Announcing: YARC Youth Contesting Program!

On behalf of the Young Amateurs Radio Club (YARC) I’m pleased to announce the:

Youth Contesting Program!

YARC’s Youth Contesting Program (YCP) is a weekend program for groups of young amateur radio contesters throughout the US and Canada to meet up at a nearby-as-possible “big gun stations” during the 2019 CQ World-Wide WPX Contest taking place 30-31 March 2019. It will hopefully enable a new dimension of the hobby to young hams who have contested a little before, and set a new precedent for the welcoming of a new generation of radiosport aficionados.

It works like this – we will attempt to pair a small group (up to 4) of young contesters interested in operating with a “big gun” station owner interested in hosting the youth group. The contesters will operate from the station, and the host has the option to help the youth improve their skills, provide advice, and even operate alongside. We will try to keep it such that young hams will only require a relatively short drive (ideally no more than 5 hours) to keep travel costs low. As such, this will require the participation of as many operators and hosts as possible, but it might so happen that a valid match may not exist. We will try our best and work to make this a better program in the future!

YARC YCP is inspired by the efforts of YOTA’s YCP, as well as Team Exuberance and we hope to inspire a big chunk of young hams into becoming the greatest contesters of the 21st century.

SIGNUP HERE

If you’re a young ham (or know a young ham) (under age 27 or so) with at least a little bit of contesting experience, and you’d be interested in spending March 30-31 (CQ World-Wide WPX SSB) at a contest-grade ham radio station, OR if you’re the owner of such a station, sign up at the Google form here: https://yarc.world/ycp/ (or scroll to the bottom to find the survey conveniently embedded!)

Note – because we’re trying to keep costs low by making this a drivable event for our young ops, we can’t promise that you’ll be selected as a host or operator, especially if either no young ops signup nearby your station or there’s no station near young operators. Since this is our first try, we probably have a lot to learn about this, so bear with us!

Thanks,

Sterling, N0SSC
YARC Programs & Outreach Dude

Young Hams Survey

YOUNG HAMS SURVEY CLICK HERE!

At the above link, you’ll find a google survey (created by WA1TE and edited by the YARC community)that has a bunch of questions that will help the community at large understand the interests and challenges of youth in ham radio better. If you’re under age 26, go take it, and if not, well…you can take it too but understand we’re trying to get a youth perspective, so. Yeah. 

Who’s we? Young hams! That’s who. Also I turn 27 in 8 days :'( 

https://yarc.world/

PS my callsign is currently KQ0B, but I didn’t realize at the time how important N0SSC is to me…like this website…so I’m in the process of changing it back. Lol. 

 

Engaging Youth in Amateur Radio, Hoshnasi Style

Hoshnasi, a.k.a Josh Nass, KI6NAZ, is a shining star in the ham radio YouTube universe. Besides gear reviews, portable and SOTA operating, tutorials and discussion, livestreams, and pro-tips for newcomers, He created the Ham Radio Crash Course – a guided journey for hams and hams-to-be to be inspired to get or upgrade their amateur radio license through real-life experiences.

He invited me to talk about the state of Youth in Amateur Radio, and specific ways to get young people interested, involved, excited, and hooked on ham radio – see that interview here.

Here’s the summary:

  1. Lots of (disparate) youth activities taking place – Scouting/JOTA, YACHT, YARC, YOTA, YDXA, WRTC youth teams, etc – wouldn’t it be nice if we came together?
  2. Ham Radio in Education going strong. Ham radio is frequently used as a tool to explain science of waves, the cosmos, the atmosphere…
  3. Maker Movement is kind of passed…we need a new movement. The Hacker Movement! Lets start a ham radio hackathon!
  4. How to make your Radio Club more approachable to younger people – activities, modern and active web presence, ensuring newcomers aren’t left without an introduction and a mentor, having a public shack or members’ shack’s with an open door policy
  5. Modern technologies of the internet going to hit ham radio’s mainstream in 5 years – Remote operating, SDR, bluetooth/wifi/internet integration, Livestreaming, eSports style competitions, online & remote VE testing, etc.

Josh followed it up with introducing a STEM club to ham radio. This class serves as a brilliant method of introducing and educating kids about ham radio. I think it should be required viewing for anyone who calls themself an Elmer.

Some key takeaways:

  1. Examples and realtime demonstrations. Josh did an example of what SSTV sounds like and how it’s decoded, and brought an antenna he can use to talk to satellites and the ISS.
  2. Connect to other well known topics (ISS, cell phones/internet, social media, geography, walkie talkies/CB radio)
  3. Downplay the license, but (quickly) make sure to explain why it’s needed. Josh had one slide and about 30 seconds of explanation. Too much can be detracting but too little might leave a surprise.
  4. Keep jargon to a minimum, and when jargon comes out, explain it in a few simple terms or analogies
  5. Q&A during and after to keep the audience included in the discussion. If the audience is mute, read from a list of frequently asked questions that you can answer yourself – there are always questions, even simple ones, but most people are afraid to ask..

You can find more blogs about Youth in Ham Radio here on N0SSC.com: http://n0ssc.com/posts/category/youth-in-ham-radio

I also have a simple list of all my posts at http://n0ssc.com/post-archive, where you can easily CTRL+F “youth” to find more like this!

73!