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Man Keeps Kids From Chopping Trees, Puts Them Into School, and Saves Environment at the Same Time

GNN.org is the exclusive media partner for the 2018 ‘Global Good Fund’ Fellows—12 extraordinary young social entrepreneurs who are making the world a better place. Chosen annually, the 12 Fellows are each matched with an executive mentor, leadership coach, and $10,000. Hand-selected from 2,400 applicants in 100 countries, these visionaries were celebrated—one each day on GNN—leading up to the 6th Annual Global Good Fund Gala, on April 26.

Born and raised in Kitabi, a poor village in the south of Rwanda, Jean Bosco Nzeyimana grew up in a home without electricity or running water.

The overwhelming majority of his fellow villagers relied on wood charcoal as their main source of fuel. Because of this, he was instilled with a passion to change the status quo, by providing more ecological and affordable biofuels.

Over 80% of the people in Rwanda are still forced to use wood as a means to live, which means more than 3 million trees will be cut down to satisfy this energy need alone.

Children are dropping out of school because they are working to help their parents collect firewood for cooking, creating another problem for the country’s future.

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As the only person from his village to graduate high school, Jean Bosco’s most pressing issue became figuring out a way to quell the fuel needs that had been robbing so many of his peers of their rights to a proper education.

“I’m trying to create a world that is environmentally stable, not by trying to find fancy, expensive, solutions. I think we’ve had the solutions for many years, we just needed a business model we could apply”, Nzeyimana explained.

Jean Bosco’s solution: He created a company that produces affordable and environmentally friendly services and fuels in the form of biomass briquettes and pellets made from waste. This serves as a sustainable alternative to wood, while also improving sanitation and air quality in the home.

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After raising startup capital for Habona, Ltd., he provided permanent jobs to more than 25 Rwandans.

For his efforts, Jean Bocso was recognized as the 2014 Top Young Entrepreneur of Rwanda, and received a prestigious 2015 Top Young Achievers award from the First Lady of Rwanda.

At the 2016 Global Entrepreneur Summit, Jean Bosco spoke on a panel alongside Barack Obama and Mark Zuckerberg. The following year, he was named one of Forbes 30 under 30 Social Entrepreneurs in Africa.

Despite the worldwide attention, Jean Bosco still resides in Kitabi, fulfilled by the fact that Habona is uplifting the lives of people in marginalized communities by providing sustainable products and new local jobs: “My greatest inspiration is that every little thing I do makes an impact in somebody else’s life.”

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This year, Nzeyimana became one of the 2018 ‘Global Good Fund’ Fellows—12 extraordinary young social entrepreneurs who are making the world a better place.

Through its Fellowship program launched in 2012, The Global Good Fund invests in high potential leaders committed to social impact worldwide. It also created the 360 MIRROR – the first evidence-based leadership assessment for social entrepreneurs and CEOs.

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Scientists Accidentally Create Super Enzyme That Can Devour Plastic Pollution

Scientists have engineered a mutant enzyme that can eat and digest hard-to-recycle plastics – and they created it entirely by accident.

The enzyme is a more developed model of the bacteria that Japanese researchers discovered in 2016. Their breakthrough made international headlines because of the bacteria’s ability to digest polyethylene terephthalate (PET).

PET is favored for its lightweight, colorless, and durable properties that make it an ideal material for water bottles, plastic trays, blister packaging, and polyester clothing. Because it’s virtually invincible against microbes, however, the plastic never degrades, making it a pollutant scourge on the environment.

Since the bacteria’s discovery, scientists at the University of Portsmouth and the US Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory have been trying to better understand how the bacteria is able to digest the plastic.

RELATEDThis Pollution-Gobbling City Bench Can Absorb as Many Toxins as 275 Trees

In the midst of their studies, the scientists accidentally created a super enzyme that is derived from the bacteria – except it is even stronger than the original.

The enzyme currently has the ability to break down the plastic in a matter of days, as opposed to the centuries it would take to naturally degrade in the ocean. The research team is now pursuing a patent on the enzyme so that they can develop its potential and increase its digestion time in order to wield the enzyme on a more industrial scale.

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And since enzymes are non-toxic and biodegradable, the discovery could be a major breakthrough in sustainably recycling the millions of tons of plastic that are polluting the planet.

“What we are hoping to do is use this enzyme to turn this plastic back into its original components, so we can literally recycle it back to plastic,” said McGeehan. “It means we won’t need to dig up any more oil and, fundamentally, it should reduce the amount of plastic in the environment.”

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Professor McGeehan, Director of the Institute of Biological and Biomedical Sciences in the School of Biological Sciences at Portsmouth, said: “The engineering process is much the same as for enzymes currently being used in bio-washing detergents and in the manufacture of biofuels – the technology exists and it’s well within the possibility that in the coming years we will see an industrially viable process to turn PET and potentially other substrates like PEF, PLA, and PBS, back into their original building blocks so that they can be sustainably recycled.”

