Washington Post: This innovative program uses brain science to teach Chicago teens how to stop violence

The CHILL trainers (left to right): D’Atrey Brinson, Devin Swift-Bailey, Judge Moore, Jonathan Jackson, and Janea Moore at the Get in the Game Teen Summit on Nov. 18 at Malcolm X College in Chicago. (Photo credit: Philip G. Tarver)

The CHILL trainers (left to right): D’Atrey Brinson, Devin Swift-Bailey, Judge Moore, Jonathan Jackson, and Janea Moore at the Get in the Game Teen Summit on Nov. 18 at Malcolm X College in Chicago. (Photo credit: Philip G. Tarver)

CYC's Devin Swift-Bailey was interviewed by the Washington Post for his work with CHILL, an anti-violence program for teens that uses best practices from the neuroscience field. Read about it here.

NBC5, Telemundo Chicago Announce Winners of '21st Century Solutions Grant Challenge'

Chicago Youth Centers was granted $25,000 for the CYC Maker Lab, which is expanding its facilities to expose children to professional-grade technology and equipment. The facilities will include a music and video recording studio and a Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics education program that will teach students about technology, engineering, IT and the arts through "making."