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Voices for Change

Voices for Change

Kathryn and Priti

2 episodesEN

Show overview

Voices for Change has published 2 episodes during 2025.

Episodes typically run ten to twenty minutes — most land between 15 min and 21 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. It is catalogued as a EN-language Education show.

There hasn’t been a new episode in the last ninety days; the most recent episode landed 8 months ago. Published by Kathryn and Priti.

Episodes
2
Started
2025
Median length
18 min

From the publisher

"Voices for Change" is a youth-led podcast hosted by Kathryn and Priti , two high school sophomores passionate about global issues and local action. Each month, they dive into one big topic—like mental health, food insecurity, climate change, or homelessness—and explore how these challenges impact teens, schools, and communities. With a mix of real stories, inspiring interviews, and practical ways to get involved, Voices for Change empowers young people to use their voices, take action, and build a more just and hopeful world. Whether you’re a student, teacher, or community member, this podcast is your invitation to learn, engage, and be part of meaningful change.

Latest Episodes

S1 Ep 2Episode 2: Education & Global Literacy – Back to School, Not Everyone Is So Lucky

Description In this September episode, we zoom out from first-week-of-school vibes and take a hard look at what “back to school” really means around the world. We begin with the reality that not every student has the chance to sit in a classroom: UNESCO estimates that about 258 million children and youth are out of school globally, largely due to poverty, conflict, or discrimination. We then dig into gender inequality in education, highlighting the nearly 130 million girls worldwide who are not in school and the specific example of Afghanistan, where secondary school is closed to girls. From there, we shift focus to the U.S., where inequities persist in how schools are funded, and we explore the ripple effects this has on opportunity. The conversation connects literacy to human rights, underscoring International Literacy Day on September 8 as a moment to celebrate progress while recognizing challenges that remain. To ground this in real action, we feature an interview with Peggy Twitchell from Darien Book Aid, who shares how books shipped from a small Connecticut nonprofit can change classrooms across the world. Finally, we spotlight youth-led solutions and concrete ways students can take action—whether through book drives, tutoring, or raising awareness online. Sources cited (facts used) This episode draws on multiple sources. UNESCO’s Institute for Statistics reports that about 258 million children and youth were out of school as of 2018, providing a baseline for global education inequality. UN Women highlights that nearly 130 million girls remain out of school, with barriers ranging from poverty to harmful cultural norms. UNESCO also documents the ongoing exclusion of roughly 2.2 million Afghan girls from secondary school. In the U.S., funding inequities are well-documented: EdBuild’s “$23 Billion” report found that predominantly white districts received $23 billion more than predominantly nonwhite districts in a single year, resulting in thousands of dollars per-student gaps. Additional context on literacy comes from UNESCO’s International Literacy Day resources, which emphasize literacy as a human right and link it to health, equality, and economic opportunity. Data on global adult illiteracy (750 million adults, two-thirds of them women) and U.S. adult low-literacy (about 32 million adults at a basic level) further highlight the scope of the problem. For local action, Darien Book Aid’s (www.darienbookaid.org) mission and reach—shipping thousands of requested books annually to more than 70 countries—demonstrate how one small nonprofit can make a global impact. The episode also spotlights youth action such as Alexa Grabelle’s Bags of Books, which has distributed more than 150,000 books to underserved communities. Music & SFX Credits Music and sound design for this episode include “Funk In The Trunk” by Shane Ivers (Silverman Sound), licensed under CC BY 4.0, serving as the intro theme. Transitions feature “Daily Beetle” by Kevin MacLeod (Incompetech), licensed under CC BY 3.0, alongside short whoosh and pop stingers from Pixabay (free for commercial use). Background beds include “Childhood,” “Catalyst,” and “Life Is” by Scott Buckley, licensed under CC BY 4.0, providing gentle underscoring during key segments. The outro uses “Dreams Become Real” by Kevin MacLeod (Incompetech), licensed under CC BY 3.0, swelling under the closing remarks.

Sep 20, 202524 min

S1 Ep 1Episode 1 - Youth Activism & Leadership

🎙 Voices for Change – Episode 1 Youth Activism & Leadership (August) Episode Summary We’re kicking off Voices for Change with a fast, story‑driven look at youth activism—why student voices matter and how small steps add up. From climate strikes to girls’ education, gun‑violence prevention, and Indigenous water rights, we spotlight four teen leaders who prove one person can spark a movement: Greta Thunberg, Malala Yousafzai, Emma González, and Autumn Peltier. Along the way, we show that activism doesn’t have to start with a giant march; it can be as simple as a school clean‑up, tutoring a younger student, or starting a real conversation with friends. You’ll also hear a quick myth‑busting segment, a practical 7‑Day Starter Plan, and a challenge to try one action this month that makes life better for someone else. Inside the Episode We begin with why youth activism matters right now and how Gen Z is already leading the way. Then we jump into four short profiles that read like origin stories: Greta’s one‑person sit‑in that grew into a global climate strike; Malala’s fearless push for girls’ education in the face of danger; Emma’s voice at Parkland that helped mobilize one of the largest student protests in U.S. history; and Autumn’s clear call on the world stage that clean water is a right, not a privilege. After those stories, we shift from inspiration to action with a set of quick, doable strategies for starting a project at school—find a problem you actually see, match it with what you’re good at, team up with a friend and a trusted adult, and take a first step this week. We also knock down a few common myths. You don’t need a big club or fancy title—two friends and one adult ally can launch a pilot. You don’t need unlimited free time—one focused hour a week beats zero. And you are not too young; people listen when you show up and follow through. To make it even easier, we lay out a one‑week ramp: pick a cause on Day 1, ask an advisor on Day 2, write a one‑paragraph goal and first action on Day 3, list what you need on Day 4, recruit two friends on Day 5, do the first small thing on Day 6, then share results and invite others on Day 7. Call to Action This month, choose one thing you’ll do to create positive change. Join a service club, volunteer at a food pantry, plan a small fundraiser with your team, design an awareness post that actually teaches something, or simply start a conversation with friends about the issue you care about most. Small steps compound—your actions add up. Music & SFX Intro/Cold Open: “Funk In The Trunk” by Shane Ivers; transitions: “Daily Beetle” by Kevin MacLeod; music beds: “Childhood,” “Life Is,” and “Catalyst” by Scott Buckley; applause sting: Crowd Cheer from Pixabay; outro: “Dreams Become Real” by Kevin MacLeod. Citations & Sources Sources referenced in this episode include Key Club International (“Why Youth Activism Matters” and “How to Take Action in Your Community”) [1][3]; United Way NCA on Gen Z social‑justice participation [2]; UN DESA Partnerships on Greta Thunberg’s first school strike (2018) and Greta’s No One Is Too Small to Make a Difference [4][5]; the Nobel Prize biography of Malala Yousafzai (BBC Urdu blog), documentation on Taliban restrictions on girls’ schooling, Malala Fund’s 2012 timeline, Malala’s 2013 UN speech, and the 2014 Nobel announcement [6][7][8][9][10]; Emma González’s February 2018 rally speech and March for Our Lives coverage noting the scale of the student protest [11][12]; and Autumn Peltier’s 2018 UN speech and her 2019 appointment as Chief Water Commissioner for the Anishinabek Nation [13][14].

Sep 20, 202511 min