International Day of Peace 2021

International Day of Peace

The UN established the International Day of Peace in 1981 as a day devoted to the ideals of peace by observing 24 hours of non-violence and cease-fire and since then it has had a rich and storied history. This year as the entire globe strives to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic there is a call to think together creatively to create a more equal, just, equitable, inclusive, sustainable and healthier world. Peacedoodle wants to help.

There are so many ways to make a difference.

☮️ Sketchnoters are encouraged to sketch their solutions or an action step that can be taken immediately to make a difference. The art will spread peace and your ideas will ripple out far and wide.

☮️ Adults and students can take photos of acts of kindness witnessed around them.

☮️ We can all make peace with someone.

☮️ We can stand up against acts of hate both online and in our regular lives.

☮️ We can spread compassion.

Please join us and share your actions, images, and ideas – big or small. We will collect them here but you can share on Twitter, LinkedIn or Instagram with the hashtags #peacedoodleSept21 and #peaceday There is also a Padlet set up where you can upload your creations, write about your actions, record a video and more.

You can read more here about the initiative and access many resources to share the information with others who want to take action for peace. Let’s make peace with one another. Let’s make peace with nature.

Let’s help the world recover from the devastating divide that has widened between people, especially the marginalized and underprivileged, due to the effects of the pandemic.

Let’s keep it going today and every day.

Peace one doodle at a time.

International Day of Peace – 2020

International Day of Peace

Entries from Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, India, Florida, Oregon, and North Carolina. The goal is the same – heal our world through peaceful thoughts and actions. Thank you for participating everyone.

International Day of Peace – 2020

International Day of Peace

International Day of Peace
Steps you can take to get involved in the International Day of Peace
Link to this poster for clickable access.

September 21st the International Day of Peace was Established in 1981 by unanimous United Nations resolution 36/37. The theme for the International Day of Peace in 2020 is “Shaping Peace Together”

The theme celebrates the 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

This year “Covid-19 is a stark reminder of the need for cooperation across borders, sectors and generations. Our response will determine how fast the world recovers, whether we achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, and how well we handle pressing challenges: from the climate crisis to pandemics, inequalities, new forms of violence, and rapid changes in technology and in our population.

But just when we need collective action more than ever, support for global cooperation has been flagging. In many countries, public trust in traditional institutions is in decline and relations between countries have been under strain. Will this pandemic bring the world closer together? Or will it lead to greater mistrust? Global dialogue – and action – is now more urgent than ever.” (from https://www.un.org/UN75)

Here at Peacedoodle we believe that creativity spreads joy. Art in all its forms will unleash a world of good for our planet. Join us here to share your thoughts and your creations. What do you see when you envision a peaceful world? Stay tuned to view the images from our international community and from schools all over the world. Peace, one doodle, painting, drawing, icon, poem or essay at a time.

Fill out our form to share your thoughts and your image.

Grab a slide and add your image here as well. Let’s connect the globe with images of peace and heal the world for generations to come.

Sketchnoting for Italy – #codoodle

Coronavirus

Our International community of Sketchnoters is generous and kind. We genuinely like each other and relish in the diversity of the group. From neutron scatterers, to scrum masters, University Professors, graphic facilitators, artists and engineers. We support and encourage, share, teach and learn from each other.

When this season of virus began. The world watched as the virus overtook China. We marveled at the rapidity with which the government reacted. Building hospitals in the hardest hit areas with superhuman speed. Watching from a distance there was hope that the infections would stay localized, transmission would be halted, and the threat for the rest of the world would diminish.

We were shocked, collectively, when the spread to Italy became so swift and devastating. Back then, around March 11th, Claire Ohlenschlager came up with the idea to have our merry band of about 17 Sketchnoters, all share a sketch in honor of Mauro Toselli, and Mario Foglia, both residing near Milan – the epicenter of the Coronavirus outbreak. We would each sketch a message of cheer for our friends, tagging them in the post and reminding them of happier times. The messages, like our group, would be unique and multi-layered. We signed up for dates and started posting on March 13th, led by @Claire_ohl we used the hashtag #cocreate and began spreading smiles. Making a sketch a day for our friends in Italy felt like a way to ease the burden of isolation and fend off the infection for our friends.