“Serendipity often plays a significant role in fundamental scientific research and our discovery here is no exception,” Professor McGeehan said. “Although the improvement is modest, this unanticipated discovery suggests that there is room to further improve these enzymes, moving us closer to a recycling solution for the ever-growing mountain of discarded plastics.”

The research is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal.

Click To Share This Incredible Breakthrough With Your FriendsPhoto by Snemann, CC

Yale is Letting Anyone Take Its Most Popular Class Ever for Free

Yale University has been teaching classes for 316 years – but none of their courses has been as popular as their course on happiness.

Almost a quarter of the student body signed up for “Psych 157: Psychology and the Good Life” during its inaugural year. That’s about 1,000 youngsters all expressing interest in learning about mental health and wellbeing.

The course was so popular, the Ivy League School decided to start teaching the class online for free – and anyone can enroll.

The modified 6-week class, which is called “The Science of Well-Being”, is being taught by psychology and cognitive science professor Laurie Santos on Coursera, a free online college education platform.

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The class description says: “The purpose of the course is to not only learn what psychological research says about what makes us happy but also to put those strategies into practice. The first half of the course reveals misconceptions we have about happiness and the annoying features of the mind that lead us to think the way we do. The second half of the course focuses on activities that have been proven to increase happiness along with strategies to build better habits.”

“The hope is that this isn’t gonna be an ordinary class or lecture series,” Santos says in the introduction video. “This is the kind of thing that we hope will change your life in a real way.”

(WATCH the video below)

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911 Calls From the Chronically Ill Dropped By 62% After the City Launched Simple Initiative

This impressive program in Wisconsin is having a huge impact on chronically ill citizens and the first responders who used to have to answer their calls.

In 2015, the Milwaukee Fire Department was surprised to find out that 7% of the roughly 63,000 calls for emergency medical services that were received during the previous year — which is about 4,300 calls — came from the same 100 people.

That’s because the patients who had a consistent track record of dialing 911 were all people who suffered from chronic illnesses, such as asthma, diabetes, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

“They call 911, and we go back and go through the same process again — taking them to the ER. It’s very expensive, very time-consuming,” Milwaukee Fire Department Assistance Chief Daniel Berendt told WITI in 2015.

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The fire department then came up with the Community Paramedic Mobile Integrated Healthcare Program: an initiative that employs a separate group of specially-trained paramedics to take care of chronically ill patients before they ever have to dial 911.

34 paramedics assess the health and homes of the patients so that they can use preventative care and guidance to prevent the illnesses from resulting in a trip to the emergency room. Over 300 patients have participated in the program free of charge since its launch in 2015.

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The program’s trial period resulted in a 26% decline in emergency calls from chronically ill patients. In 2016, those calls dropped by 56%. Then in 2017, they fell by 62%.

“We’re serving the most at-risk citizens in a proactive way,” Capt. Michael Wright, the department coordinator who spearheaded the project, told JS Online. “I see it first-hand. People are getting better.”

Pass On The Positive Article To Your Friends: Click To SharePhoto by Journal of Emergency Medical Services

“The drive to be authentic is more powerful than our greatest fear. And when we bump up against that authentic voice, we are called to face our fear—and overcome it.” – Unity Rev. Larry Schellink

Quote of the Day: “The drive to be authentic is more powerful than our greatest fear. And when we bump up against that authentic voice, we are called to face our fear—and overcome it.” – Unity Rev. Larry Schellink

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quotes page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

How Hydrogen is Being Used to Treat Some of Our Most Common Illnesses

File photo by Zero Emission Resource Organization, CC

The Lesson: Scientists have only been researching the benefits of molecular hydrogen for the last ten years or so – but the studies are turning out to be extraordinarily promising. In this podcast, Tyler LeBaron uses his background in biochemistry to outline exactly how molecular hydrogen could be used to treat everything from Parkinson’s disease to rheumatoid arthritis.

Notable Excerpt: “If we look at some of the clinical studies, and some of the animal studies, hydrogen is still very much in its infancy. We don’t have, you know, 20-30 years of clinical research with hundreds and hundreds of studies. It’s in its infancy. There’s just over 1,000 publications on molecular hydrogen and its medical benefits. But, what we’re seeing if we look at the human studies, for example, I mentioned inflammation and its connection with rheumatoid arthritis. Well, there was a study published in 2012, and some other ones in 2013 and 2014 where they showed in a double-blinded, placebo-controlled, randomized fashion that the ingestion of hydrogen-rich water was very significant in improving the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis, and decreasing the markers of oxidative stress … insomuch that some of the patients with early-stage rheumatoid arthritis actually had a complete remission of the disease. Their markers of the acetylated proteins, [which] are markers of the disease, were back to normal levels, as though they did not have the disease anymore. This is very powerful, and it’s being followed up right now with another study [that is including about] 170 or so patients to really show the effects in the [disease].”

