Literature Media & Communications 2011/12

Page 1

Building the 21st century writer

Literary Media & Communications at Duke Ellington School of the Arts


Literary Media & Communications at Duke Ellington School of the Arts Traditionally, a writer is viewed as the recluse who hides in the corner with ink-stained fingers, feverishly pouring his soul out onto scraps of paper. At Duke Ellington’s Literary Media and Communications (LMC) department, we train our students to work within an ensemble to become “citizen writers”. This collaborative process allows them to share ideas, exchange constructive criticism, and hone their individual talents. The modern writer must be able to move seamlessly between social networking, multimedia platforms, and the printed page, always anticipating the next innovation and ever mindful of how their words contribute to the world in which they live. From Shakespeare to Sanchez to Sapphire, LMC students are grounded in the best of all literature, placing their work on a cutting edge that is smart, sophisticated, and decidedly 21st century.

Beyond reading & writing. An important element in the Ellington LMC department is to mirror society through interaction with the larger community — by any means necessary. Whether through performance, play readings, poetry slams, blogging, filmmaking, street interviews, or even getting up on a soapbox, there is no such thing at LMC as letting the grass grow under your feet.

“As writers all we can do is fail. And it is within that failure that we see the possibility of success.” 2

— James Baldwin


contents

Introduction......................................................................................4 Creative Writing + Expository Writing................................................5 Journalism + Lifestyle Journalism.......................................................6 Media (filmmaking, film studies + scriptwriting.................................7 New Media.......................................................................................8 Playwriting........................................................................................9 Poetry..............................................................................................10 “Last Kiss (gone but not forgotten)” by Lauryn Nesbitt, 11th grader, a poetic tribute to the late Susan Avant, who was Chair of the Science Department at Duke Ellington School of the Arts.............................11 Projects......................................................................................12-14 Awards............................................................................................15 “The 21st Century Writer” by Mark Williams, Chair of the Literary Media & Communications Department......................................16-17 Faculty.............................................................................................19 Partners...........................................................................................20

Opposite page, clockwise from top right Students document the all-school collaborative, Dreamgirls; 11th grader Lauryn Nesbitt films legendary musician Herbie Hancock; Eleventh grader Miriam Rappaport-Gow prepares for a performance at the Corcoran; 12th grader Raven Reese observes the Dreamgirls rehearsal.

3


INTRODUCTION WE WELCOME YOU TO THE DUKE ELLINGTON SCHOOL OF THE ARTS LITERARY MEDIA and COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT, WHERE OUR MISSION IS:

The Literary Media and Communications Department’s (LMC) goal is singular, to train its student in the different strands of communication (written, verbal and new media), considering how this translates to the marketplace. This department necessitates interdisciplinarity, including, but not limited to LMC, Theater, Museum Studies, Visual Arts, and TDP (recording studio). Our aim is to dismantle the sometimes self-indulgent, and strictly cathartic workshop model of writing and leave in its place a department that imparts to its students the notion that they are writing to work, rather than just writing to write. The department has five strands, that are product driven, products that range from performance, to print, archival, to design, research to debate, and within the strands, culminating work both within the Duke Ellington School of the Arts (copy and content for the Ellington website, developing archives of Ellington work, creating scripts in the areas of performance/performance marketing, writing copy and public service announcements, serving as viable extension/support mechanism of and for Ellington Fund, to name a few), and outside the context of the school.

Above, from left: LMC student ensemble, the R Street Collective, prepares for a performance at the Corcoran; LMC students visit National Public Radio HQ.

4


CREATIVE WRITING + EXPOSITORY WRITING

EXPOSITORY WRITING The Expository component of the course walks students through the process of writing a concise, correctly formatted essay with a clear focus, thesis and argument. Students begin with a dual program of Theory and Practical exercises, starting with the pre-writing steps to planning an essay and time management, through to the thesis statement, the body of an essay and revision. Students also take units on developing critical thought, proofreading, creating effective sentences and word logic. There is also a unit on addressing the reader-writer relationship, and recognising the different essay strategies, from Argumentation to Persuasion and Narration.

CREATIVE WRITING The Creative Writing unit of the course introduces students to the elements that go into creating strong fiction, memoir and creative non-fiction. Students look a t a r e a s s u ch a s d i a l o g u e , e x p o s i t i o n a n d characterisation, as well as the crucial aspects of plot, emotion and imagery, as they learn how these elements are weaved together in order to convey themes. The course introduces students to the practice of rigorously re-drafting work. Students are forced to address the fear of self-editing, as the course helps students realize that though revision is arduous, it is ultimatley rewarding.

10th and 11th graders engage in a “speed dating” creative writing exercise.

unable to fully grasp the faults in their technique, and at times the fundamentals of writing. While students will be encouraged to draw on their experiences, oftentimes this inability to create separation between the writer and the craft of writing causes work to suffer. Students learn how to communicate an idea, as opposed to writing for the sake of one’s self.

