World Vision ACT:S is a network of young people committed to exploring what our faith says about poverty and injustice, using creative activism to bring issues to life and change hearts, and using our voices to advocate on AIDS, malaria, hunger, and child slavery.
If you are not already a member of ACT:S, we encourage you to check out our About page and join the ACT:S network for bi-weekly e-mail updates.
Below are the latest stories, resources, and campaigns. If you would like to contribute, e-mail acts@worldvision.org.
Art & Activism: Viewing Haiti 'Through Their Eyes'

Bowls contributed by the Art Creation Foundation For Children
By Lauren Seibert, ACT:S Advocacy & Campaigns Fellow
Cradling a little paper maché bowl hand-painted by a Haitian child, I felt the immediacy of the situation in Haiti sink home in a new way. Holding something that their own hands shaped—the same hands that probably helped rig up tents to live in after the earthquake—suddenly woke me up more than any news updates ever had. That’s one of the things art does best: it wakes you up, shakes you up, makes you rethink what you know.
Art can do what so many other forms of advocacy can’t: it can morph and evolve into a personal thing, something that we can associate with our own experiences. It tugs on our emotions. It fills our brains with tangible sensations—color, texture, sound. Want to make an issue come alive for your audience? Art can do that, and people will remember it long after they forget about the pamphlet on Haiti relief tucked in their pocket.
This time, a display of paper maché bowls painted with stars and watermelons made me think of my own childhood, and then those kids in Haiti suddenly became real. Those bowls, along with photographs taken in Haiti by National Geographic photojournalist Maggie Steber, hand-sequined flags by Haitian artists, and photos taken by Haitian children themselves formed the exhibit “Through Their Eyes: Haitian Artists’ Visions of Home” at the Joan Hisaoka Healing Arts Gallery in D.C. during the past month.
World Vision ACT:S + InterVarsity: Developing World Changers Together
Check out this new resource on ways World Vision ACT:S is supporting InterVarsity fellowships all across the nation. Whether its chapter planting, chapter building, or helping students continue their Global Projects experience, ACT:S is committed to partnering with InterVarsity to develop world changers through faith and justice formation and creative activism. Check out this new guide to our free activism resources.
STOP CHILD SLAVERY: Update on the Child Protection Compact Act: Keep it up – your voices are being heard
ACT NOW:Throughout the month of August, make it a goal to call your Senators once a week!
Thanks to everyone who called in to your representatives in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to voice your support for getting the Child Protection Compact Act back on the agenda. As of this week, we have heard back from almost every Senator's office mentioned in the advocacy action alert last week. Your voices have been heard and the Senators are responding.
You Want My Cup of Noodles? An Incidental Study on Luke 12

By Carrie Caddell, Westmont College
I’m staring at a pile of student loan paperwork. There’s a giant box of Cup of Noodles in my pantry and I’ve been sleeping on an air mattress for the last two months. The thought that pulses through my very veins is: I need a job.
After another where-is-your-life-headed conversation with my parents, I flipped open my Bible again in faith that the page it opened to was divinely appointed for me to read. On days when I open to Numbers, I know God is telling me this is a dumb way to seek him, but today I opened to Luke!
Unearthing the Unexpected: 7 Strategies to Grab Others’ Attention on Campus
By Lauren Seibert, ACT:S Advocacy & Campaigns Fellow
The cloudy pain of mind and body consumed by malaria, the constant burning of an empty stomach, the humiliation of owning nothing, not even your body—these are not things the typical American college student has experienced.
But for those of us who get it, who understand the urgent need to take action to fight issues like child slavery, malaria, and poverty, how can we inject that bone-deep empathy into everyone else?
For most American students, their worlds run on entirely different tracks than those of children around the world struggling to survive. To get their attention, to get them to act, we have to stand out from all the other causes and campus groups competing for their time. We can’t just dangle an issue in front of them and expect them to snap it up. We have to surprise them, make them curious, drop them into an unexpected experience.
Here are 7 strategies for making that happen:









