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People's State of the Union

Share your stories on Saturday, January 30th, 10:00am-11:30am, 1430 Carswell St. Baltimore, Md 21218. Refreshments will be provided. RSVP here. Between January 23-31, 2016, individuals and organizations across the U.S. will sign up to host story circles as part of The People’s State of the Union. Every January, the President delivers a State of the Union address highlighting important issues from the past year and suggesting priorities for the coming year. The People’s State of the Union is an invitation to supplement the President’s stories with our own. #PSOTU2016

We will each tell a three minute story about one of these prompts that we will share with the PSOTU poets who write a People’s State of the Union from all of our stories that they will perform on February 20:

  • Share a story you think the next President absolutely needs to hear about what is happening in Baltimore City and how is it impacting schools in your community.
  • Share a story about a time you felt a sense of belonging —or the opposite—in a school and/or community in Baltimore.

See Poetic Address 2015 here.

Click here to RSVP for #PSOTU2016

Video 2 Beginner Workshop

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This class is designed to expand on the skills people learned in their introductory TDP video workshop (if this applies). The 6 sessions will include film making techniques, experiments with a a few video genres (psa and documentary) and settings (documenting an event or discussion, interviewing in less than ideal settings) and resources on how to plan a video and tell meaningful stories. The products generated include a series of mini-video assignments that help to develop mastery of concepts and techniques.  Ideally, these mini-assignments will build toward work on a larger theme or topic. Though some participants may emerge with a polished short video, you are not expected to create a final product but rather invited to learn some building blocks in order to create more professional and meaningful work in the future or to gain skills that you can use immediately in a classroom.
Planning to attend? REGISTER HERE.

Ideally, participants will choose a larger theme that  shorter assignments could contribute to.  So, if your topic is: Charters should drop the lawsuit, then in every class you would create a piece that adds something to your topic.

Examples of topics:

  • Charters should drop their lawsuit
  • Every student at City College needs to be able to take the IB
  • Bullying in School: Young people as peace keepers
  • Students’ Bill of Rights: A Series of Dramatizations
  • Students getting a say in the assessment of their own learning
  • A good parent-teacher conference where the power and learning goes both ways
  • What parents think about school
  • Why my school needs more money

The next level (intermediate) class will be offered in spring 2016, with 6 group sessions plus one-on-one assistance focused on developing a polished final product that could screen at the TDP end-of-year event: “School Stories: The Human Face of Policy.” This intermediate class starts on February 24th and finishes on June 9. For those that want to create pieces that can be used in advocacy or professional development, we encourage participation in both sessions.

As a participant in the class you gain access to TDP’s video equipment that can be used in the classroom or for other education projects.  There is a stipend of $350 available for anyone who produces a finished product by June 9.

Schedule: 6 Wednesday sessions- Dec. 2, 9, 16 & Jan 6, 13, 20 5-7pm

Session Overview (will alter based on the interest of participants)

Class 1: How to plan a documentary.
  • Power and privilege as a filmmaker: Who are you as the video producer? If you are telling someone else’s story how are you sure they would approve?  
  • What makes for a powerful story in documentary?  Creating the narrative arc.
  • The steps: Research history and context, outline goals and narrative structure (can change but helps to determine questions), identify key players/interviewees, determine shooting style, identify broll, editing, titles or narrator, finishing.
  • Assignment- create your documentary plan (template provided)

Class 2: The Art of the Interview
  • Shooting Techniques- sound, interviewee placement, light, talk room, shots
  • How to make a story from interviews
  • Assignment- conduct a short interview

Class 3: PSA’s:
  • Watching samples and decoding for audience and  message and analyzing technique
  • Techniques for how to shoot a dramatization
  • Storyboards and shot lists
  • Design your own PSA
  • Assignment: Shooting PSA using in camera edits as much as possible

Class 4: Editing and broll
  • Edit PSA or interview in class
  • Assignment- Finish editing

Class 5: Finishing touches
  • Watch PSA’s or edited interview and examine for quality of sound, image, creativity, narrative arc, message
  • Add titles, music, fades, audio levels
  • Assignment: Document a class or important meeting.