The Guest: Tyler LeBaron is the founder and executive director of the Molecular Hydrogen Foundation, a nonprofit organization that is dedicated to studying the medicinal benefits of molecular hydrogen. His credentials include researching cell signaling pathways at Nagoya University in the Department of Neurogenetics in Japan, and becoming the director of the International Hydrogen Standards Association.

The Host: Dave Asprey, the CEO and Founder of Bulletproof, is a biohacker (changing his environment from the inside-out to have full control of his biology). For nearly two decades, he’s been questioning the status quo of nutrition and medicine so he could feel better—and have more energy in his 40s than he had in his 20s. Join more than 1 million biohackers who follow Bulletproof for leading-edge information on how to supercharge your body and upgrade your brain.

Books: Asprey is the author of “The Bulletproof Diet” – a guide on how to feel more energized and lose weight – and “Head Strong: The Bulletproof Plan to Activate Untapped Brain Energy to Work Smarter and Think Faster-in Just Two Weeks”.

Podcast: The Bulletproof podcast is available on PodcastOneiTunesStitcher, and YouTube.

(LISTEN to the inspiring talk below or read the transcript) – Representational photo by ZERO, CC

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After Securing Release of 2 Men From Decades in Prison, Woman Ensures That No One Will Suffer Same Fate

GNN.org is the exclusive media partner for the 2018 ‘Global Good Fund’ Fellows—12 extraordinary young social entrepreneurs who are making the world a better place. Chosen annually, the 12 Fellows are each matched with an executive mentor, leadership coach, and $10,000. Hand-selected from 2,400 applicants in 100 countries, these visionaries are being celebrated—one each day on GNN—leading up to the 6th Annual Global Good Fund Gala, on April 26.

Kelly Orians has helped bring freedom and wellbeing to dozens of people who have struggled with the judicial system – and it is all thanks to her unlikely relationship with two men who had spent nearly half a century in prison

Kelly grew up in a family that was impacted by incarceration. She is all too familiar with the predatory price of phone calls, the random and unexpected lockdowns that prevent visitation, the court dates and continuances that drag on for years, and the lengthy parole supervision that follows, making real freedom seem nearly impossible.

Additionally, her home of Louisiana is the world’s prison capital, imprisoning more of its people per capita than any of its U.S. counterparts. The state’s incarceration rate is nearly five times that of Iran, 13 times China’s, and 20 times Germany’s.

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Because of her upbringing, Orian has managed an astonishing career in advocating for prisoner’s rights with The Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana (JJPL). Additionally, she has managed the statewide campaign to End Life Without Parole Sentencing for Juveniles (JLWOP).

“When I first started working in the Louisiana prison system I learned my most important lesson: that even though my family struggled, we still enjoyed incredible privileges compared to people of color from low income communities who have family in prisons and jails,” Kelly explained. “It wasn’t my family’s experience with incarceration that motivated me to pursue this work, it was what was so dramatically different about ours.”

Kelly worked on the legal team that secured the release of the first two people in the country under the US Supreme Court ruling Graham v. Florida, which declared JLWOP sentences unconstitutional in non-homicide cases. After nearly half a century in jail, the two men named Bob and Josh were released in the middle of the night from the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola.

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She met them at the gate, drove them home, and with a brave heart, personally guided them through their transition back into everyday life.

“The moment Bob and Josh stepped out of the prison van and crossed the threshold of the front gate is one I will absolutely never forget. I remember every detail of that night. I remember thinking ‘We won! We did it. We finally won.’ Then, about 30 minutes later, on the long ride back down highway 66 from Angola, Bob turned to me and asked, ‘where do I get my medications tomorrow?’ It occurred to me then that although we had won their release from prison, we had not even begun the fight to ensure they would never have to go back to prison. We had not yet done anything to ensure they would have the opportunity to live with dignity and respect.”

It was during these very exciting (albeit uncertain) weeks that Kelly launched her first “communal loan fund” which raised and dispersed zero interest loans to assist her clients with meeting the demands of their reentry process.

Continue Reading The Inspiring Story Below…

Man Extends Huge Kindness to Mom of Screaming Kids After Stranger Did the Same For Him

It was Jessica Rudeen’s first time flying with a toddler and baby in tow – and if it had not been for a compassionate stranger seated next to her, it may have been a complete disaster.

Due to “unforeseen circumstances”, Rudeen was unable to breastfeed her 4-month-old son before boarding the plane. As the hungry infant started to scream in distress, the mother’s 3-year-old daughter named Caroline started to kick and cry about how she wanted to get off the plane.

