Monday, December 8, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Surrey Students become youth entrepreneurs

Darpan News Desk, 06 Dec, 2016 03:24 PM
    Something exciting is going on at Surrey's Coyote Creek Elementary. In the hallways and classrooms of this Surrey school, things are buzzing. Market research has been completed, product designs have been finalized and the school’s Grade 6 and 7 students have moved full swing into production mode. They have been learning to earn and manage money with PowerPlay Young Entrepreneurs, an exciting experiential learning program that helps youth plan and implement their own small business ventures.
     
    Sponsored by the Surrey Board of Trade as part of its Youth Entrepreneurship and Advocacy Action Plan (YEAAP), PowerPlay Young Entrepreneurs empowers young people to make informed financial decisions as they work through the business planning process. “The program provides a real-world platform for young people to stretch their abilities and build important practical life skills,” says program creator Bill Roche. “The young entrepreneurs create business plans, products and marketing materials. They then showcase their achievements at an exciting event called the Young Entrepreneur Show where they make sales and earn real money.”
     
    Grade 7 teacher Jared Stevens had his class conduct market research with other students around the school to help them gain confidence with public speaking. “Getting product feedback from their peers was a nice way for the kids to ease into conversing with people they aren’t familiar with,” he commented. Stevens’ students have also been learning new vocabulary and role-playing sales interactions with one another as they gear up for their upcoming trade show. “These skills are transferable,” he noted. “As they move into high school and into the working world they will increasingly be expected to communicate and express themselves.”
     
    “At the Surrey Board of Trade we are committed to helping Surrey youth develop the tools they will need to thrive in the new economy,” says Anita Huberman, CEO. “We are proud to sponsor PowerPlay Young Entrepreneurs because it teaches young people to be innovative and think outside the box.” Stevens was especially impressed with the creativity of one of his students who thought up an original design for an emoji night-light while talking with his brother in his bedroom one night. Huberman concurred, “I am always impressed to see the ingenuity of the students at the showcase events. It makes me excited for our city’s future.”
     

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Laughter Best Tactic To Woo Your Girl

    Laughter Best Tactic To Woo Your Girl
      Sharing a few good giggles and chuckles makes people more willing to tell others something personal about themselves, without even necessarily being aware that they are doing so, finds a new study.

    Laughter Best Tactic To Woo Your Girl

    Wealth Behind Decline In Number Of Reproducing Males

    Wealth Behind Decline In Number Of Reproducing Males
    Researchers have discovered a dramatic decline in genetic diversity in male lineages four to eight thousand years ago -- likely the result of the accumulation of material wealth.

    Wealth Behind Decline In Number Of Reproducing Males

    Sleep Well To Enhance Sexual Pleasure

    Sleep Well To Enhance Sexual Pleasure
    David Kalmbach from the University of Michigan Medical School has found that each additional hour of sleep increased the likelihood of sexual activity with a partner by 14 percent. 

    Sleep Well To Enhance Sexual Pleasure

    How Smartphones Are Ruining Sex Lives

    How Smartphones Are Ruining Sex Lives
    Have you been feeling dissatisfied with your sex life of late? Your smartphone may be to blame, suggests a study.

    How Smartphones Are Ruining Sex Lives

    Depressed Dads Turn Toddlers Into Troubled Kids

    Depressed Dads Turn Toddlers Into Troubled Kids
    Not just mothers but new fathers who are depressed do not make as much eye contact or smile at their toddlers, leading them to develop troubling behaviour such as hitting, lying, anxiety and sadness as they grow, new research has found.

    Depressed Dads Turn Toddlers Into Troubled Kids

    Ready to spring forward? Good sleep patterns key as daylight time begins

    Ready to spring forward? Good sleep patterns key as daylight time begins
    As Canadians prepare to set their clocks ahead an hour this weekend for the start of daylight time, chronically sleep-deprived people could be hit hard by the change."If you're getting five to six hours of sleep regularly as an adult instead of what's recommended — the seven to eight hours — then you're going to suffer a bit more when you have one less hour of sleep than you would if someone who has more regular sleep scheduling," 

    Ready to spring forward? Good sleep patterns key as daylight time begins