lee@leejackson.org
Telephone - 0113 2170081 (UK)
Lee is able to do that rare thing in an inner city high school. He is able to challenge, reassure and amuse a potentially reluctant audience. It is through his ability to talk with conviction and with transparent honesty that draws the pupils and staff to listen carefully and reflect on the content and context. He is always well prepared, selects topical themes and takes pride in his delivery, including good use of audio/visual technology.
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Dont make your talks formulaic either :)
Just another day at the office. A typical day for Motivational Schools Speaker Lee Jackson
See Lee Jackson before, during and after a school presentation in Leeds.
You can find out more about Lee or invite him to your school via his website – www.leejackson.org P.S. Can you spot the cheesy video and one deliberate mistake?! Kindly filmed and edited superbly by Stu from www.newmediageekz.comI really warmed to this guy – very honest and some great tips on speaking. Love to meet him one day, seems like a down-to-earth bloke.
‘The Motivator’ is a voyeuristic look at the business of professional speaking from the inside. Victor Antonio G. gives unprecedented access to what goes on in the life of a motivational speaker.
Join him as he travels to a major speaking event all the while sharing his triumphs, defeats and providing an insider’s perspective on the business of speaking. Find out how he managed to escape the hardships of being poor. From food stamps to CEO of a multimillion dollar company, Victor’s story is a story of triumph in the face of gang violence, drugs and poverty. Listen in on how he made it out of the hood and onto “mahogany wood”.
Documentary filmmaker Dan Perez pulls back the curtains and dims the spotlight to reveal the professional costs and personal sacrifices of being a professional speaker.
Lovely meal with my wife, friendly staff and creative carrots!

A new generation of digitally-aware 8-14 year olds has been identified in the biggest ever pan-European study of tweens. These children, who have never known a world without the internet, and who in turn have a heightened awareness of their future and that of the planet, have been labeled Generation XD - the Digital children of Generation X.
Named ‘Generation XD’ and commissioned by Disney as part of ongoing research for the new kids TV channel Disney XD, the study interviewed over 3,000 8-14 year-olds in six countries (UK, France, Germany, Italy, Poland and Spain). The results shatter many myths about children’s relationship with the internet and attitudes towards the family and celebrity culture.
Fundamentally different to previous generations due to its digital upbringing, Generation XD – children born between 1995 and 2001 to parents of Generation X – has witnessed more technological developments than any other generation and never known life without digital entertainment, mobile phones or social media channels.
Victoria Hardy, Executive Director, EMEA Research, Disney Channels, commented: “As we enter a new decade, the XD report redefines the popular image of today’s tweens and shows them as a positive, community-minded generation who uses the technology that surrounds them to make a positive impact on their lives and the world around them.”
The study reveals the following trends as a consequence of this unprecedented connectedness:
- Digital Generation – while completely at ease with technology, XDs use it to enhance rather than replace face to face social interaction
– Face to face contact is still the most preferable way to meet up with friends (30%) over and above texting (15%), online chat (14%) and mobile (8%)
– 95% feel that the internet and computers are important to them
– 53% feel the internet improves their life by helping them talk to their friends outside school
– 44% say the internet makes it easier to stay in touch with friends
– Homework (59%) scores second only to gaming (74%) for most common uses of the internet
- Mini-Preneurs – despite the credit crunch, which is in part a result of the credit-and-debt culture of Generation X before them, XDs are establishing good financial habits early
– 70% are saving their pocket money rather than spending it immediately
– 64% of XDs would much rather work for themselves than for someone else when they grow up
- Generation Aspiration – despite the celebrity dominated environment that XDs have grown up in, they have strong family values and aspire to traditional vocations rather than the pursuit of fame
– The top five future professions are vet, teacher, footballer, doctor and police officer
– Topping the poll in every single country as the person they admire most in the world is mum at 43%, with dad coming second at 30%
- Green Tweens – Generation XD say caring for the environment is important
– 97% of XDs believe it is important to look after the planet, with 74% already recycling regularly
Tom Dunmore, Consulting Editor, Stuff said: “As the kids of Generation X, who embraced all mod cons in their twenties, you’d expect Generation XD to be fully versed in how the internet can help them. What’s interesting though, is how they are embracing both cutting edge technology and traditional family values in their approach to life. While David Beckham does inevitably get a mention, fame and celebrity are secondary to family and they aspire to be vets and teachers rather than singers and celebrities, which is both surprising and encouraging. Indeed, Generation XD is remolding the traditional definition of youth as we know it”.
Concluded Victoria Hardy: “Generation XD kids have a heightened understanding of socio-economic issues, deep family values and are already demonstrating behavioural patterns that will have a deep impact on the future. As the world leader in family entertainment, Disney invests heavily to ensure we continue to understand our audience, to help us produce content that is aspirational for them and, critically, that is available when and where they want it in their digital universe, both of which are central to Disney XD.”
Disney XD is a boy-focused, girl-inclusive TV channel for kids aged 6-14 – the first of its kind in the world – which launched in UK in August 2009. It features a compelling mix of live-action and animated programming, hyper-targeting boys and their quest for discovery, accomplishment, sports, adventure, music and humour. Find out more at (www.disneyxd.co.uk).

A survey of 1,000 teenage boys in the UK showed that 88% of them believed their career prospects were good, and 88% regarded themselves as ambitious; 87% were happy in their family lives, 87% were happy in their social lives, and 81% were happy in their school or work lives.
via Teenage boys are not yobs but loving, maligned boys – survey finds | Society | The Guardian.
Can someone please tell the Daily Mail :)
Let’s love and help young people not make them societies scapegoats.
The young people I meet day to day in schools are on the whole – keen, funny, eager to learn and really want to succeed, both in school and in their home life – often we have the keys to help them.
Thats why I work in schools.
Lee
Random but true click the link to see…
Time has expired for bad powerpoint/ keynote stats and charts…
If you have to use them, then learn from the best…WOW…
Information Is Beautiful | Ideas, issues, concepts, subjects – visualized!.