“I honestly thought we’d get kicked off the plane,” Rudeen wrote on Facebook. “So with two kids losing their minds, I was desperately trying to calm the situation.”

Thankfully, Rudeen was fortunate enough to be seated next to a man named Todd.

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“(Todd) reached for the baby and held him while I forced a seatbelt on Caroline, got her tablet and started her movie. Once she was settled and relatively calmed, he distracted her so that I could feed Alexander,” says Rudeen. “Finally, while we were taxiing, the back of the plane no longer had screams.

“During the flight, he colored and watched a movie with Caroline, he engaged in conversation and showed her all the things outside. By the end of the flight, he was Caroline’s best friend. I’m not sure if he caught the kiss she landed on his shoulder while they were looking out the window.”

Not only that, but Todd was serendipitously booked for the same connecting flight from Charlotte, North Carolina to Wilmington – a flight that he “navigates frequently for work”.

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With his new toddler friend in hand, Todd guided the family through the airport to the right gate.

“If that wasn’t enough, he changed his seat on the next flight to sit in our row to help us,” says Rudeen.

She later posted photos of Todd and Caroline to Facebook so she could praise him for his extraordinary generosity.

“This guy, Todd, showed me kindness and compassion that I’ve never known from another person. His wife, he said, had a similar experience when their two boys were young and a stranger showed her the same kindness.

CHECK OUT: When Flight Attendant Discovers Passenger Has Parkinson’s, He Escorts Her By the Hand to First Class

“I am blown away by God’s hand in this because we could have been placed next to anyone, but we were seated next to one of the nicest men I have ever met in my life.”

The post, which was shared over 4,500 times, connected Rudeen to Todd’s wife – and the two families are planning on “getting together soon” so they can pursue their blossoming friendship.

Fly This Sweet Story To Your Friends: Click To SharePhotos by Jessica Rudeen

Chinese Colleges Add Anonymous HIV Test Kits to Campus Vending Machines

As a means of overcoming the stigma behind STDs and sexual education, Chinese universities have started adding HIV test kits to their campus vending machines.

The kits, which are offered at $6 a pop (a heavily discounted rate from their original price of $62), can be anonymously completed online so that students don’t have to feel embarrassed about getting tested.

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Upon getting a urine sample, the student can return the sample to a collection bin inside of the vending machine. After five days of processing, they can use the serial number on the kit to look up their test results online.

The program was first created by the Chinese Association of STD and HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control to curb HIV infection rates in 2016. The kits have since been rolled out in universities across the Heilongjiang, Sichuan, Yunnan, and Guangxi provinces. Additionally, they have been added to campus vending machines in Beijing and – as of this week – three universities in Shanghai.

(WATCH the video below)

Pass On The Positive News To Your Friends: Click To SharePhoto by CGTN

In Historic Move, the Global Shipping Industry is Agreeing to Join Climate Agreement

In a landmark turn of environmental diplomacy, the global shipping industry has taken a stance against climate change by pledging to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by 50% by 2050 compared to 2008 levels.

The shipping and aviation industries have previously been excluded from climate talks because they range across international territories, rather than being nationally-based; but according to the BBC, the shipping industry could be called the world’s sixth biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, making it roughly equal with Germany.

Larger countries, such as Brazil and Saudi Arabia, were reluctant to enforce any emission cuts, while smaller countries in the European Union were keen on pursuing 70% to 100% emission cuts.

But the 50% pledge, which was established during the International Maritime Organization talks in London earlier this week, was considered a fair goal to set for all nations involved.

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The environment minister of the Marshall Island said of the concluded talks: “To get to this point has been hard, very hard. And it has involved compromises by all countries. Not least by vulnerable island nations like my own who wanted something, far, far more ambitious than this one.

“This is history in the making… if a country like the Marshall Islands, a country that is very vulnerable to climate change, and particularly depends on international shipping, can endorse this deal, there is no credible excuse for anybody else to hold back.”

Kitack Lim, the secretary-general of the International Maritime Organization, reportedly said: “This initial strategy is not a final statement but a key starting point.”

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Aoife O’Leary, who is a legal analyst for the Environmental Defense Fund Europe, said: “The shipping sector’s greenhouse gas emissions reduction target represents an important step forward. The [International Maritime Organization] has been talking about climate change for twenty years but the strategy agreed this week marks the beginning of a focused debate about the policies and measures that will help the shipping sector modernize and regain the status of a clean and efficient mode of transport.

“The target falls short on ambition, but should be sufficient to drive policy development and consequently investment in clean fuels and technology. EDF remains committed to working with stakeholders including those in the industry to find the ways that will work in order to peak shipping emissions as soon as possible.”

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Dying Grandma Was Too Sick to Attend, So College Baseball Team Took the Game to Her

This 19-year-old college baseball player was heartbroken over his grandma’s inability to watch his game – so instead of allowing her to miss it, he and his team brought the game to her.

