community.

About Me

Marita ChengForbes named me a world's top 50 woman in tech & 30 Under 30. I founded Robogals and Aipoly and was Young Australian of the Year 2012. Currently working on robotics company Aubot. I'm the youngest Member of the Order of Australia (AM) and I give speeches around the world.

I tweet @maritacheng and I'm on Facebook.

Subscribe

Enter your email address to receive my latest blog posts: 

 

Random Articles

  • Networking effectively

    I meet people all the time. In the past it was at entrepreneurship networking events when I was starting up Nudge.  Then, it was at engineering...

  • How I manage

    For one of the projects I’ve been leading for over the past 2.5 years, I manage a team of 20 people remotely. I meet with all of my direct reports...

  • Q&A

    Q&A on ABC alongside two Nobel Laureates:  Peter Doherty and Brian Schmidt, Chief Scientist of Australia Ian Chubb and respected microbiologist...

  • Over-exposure

    Telling people your plans too early doesn't make you less likely to achieve them.  I know when I tell people what I plan to do the response I get...

  • Jevaroo’s base

    Jevaroo’s base dual plates are weighted with three heavy batteries, two large stepper motors for the neck’s linear actuators and its own two steel...

  • Three months

    In the first three months, Robogals Melbourne was formed (July ~ September 2008). In the next three, I got to know London and Europe (October 2008 ~...

  • Nail painting robot

    A robot friend suggested we go and get our nails painted by a robot!  So we went and did that!  The first time I saw a nail painting robot was at CES...

  • Sole founder or co-founders?

    I was starting up my new start-up and I was finding it hard to get my desired co-founder to commit.  So I thought back over my experiences of the...

  • YouthActionNet Global Fellowship Day 1: What makes a great leader

    The first day of the "YouthActionNet Fellowship" program began with a welcome email read out, written by Bill Clinton!  How exciting!  I've always had...

  • It’s not you

      If your teacher comments on your work and tells you it can be better; it’s not you, it’s your work.   If the person behind the counter snaps at you...

Enter your email address to receive my latest blog posts: 

 

Scroll to Top