Class 6: Video as assessment. Explore frameworks that could be used to analyze the footage shot in the assignment so that video might help teachers and students reflect, and/or meet assessment goals.

Workshop--Social Justice Curriculum Writing Workshops

Join Our inquiry-to-action-group (ITAG)

This ITAG is an opportunity for 6-8 teachers to research and implement a social justice unit plan to be published using a peer-review process (similar to the Chicago Grassroots Curriculum). Building on the curriculum planning work begun during the TDP Summer Institute, teachers get together in interest/subject area groups to discuss details of protocols they are using in their classrooms, share student projects, research useful resources, and invite local experts and community leaders to join their discussions. The goal is for teachers to find common ground in their day-to-day classroom work, and to find ways to collaborate more deeply in inter-school projects and organizing efforts. Participants may earn a stipend of up to $500. The whole project will take approximately 45 hours from early October to mid-December. Participants in the TDP Summer Curriculum Workshop have priority for this workshop:

Curriculum Workshop to discuss research, original source documents, readings, and pedagogy Individual planning and preparation of curriculum with peer feedback online Documenting implementation, refining, publishing to share online, at conferences, as school-based PD

Limited space available. Register here.

Education Advocacy Follow-Up Session II

July 30

9AM-3PM DREAM HOUSE 1430 CARSWELL ST., 21218

This workshop is an opportunity for 8-10 teachers and education advocates to get focused assistance on their writing skills for the purpose of reflection and advocacy. Participants will engage in peer feedback during the different stages of research and writing and analyze examples of blogs for writing styles and effectiveness of message.

Participants will also do research into specific education reform issues as they apply to Baltimore and help work on building our grassroots education activist network.

Finally, participants will practice interviewing each other to learn interviewing techniques.

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School Stories: What Just Happened to me? Follow-Up Session II

July 31

12:30pm-2pm Dream House 1430 Carswell St., 21218

Thinking deeply about strange and con ict-ridden incidents in the classroom as a way to develop our re ective practice.

This “story-as-re ection process” using the Critical Response Process is geared toward teachers at any stage of their careers who want to talk over how to use reflection to dig deeper into classroom practice and how our educational values get expressed in the minute-to-minute decisions we make. The goal is mostly to encourage and support each other’s personal reflections on our classrooms for the purpose of improving our practice, getting closer to students, colleagues or communities in order to improve our teaching and connections.

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The past is never gone Follow-Up Session II

July 24

9am-3pm Dream House 1430 Carswell St., 21218

Develop curriculum that helps students learn, within the con nes of a curricular mandate, how their neighborhoods have been transformed by sytematically racist policies over the years.

This curriculum-focused workshop invites participants to bring the materials, books, sources and ideas they have used to expose students to critical thinking about the history of race and neighborhoods within Baltimore. We will ask questions about how to construct curriculum from both and historical events/policies--curriculum that can be used for di erent age groups and to teach di erent subjects. We will share problems we have encountered with respect to curricular mandates, debate the most salient and engaging events and the messages they provide, share classroom protocols that work to engage all students, and set up an on-going forum for exchanging curriculum plans and doing collaborative eld work on this vital topic.

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Education Advocacy Follow-Up Session I

July 23

9am-3pm Dream House 1430 Carswell St., 21218

This workshop is an opportunity for 8-10 teachers and education advocates to get focused assistance on their writing skills for the purpose of reflection and advocacy. Participants will engage in peer feedback during the different stages of research and writing and analyze examples of blogs for writing styles and effectiveness of message.

Participants will also do research into specific education reform issues as they apply to Baltimore and help work on building our grassroots education activist network.

Finally, participants will practice interviewing each other to learn interviewing techniques.

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WHAT JUST HAPPENED TO ME?

