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450+ Expected at 4th Annual Event for Young Ladies

Home/News, Previous Event/450+ Expected at 4th Annual Event for Young Ladies
2018-03-15T09:34:47+00:00 May 2, 2017|News, Previous Event|
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450+ Expected at 4th Annual Event for Young Ladies

  • Highline College YELL Summit poster

Young women of color are invited to Highline College for the Y.E.L.L. Summit, a free event designed to empower, encourage and educate.

Y.E.L.L. — short for Young Educated Ladies Leading — is scheduled for May 20, 2017, and designed for south King County students in 9th grade and above.

Last year the Y.E.L.L. Summit drew approximately 450 participants, and event organizers are expecting a similar turnout this year. It is free and open to the public, but registration by May 12 is required; registration may close earlier if capacity is reached. Participants will receive giveaways, prizes, breakfast and lunch.

Rocky Rivera

Rocky Rivera

During the summit, which will run from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on Highline’s main campus, students will attend one of 11 workshops, participate in a leadership activity and hear from a panel of professional women of color.

Rocky Rivera, who identifies herself not as a female MC, but as an artist who makes movement music for the masses, will give the keynote address. In addition to pursuing various music projects, Rivera works as a youth development coordinator in Oakland and writes for publications such as Rolling Stone, The Source and Vibe.

Rivera’s creative delivery through music and her unique skill set, life experience and Filipino roots will draw in students, according to Rashad Norris, who is one of the summit’s organizers and Highline’s Director of Community Engagement. Rivera consistently incorporates equity, social justice and intersectionality in her music, writing and youth work.

Rashad Norris

Rashad Norris

“Having Rivera deliver her inspirational and artistic messages will be a treat for our young women,” said Norris. “She will focus on the need to communicate the stories and struggles of our communities in a constructive way.”

The Y.E.L.L. Summit is patterned after Highline’s Black and Brown Male Summit, a popular event each fall for young men of color in South King County.

Like the Black and Brown, the Y.E.L.L. Summit is underwritten by the college with special support by Highline’s Access Services and the Office of the President.

Questions?
Contact Rashad Norris at (206) 592-3939 or rnorris@highline.edu.