Due to the chemotherapy and radiation treatments that Marilyn Seavers had endured to fight her stage IV lung cancer, she was too weak to leave the house for her grandson’s game in March.

Zach, who was very close with his grandma before she died, was determined for her to see him play in a college uniform.

“She was more than a grandma for me and my sister,” he told Belleville News-Democrat. “We were like friends. We’d go to movies together, she took me shopping for homecoming, we played a lot of pranks on each other … [and] whenever we had a game, she was there.”

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The student then asked his teammates on the Lewis and Clark College baseball team if they would play a game in his grandma’s backyard – and they agreed.

The next morning, Zach told his aunt to help his grandma into her wheelchair, position her in front of her bedroom window, and open the blinds.

The senior was stunned to see that a dozen young athletes had drawn a makeshift baseball diamond in her backyard for a game. Not only that, but Zach’s 16-year-old sister, who is also a talented softball player, was included in the game as well.

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“She shed some happy tears and sat there in disbelief,” said Zach’s aunt. “I get choked up every time I think of it. What an amazing, loving gift these boys showed Zach and his grandma.”

“Every guy who was there came out without hesitation,” Zach told the online news outlet. “All of them are nice people, and it was really cool that they could come out and be with me and my family. Everybody had a lot of fun with it. I could see into her bedroom window, and there were smiles all around.”

Two weeks after the surprise game, Marilyn passed away in her Edwardsville, Illinois home surrounded by her loving family members. She was 78.

“It meant a lot to me to be able to pull that together for her,” says Zach.

(WATCH the interview below)

Score Big With Your Friends: Click To SharePhoto by the Seavers Family

“There is little difference in people, but that little difference makes a big difference. The little difference is attitude. The big difference is whether it is positive or negative.” – W. Clement Stone

Quote of the Day: “There is little difference in people, but that little difference makes a big difference. The little difference is attitude. The big difference is whether it is positive or negative.” – W. Clement Stone

Photo: by Hartwig HKD, CC

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quotes page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

She Prevents Gender-based Violence in India by Using a Powerful Law

 GNN.org is the exclusive media partner for the 2018 ‘Global Good Fund’ Fellows—12 extraordinary young social entrepreneurs who are making the world a better place. Chosen annually, the 12 Fellows are each matched with an executive mentor, leadership coach, and $10,000. Hand-selected from 2,400 applicants in 100 countries, these visionaries are being celebrated—one each day on GNN—leading up to the 6th Annual Global Good Fund Gala, on April 26.

Kids express their differences in India’s ’Schools of Equality‘

Ponder this: Do you feel equal to the world around you? In what ways are you different—and in what ways are you the same?

Rights of individuals and groups are often violated based on one or more aspect of their identity — such as race, gender, sexuality, class and religion. Growing up in India, Gulika Reddy experienced this first-hand. The normalization of identity-based discrimination filled her with anger, specifically the social acceptance of widespread gender-based violence.

With a mission to prevent and respond to this issue, and a belief that knowledge of the law is a powerful instrument, she set out to ‘be the change’.

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As a human rights lawyer, Gulika knows good legislation alone does not guarantee justice. It needs to be supported by a number of fundamental enabling conditions including rights awareness and access to legal counsel.

To create these conditions, she spent time building partnerships between state and non-state actors to create rights awareness, and provide free legal services for indigent women. Despite receiving free legal assistance, women expressed reluctance to approach the legal system as they felt further victimized by law enforcement authorities.

Gulika conducted sensitization programs for these authorities and observed that they were unable to shift deeply entrenched attitudes towards women and gender roles.

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Enter, Schools of Equality, a nonprofit that runs activity-based programs that reach young people to shift attitudes that perpetuate gender-based violence and other forms of discrimination. As Founder and Director, Gulika created this program to encourage students to reflect and examine their own attitudes and unconscious biases, question notions of power and privilege related to gender and its intersections, and foster diversity and inclusion by respecting each other’s rights.

The Global Good Fund selected Gulika as part of the innovative and inspiring 2018 cohort of Fellows to drive and multiply Schools of Equality’s impact, equipping students to be agents of change.

“I spoke my mind in these classes. I asked questions without fear.” -Thiruvanmiyur, student from Chennai Higher Secondary School.

Gulika is currently a Dubin Fellow at Harvard Kennedy School, and was previously a Human Rights Fellow at Columbia Law School and an International Bridges to Justice Fellow. In 2016, Columbia Law School’s Human Rights Institute awarded her a Commendation for Leadership and Commitment, and the World Economic Forum named her one of the Davos 50. She was also recognized with the TalentNomics Global Emerging Game-Changer award for exemplary dedication to the empowerment of women and girls.