June 29

9pm-3pm, dream house 1430 carswell street, 21218

Thinking deeply about strange and conflict-ridden incidents in the classroom as a way to develop our reflective practice.

This story-as-reflection workshop is geared toward teachers at any stage of their careers who want to talk over how to use reflection to dig deeper into who we are in the classroom, and how our educational values get expressed in the minute-to-minute decisions we make. The goal is mostly to encourage and support each other’s personal reflections on our classrooms for the purpose of improving our practice, getting closer to students, and finding a perspective with which to deal with stuff that just doesn’t make sense. There is the option for participants to keep meeting during the summer and school year. A set of readings and reflection guidelines will be provided, but participants are also encouraged to contribute their own materials to share with others.

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Register here!

EDUCATION ADVOCACY

July 1

9AM-3PM, DREAM HOUSE 1430 CARSWELL STREET, 21218

Telling school and neighborhood stories in writing and in video so other people will read/view them and so you won’t get fired.

In this story workshop we will all practice writing stories and doing short audio or video recordings to capture stories about schools and neighborhoods and about the relationship between them. The purpose is to improve our own storytelling abilities, to learn more about how to ethically and safely elicit stories from other people, and how to “publish” our stories. TDP, in conjunction with other partners, will continue gathering stories (in writing, audio and video) over the summer. We will discuss how the recording of a collection of individual stories can lead to the formation a larger counter-narrative about a school wide, systemic or neighborhood issue.

This larger narrative is controlled by the people telling the stories and can serve to replace the accepted narrative about educational failure with dreams about the schools and neighborhoods we deserve. This workshop will discuss how to collect the stories, build a team and instigate massive yet focused change.

 Register here!

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Video Workshop: How to Make Videos in Your Classroom

august 4&6

9am-3pm, dream house 1430 Carswell street, 21218

This two-day intensive workshop led by Wide Angle Media www.wideanglemedia.org will provide teachers and other TDP associates with the skills to make their own videos either with students in their classrooms, or with other education activists. We use iPads and other classroom-friendly equipment and learn editing tricks on iMovie. This equipment can be borrowed from TDP for classroom projects during the school year.

Space for this valuable workshop is limited, so register early!!!

TDP FILM WORKSHOP FLYER

The Reflective Teacher

Tuesday August 13 5pm-6:30pm Dream House 1430 Carswell St., 21218

Join us for dinner, stories about problems in schools, and structured reflection.  One or two people each month will share their problem of practice and participate in a structured reflection process that provides substantive feedback, promotes a sense of mutual support, and deepens practice for all participants.

Future Dates:

Tuesday September 17 Tuesday October 8 Tuesday November 5

TDP Fall Calendar of Events

 

Film Series- Slavery By Another Name

SlaveryByAnotherNameArt5.21.2015 6pm-8pm

"Slavery By Another Name challenges one of Americas most cherished assumptions the belief that slavery in the US ended with Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation by telling the harrowing story of how in the South, a new system of involuntary servitude took its place with shocking  force."

90 minutes

This film may be if interest to teachers and community members who seek to learn about the history of the prison industrial complex as well as how its history informs contemporary policy.

Let us know you're coming!

Movie Night for Teachers

SLAVERY BY ANOTHER NAME

Slavery by Another Name is a 90-minute documentary that challenges one of Americans’ most cherished assumptions: the belief that slavery in this country ended with the Emancipation Proclamation. The film tells how even as chattel slavery came to an end in the South in 1865, thousands of African Americans were pulled back into forced labor with shocking force and brutality. It was a system in which men, often guilty of no crime at all, were arrested, compelled to work without pay, repeatedly bought and sold, and coerced to do the bidding of masters. Tolerated by both the North and South, forced labor lasted well into the 20th century.

For most Americans this is entirely new history. Slavery by Another Name gives voice to the largely forgotten victims and perpetrators of forced labor and features their descendants living today.

See EVENTS page to sign up