Sending my love to our friends in Italy. Entry #16. #cocreate

My date was March 28th and I was #16 in the que. By then, we learned of another Italian friend, Federica Tabone, to add to the message, and we were joined by many others spreading the focus outward as the quarantine, isolation, and death spread to every country in succession. Our virtual community had always communicated over digital devices, time zones, and languages. The quarantines did not impact the friendships we have developed over time. What it did was bring us closer in a virtual hug where we all took the time to reach out to each other, the hardest hit at first, to just say we are still here. We are thinking of you. Stay safe and sketch on.

#cocreate doodles from the heart to offer joy and to share smiles around the world. The group continues to grow. Sketchnoting to create change.

Spread peace, One doodle at a time.

Sketching Lewis and Clark

Teachers and Students

Here is what I do.
Inspire
Empower
Collaborate
Support
Show up
Repeat

Working with individual teachers is one of my greatest joys. When that collaboration is spearheaded by someone who has attended one of my trainings it is doubly rewarding. That is what happened at a local middle school recently after a district-wide training sparked personal interest. Shelly was enamored by Sketchnoting/Visual Notetaking after participating in a 3 hour workshop for media specialists.

Shelly Sketches
Shelly at the Media Specialists’ workshop – all smiles while sketching her icon.
She was a natural – creative, daring, curious, and eager. The whole prospect clicked and she wanted more. I had prepared a variety of resources for attendees so that they could go back to their schools and begin implementing sketchnotes with their students. I assured her everything she needed was there, but also said “if you need help, just call.”

Call she did.
A social studies teacher took the bait and declared that Sketchnoting would be a perfect addition to their study of Lewis and Clark and Westward expansion. My resources did the trick with introducing sketchnoting. Shelly facilitated the introduction to sketchnoting in individual classes, but for phase two I was asked to facilitate live sessions to deepen student learning.

In advance of my visit I asked Ms. Brown, the content area teacher for as much background knowledge as possible. I also asked her to identify the objective for our lesson. She sent me her learning targets, key vocabulary and important events, and also a link to a Youtube video that was to be used as both scaffold and support. I watched the video and made a sketchnote to share. I also researched the expedition through primary source journal entries from which I created an icon sheet as reference.
Lew and Clark SketchnoteLesson StepsWe started with brainstorming key vocabulary terms. Students were asked to share ideas for which terms spoke to them for complete understanding of the unit. Of these, their teacher selected the key terms (at first this was done randomly, then we had the teacher select the most important remaining terms for exploration). Many students chose the same terms. We completed graphic jams for the selected terms, about 4 per class meeting, moving the sticky notes to charts around the room. We then invited those whose term was selected to come view the images to choose the most effective icons. Listening to 8th graders debate the merits of a collection of icon sketches was delightful. Their reasoning and thought process spread laughter and enthusiasm in each group. The sketches filled up the space acting as anchor charts for the active learning part of the class time.Students in Action
Students worked in groups of 4 or 5, each group was given a large piece of paper. Students were asked to use their learning targets and their notes to come up with an image that would best represent their learning. After 5 minutes, the students rotated clockwise to view and investigate the sketch of their peer – adding to the drawing, clarifying a connection, or commenting on the importance of the image. The rotations continued till all students were back at their own original drawing. Once there, students evaluated the additions of their peers and finalized the learning target/objective from which they began.

Student Example
Groups then evaluated the whole poster, adding connectors or borders where necessary and showing the interactive fluidity of their work. At this point we instructed them to come up with one main idea that best represented their results and write that in the center if it was not already noted. The final products were posted on the walls of the room and a gallery walk ensued.

As an exit ticket, students were asked for one word to describe the visual review and their learning: Educational, good, exhilerating, amazing, decent, extraordinary, surprising, beautiful, challenging, lovely, awesome, glorious, neat, interesting, fantastic, memorable, informational, enthusiastic, creative, informative, artistic, reminding, collaboration, art, fantastic, imagination, creative, smart, exciting, spectacular, intriguing, education, communication, contributing, interesting, alright, responsibility, engaging, adventurous, special, expression, were some of the words shared. Wouldn’t you want to engage in a lesson that could claim an adjective such as these? The students were going to continue the path during their next unit of study. Teacher empowered, media specialist the conduit, Peacedoodle the delivery.

Onward.