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A force to be reckoned with, Gulika has worked with lawyers, non-profits and academic institutions on the rights of women and children, climate refugees in the South Asian region, persons with disabilities, persons living with HIV/AIDS and slum-dwellers.

To date, Schools of Equality is found in 11 institutions, with 21 facilitators, having hosted 2,677 sessions, influencing and empowering 2,755 students.

A world full of children practicing freedom of expression and recognizing their ability to take action. That’s the kind of world we want to create for our kids, our grandkids and all generations to come thereafter.

Through its Fellowship program launched in 2012, The Global Good Fund invests in high potential leaders committed to social impact worldwide. It also created the 360 MIRROR – the first evidence-based leadership assessment for social entrepreneurs and CEOs.

Click To Share The Inspiring Story With Your Friends…

Device That Translates ‘Silent Speech’ Could Revolutionize the Way People Communicate

Computer system transcribes words users “speak silently”
Electrodes on the face and jaw pick up otherwise undetectable neuromuscular signals triggered by internal verbalizations.
Written by Larry Hardesty
MIT News

Imagine if you were in a situation where you weren’t able to speak out loud – but you could still have a conversation with the people around you? MIT researchers have developed a computer interface that can transcribe words that the user verbalizes internally but does not actually speak aloud.

The system consists of a wearable device and an associated computing system. Electrodes in the device pick up neuromuscular signals in the jaw and face that are triggered by internal verbalizations — saying words “in your head” — but are undetectable to the human eye. The signals are fed to a machine-learning system that has been trained to correlate particular signals with particular words.

The device also includes a pair of bone-conduction headphones, which transmit vibrations through the bones of the face to the inner ear. Because they don’t obstruct the ear canal, the headphones enable the system to convey information to the user without interrupting conversation or otherwise interfering with the user’s auditory experience.

The device is thus part of a complete silent-computing system that lets the user undetectably pose and receive answers to difficult computational problems. In one of the researchers’ experiments, for instance, subjects used the system to silently report opponents’ moves in a chess game and just as silently receive computer-recommended responses.

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“The motivation for this was to build an IA device — an intelligence-augmentation device,” says Arnav Kapur, a graduate student at the MIT Media Lab, who led the development of the new system. “Our idea was: Could we have a computing platform that’s more internal, that melds human and machine in some ways and that feels like an internal extension of our own cognition?”

“We basically can’t live without our cellphones, our digital devices,” says Pattie Maes, a professor of media arts and sciences and Kapur’s thesis advisor. “But at the moment, the use of those devices is very disruptive. If I want to look something up that’s relevant to a conversation I’m having, I have to find my phone and type in the passcode and open an app and type in some search keyword, and the whole thing requires that I completely shift attention from my environment and the people that I’m with to the phone itself. So, my students and I have for a very long time been experimenting with new form factors and new types of experience that enable people to still benefit from all the wonderful knowledge and services that these devices give us, but do it in a way that lets them remain in the present.”

In current experiments, the researchers are getting comparable results using only four electrodes along one jaw, which should lead to a less obtrusive wearable device.

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Once they had selected the electrode locations, the researchers began collecting data on a few computational tasks with limited vocabularies — about 20 words each. One was arithmetic, in which the user would subvocalize large addition or multiplication problems; another was the chess application, in which the user would report moves using the standard chess numbering system.

Then, for each application, they used a neural network to find correlations between particular neuromuscular signals and particular words. Like most neural networks, the one the researchers used is arranged into layers of simple processing nodes, each of which is connected to several nodes in the layers above and below. Data is fed into the bottom layer, whose nodes process it and pass them to the next layer, whose nodes process it and pass them to the next layer, and so on. The output of the final layer yields is the result of some classification task.

The basic configuration of the researchers’ system includes a neural network trained to identify subvocalized words from neuromuscular signals, but it can be customized to a particular user through a process that retrains just the last two layers.

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Using the prototype wearable interface, the researchers conducted a usability study in which 10 subjects spent about 15 minutes each customizing the arithmetic application to their own neurophysiology, then spent another 90 minutes using it to execute computations. In that study, the system had an average transcription accuracy of about 92%.

But, Kapur says, the system’s performance should improve with more training data, which could be collected during its ordinary use. Although he hasn’t crunched the numbers, he estimates that the better-trained system he uses for demonstrations has an accuracy rate higher than that reported in the usability study.

In ongoing work, the researchers are collecting a wealth of data on more elaborate conversations, in the hope of building applications with much more expansive vocabularies. “We’re in the middle of collecting data, and the results look nice,” Kapur says. “I think we’ll achieve full conversation some day.”

