| Advanced Search |
Knowledge SectionsE-magazinesThe CI PartnersClassifiedsAbout Us |
Average Rating: no ratings submitted
Educational Video Center - New York City, USACountry
United States
Regions
Global, Africa, North America
Programme SummaryCommunication StrategiesEVC uses face-to-face training to empower youth and members of the NYC community with media-related skills so that they might communicate in creative ways about the issues that impact their lives and put them at risk. EVC's methodology of media education brings together the traditions of student-centered progressive education and independent community documentary making. EVC media educators aim to:
The idea is that, through the process of creating their own documentaries, young people experience the entire city as a learning space. A project researched, scripted, shot, and edited by students is designed to engage them in a creative group learning experience, one that is perhaps different from any other they might have in traditional school settings. The social and academic problems they carry with them to school each day, on this model, can become opportunities for research and problem solving. The hope is that their media projects will provide them with a positive and directed focus that, after hard work, will result in a concrete product that can be shared with teachers, family, and the community. Specifically, EVC offers 3 programmes:
Through these programmes, EVC students have produced over 100 documentaries on issues such as media and youth culture, gun violence, race relations, and environmental pollution. (To view clips of these tapes, or to purchase them, visit EVC's screening room). To guide media educators hoping to draw on EVC's experiences, various publications are available for download in PDF format on the EVC website. These resources include classroom curricula, research papers, viewer guides, production handbooks, and articles on teaching youth media. Development IssuesYouth, Media Education. Key PointsIn 2001, the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities honoured EVC with the Coming Up Taller Award, presented to 10 cultural organisations in the country. EVC's youth-produced documentaries have been broadcast on the NBC, ABC, and PBS television networks. The videos have won more than 100 awards nationally and internationally, including an Emmy. PartnersSupport for EVC is provided by: The Robert Bowne Foundation, Child Welfare Fund, Frank Crystal and Co., The Green Family Foundation, Health Plus, The Estate of Isabel Johnson Hiss, JPMorgan Chase, The Janet Stone Jones Foundation, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Met Life/Learning Matters Inc., National Alliance of Media Arts and Culture, The Youth Initiatives Program of the Open Society Institute, Social Venture Partners NYC, The Tides Foundation - Mendel McCormack Fund, The New York City Department of Education, The New York State Council on the Arts (Arts in Education Program), the National Endowment for the Arts, and the US Department of Education. ContactSteven Goodman
Executive Director, Educational Video Center SourceLetter from Jen Meagher dated January 12 2004, forwarded to the Communication Initiative; and EVC site. Placed on the Communication Initiative site February 12 2004 Last Updated February 12 2004 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTED |
Special FocusJournalist/Reader Connection
What are the best possibilities for journalist-readership connections? (you may choose more than one; please add clarifying comments)
|