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“I think that they’re a little underselling what I think is a real potential for the work,” says Thad Starner, a professor in Georgia Tech’s College of Computing. “Like, say, controlling the airplanes on the tarmac at Hartsfield Airport here in Atlanta. You’ve got jet noise all around you, you’re wearing these big ear-protection things — wouldn’t it be great to communicate with voice in an environment where you normally wouldn’t be able to? You can imagine all these situations where you have a high-noise environment, like the flight deck of an aircraft carrier, or even places with a lot of machinery, like a power plant or a printing press. This is a system that would make sense, especially because oftentimes in these types of or situations people are already wearing protective gear. For instance, if you’re a fighter pilot, or if you’re a firefighter, you’re already wearing these masks.”

“The other thing where this is extremely useful is special ops,” Starner adds. “There’s a lot of places where it’s not a noisy environment but a silent environment. A lot of time, special-ops folks have hand gestures, but you can’t always see those. Wouldn’t it be great to have silent-speech for communication between these folks? The last one is people who have disabilities where they can’t vocalize normally. For example, Roger Ebert did not have the ability to speak anymore because lost his jaw to cancer. Could he do this sort of silent speech and then have a synthesizer that would speak the words?”

Reprinted with permission from MIT News

Click To Share The Fascinating News With Your FriendsPhoto by Lorrie Lejeune / MIT News

Because She Missed her Flight, a Distraught Pregnant Woman Found the Perfect Mom to Adopt Her Baby Boy

Temple Phipps’s serendipitous meeting with Samantha Snipes changed the course of their lives – and it’s all thanks to a missed airline flight. Hear the incredible tale told by The Good News Guru (from the April 13, 2018 Ellen K. Morning Show on KOST radio).

READ more good news on GNN.org….

Because She Missed her Flight, a Distraught Pregnant Woman Found the Perfect Mom to Adopt Her Baby Boy

LISTEN to this Good News Guru story broadcast from the radio show with Ellen and Geri on KOST-103.5 (Subscribe to our new podcast on iTunes – or for Androids, on Podbean) — or Read the story below

Almost two years ago, Samantha Snipes was a frightened 24-year-old worrying about the future of her unborn baby – but as fate would have it, a missed flight would provide the incredibly perfect ending.

Back in September 2016, the young woman, escaping an unhealthy relationship, missed the plane from Atlanta to Raleigh—8 months pregnant at the time.

She got the last standby seat on a Delta flight that placed her next to a woman named Temple Phipps.

Phipps, who was in her early 40s, had been married before, but never had children. She always dreamed of being a mother, but the opportunity had eluded her.

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As she sat next to the young mother-to-be, the two women struck up a conversation. Snipes mentioned that she was debating whether to put her unborn baby up for adoption or allow a family member to raise it. Not having a plan, she was noticeably anxious.

Before departing, Phipps gave Snipes her phone number and said that if she ever needed anything while in Raleigh, she could give her a call.

Three days later, Samantha gave birth. Nervous and scared because she still didn’t know what to do, the new mom called Phipps and asked if she would visit them in the hospital.

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In the maternity ward, once she saw the baby boy, Phipps immediately knew she would become his mother.

Lying in the hospital bed, the young mom’s instincts also took over. She asked if their new friend wanted to adopt the baby boy.

Phipps told WRAL she literally started shaking—but everything afterward just fell into place.

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She officially adopted Vaughn Preston Phipps last August. Not only that, Samantha moved to North Carolina to be part of the boy’s extended family and always be a guest at birthday parties.

She started a photography business in the city, and she and Phipps are considering writing a book about the serendipitous meeting that changed their lives forever.

Don’t Miss The Chance To Share The Inspiring Story With Your FriendsPhoto by Temple Phipps

Officer is Shocked to Learn He’s Been Working Alongside a Person Who Wrote to Him in Iraq

This letter from a fourth-grade elementary student is just another example of how it’s a small world, after all.

Before Jim Johnson became the sheriff of the Ozaukee County Police Department in Wisconsin, he was a soldier stationed in Iraq and Afghanistan.

While he was deployed, Johnson received dozens of letters from American school children – and he kept every single one of them as a reminder of the kids who cared about him while he was stationed overseas.

The police officer was recently going through his collection of heartwarming letters when he found one that had been written by a young student from Cedar Grove Belgium Elementary School in Wisconsin.

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The letter read: “Dear soldiers. Thank you for what you all do and are doing for our country. Best wishes and have a Merry Christmas. From Chris Uselding.”

Johnson was immediately stunned by the letter: Chris Uselding, the young student who had written the reassuring note, had been working alongside Johnson at the police department for several years.

“It’s crazy to think about that this letter touched Sheriff Johnson and he was able to share that with me and keep it for all these years,” Uselding told WDJT.

The sheriff added: “It makes you realize how small the world is. It truly does.”

(WATCH the video below)

Click To Share The Serendipitous Story With Your FriendsPhoto by WDTJ

“There are no guarantees. From the viewpoint of fear, none are strong enough. From the viewpoint of love, none are necessary.” – Emanuel Tanay

Quote of the Day: “There are no guarantees. From the viewpoint of fear, none are strong enough. From the viewpoint of love, none are necessary.” – Emanuel Tanay

Photo: by Michael LoRusso, CC

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quotes page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

She Heard a Child’s Plea in Liberia, and it Turned into Schools for 1,500 Girls

It all started with a little girl. At age eleven, Abigail was selling herself on the streets of Liberia in exchange for clean drinking water. Then, she met Katie Meyler, who had left her hometown of New Jersey twelve years earlier to volunteer overseas for Samaritan’s Purse, a Christian international relief organization that supports children.

At the time, Meyler knew the challenges the country faced. A 14-year brutal civil war had left the country in shambles, including destroying over 80% of its schools. Young girls seemed to bear the brunt of the damage, with more than 40% of those aged 10-14 never attending school, and, many of them like Abigail, falling prey to violence.

Seeing Katie as a potential lifeline, Abigail begged her to help her get into school. Desperate to help, Katie turned to a friend she met in Monrovia, Erica Noelle Duncan, who was a business consultant and coach. Erica knew immediately that Katie’s passion and drive gave her the ability to do something concrete. Soon after, More Than Me was born.

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More Than Me (MTM) works in partnership with the Liberian Ministry of Education to rebuild the education system, and ensure girls like Abigail have access to basic human rights. The objective is that every child will attend and graduate primary school prepared to take their next step in life, which in turn, will bring stability to the country and grow the economy.

Through the MTM Academy, K-8 girls attend a tuition-free school that provides high quality education and holistic services like healthcare, family planning, psychosocial support, and a feeding program for the most vulnerable girls in Monrovia. The Academy also serves as an incubator for innovation and features a research and development center to test initiatives that, if proven successful, will be implemented in schools across Liberia. More Than Me Academy continues to pay the girls school fees onward through high school.

In its first year, MTM was able to send 5 girls to school, but that quickly grew and by 2017 they were schooling 1,500 children. Their goal is to be educating nearly 250,000 kids by the year 2020.

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Consider the impact. When a girl in the developing world receives 7 or more years of education, she marries 4 years later and has 2.2 fewer children.

An extra year of primary school boosts girls’ eventual wages by 10-20%; an extra year of secondary school: 15-25%. When women and girls earn income, they reinvest 90% of it into their families, much more so than men.

Katie’s vision and achievements have not gone unnoticed. In 2014, she was named a 2014 TIME Person of the Year for her efforts on the front lines of Ebola, and recognized among People Magazine’s 25 Women Changing the World—next to Sheryl Sandberg and Oprah.

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After years of gaining trust from the Liberian community, government and high-network donors around the world, MTM has been able to create lasting change in Liberia, with hopes that their model will be replicated to make a difference in the rest of the developing world.

According to Katie, “I’d rather die at 30 years old living for what I really believe in—from head to toe and in every single way possible, than to live to be 90 years old and not really fulfill what I was born to do.”

For girls in Liberia like the third-grade student Marka, their lives have been changed forever, with long lasting impact for generations to come. She remembers the happiest moment of her life as being the day when Katie’s academy “came to rescue me”.

Click To Share The Incredible Story With Your FriendsPhotos by More Than Me

How a Train Operator Pulled All the Stops to Help Save Injured Puppy From Subway Tracks

It was 3:30 AM when New York City subway operator Ernest McClain narrowly missed hitting an injured puppy that had made its way onto the train tracks – thankfully, he noticed the poor pup just in time.

McClain, who pilots the “L” line train for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, says he was shocked to see the beige pit bull limping along the subway tracks near Bushwick.

in order to avoid hitting the dog, McClain slowed the train down to a 10-miles-per-hour crawl for over 3 miles. The journey lasted for nine stops over the course of 40 minutes.

According to MTA worker Edlin Cruz, the confused canine had a cut on its leg and it had been limping its way along the tracks when it was first spotted from the train. As the subway workers were anxiously keeping track of the dog’s location, it finally meandered into to the Graham Avenue station.

“[Cruz] jumped down, got the dog’s attention, grabbed the dog by its hind legs, and pulled it on the platform,” McClain told the New York Post. “I was beeping the horn and yelling at the track workers, ‘There’s a dog on the track!’” said McClain. “I didn’t want to see the dog die.”

Since it had no collar or identification, it was turned over to the NYC police.

Additionally, the workers were happy to hear that the dog was taken care of since they immediately rushed back to work so that they could address the delays.

MTA workers say that the dog, who was nicknamed “Lucky”, was fortunate to have gotten lost during the early hours of Monday morning because it only caused several delays behind McClain’s train.

(WATCH the video below – or, international viewers can watch the video at CBS News)

Click To Share The Pawesome Story With Your Friends