The Creative Writing aspect of the Literary Media & Communications department adopts a “quality not quantity” approach, focusing on the constant revision of small pieces of work to bring them up to a publishable standard. Once the techniques of writing are mastered, students can go on to apply these disciplines to larger As beginners, young writers often encounter the issue of pieces of work. being “too closely tied to the work” leaving them

5


JOURNALISM + LIFESTYLE JOURNALISM JOURNALISM The aim of the Journalism course is to introduce students to some of the fundamental aspects of journalism and encourage students to engage in the news, the business of news and current affairs. Students look at the principles of writing the news, while considering the history of journalism and the state of journalism today in the information age. Students learn what makes a news story newsworthy, what motivates people to pick up newspapers, news agenda and the news markets. Students compare news coverage as it’s delivered through different media. Classroom topics include the reliability of sources, the purpose of news headlines, and the elements that go into making a strong headline. The units will introduce students to the divisional roles in news, editorial, sub-editing and copy-writing as well as the role of photography within news. Students will have the chance to come up with their own headlines for newspapers as well as the opportunity to edit work. Students will learn to understand news bias, the ethics of journalism, freedom of speech versus the right to privacy plus the dangers of libel. Students will be encouraged to come to terms with their own bias, allowing them to have an open approach to cultivating journalistic objectivity. The Literary Media & Communications Department’s News Journalism program is delivered in partnership with the Washington Post’s Young Journalist Development Program and George Washington University’s Prime Movers Program.

LIFESTYLE JOURNALISM The Lifestyle Journalism unit of the course gives the students the opportunity to create substantive pieces of written journalism. Our fledgling journalists explore ideas personal to them while being introduced to the likes of investigative journalism, fashion, music and sports writing, as well as trade publications. The course outlines theoretical approaches to feature writing such as the use of descriptive narrative, color, interview techniques and research. Students have the opportunity to learn hands-on as they edit and manage the school’s lifestyle magazine Daisy James.

Counterclockwise from top left: 12th grader Asha Shannon interviews Corbin Johnson, percussionist for the all-school collaborative production of Dreamgirls; 12th grader Allantra Lewis interviews Head of School Rory Pullens; 9th grader Asia Alston puts a question to Secretary of Education Arne Duncan in the NPR studio during a live radio question and answer session.

6


MEDIA (FILM STUDIES, FILMMAKING & SCRIPTWRITING) Media I is an introductory course for second year high school students wanting to learn and acquire the tools and elements necessary for designing a screenplay for the motion picture. The student will be introduced to the scriptwriting software Final Draft, its interface, and will come to understand the screenplay’s function to serve as a vital blueprint in the motion picture process. Students who are enrolled in Media I will be charged with governing the scriptwriting aspect of a collaborative final project with students in Media II. Micro-production companies (3 to 4 students) are formed, for the purpose of generating two, 3 - 5 minute motion picture with sound narrative works. Media II is an elaborative, thinking course, designed for third year students to explore the many facets of film and cinema. Through critical analysis, they will learn how to deconstruct images portrayed onscreen. Through ongoing class discussions, the student will come to know the ecology of film, how that comprises film culture, and what it means to read a film. Students who are enrolled in Media II will control and over- see the production process of a collaborative final project with students in Media I. The Literary Media and Communications Department (LMC) endeavors to foster a legacy in which the creative training herein will prepare students for the role of 21st Century Writer and Artist. Subjects Covered: Narrative — The Idea — The Premise — The Treatment — The Final Draft Interface Script Format — Character — Dialogue — Setup/Sequence — Plot Points Film Genres — Narrative — Film Viewing — Documentary — Representation — Film Spectator Film History — Film Theory — Hollywood Film — Independent Film — Black Film International Cinema — Film Production — Film Distribution — Film as Social Media/Social Action

11th grader Danielle Kent shoots the making of the Dreamgirls Documentary.

From top left, downwards: A Short by 10th grader Madison Hartke-Weber; A Short by 9th grader Barrett Smith, 12th grader Sierra-Reaux Mcneil presenting at the Ted X Penn Quarter; screenshot by 10th grader Ky’lend Adams; 4 Women, A visual interpretation of Nina Simone's song by the same name by 9th graders Lucy Freshour, Lauryn Nesbitt, Dayanira Hough, Danielle Kent and Darian Jones.

7


NEW MEDIA This course is intended as a first level media course required for all students in the Literary Media & Communications Department at Duke Ellington school of the Arts. Innovation continues to occur on the Internet at an extremely lively pace. Keeping up with the speed of innovation and maintaining a familiarity with the most recent tools and capabilities is handy in some professions and absolutely critical in others. This course is designed to help you understand and effectively use a variety of “web 2.0″ technologies including blogs, RSS, wikis, social bookmarking tools, photo sharing tools, mapping tools, audio and video podcasts, and screen casts. Students gain practical experience in literary publishing through work on Daisy James Online, the Duke Ellington School’s lifestyle magazine. Students solicit and evaluate work for publication, and then gain practical experience in editing, layout, and production of the journal, as well as in publicizing and promoting the finished product. The course includes an introduction to the larger literary market, and instruction in preparing creative work for submission and publication. The classes challenge students to think creatively about the potential of web video, and connect the dots between open technology, creative expression, and media democracy. Students gain practical experience in online video publishing through work on the LMCTV YouTube video channel and LMCTV Tumblr blog. Exploring principles of multimedia production, online storytelling tools, social media and content management, students learn to populate a reported site, promote it and maintain it beyond class.

TRANSMEDIA This course explores the cultural and commercial context of transmedia (or “crossmedia”) storytelling as a form of writer’s craft and learn about the skills and knowledge required to create it. Students will view and analyze examples of transmedia (genres/styles), learn about core components (form) and use a workshop approach to produce a short transmedia ‘treatment’ of an existing text/world. Students will identify and articulate effective, engaging and creative transmedia storytelling techniques in their own work and evaluate their a p p r o a ch e s a g a i n s t p r o f e s s i o n a l e x p e c t a t i o n s a n d competencies.

8


PLAYWRITING Students will be expected to consider the form, content, style, analysis, construct, and construction of a play. The arrival point of this class is for students to write, and mount a staged reading of a full-length, one act play. Students will also be expected to submit work from class to at least one of LMC’s “Coffeehouses” The class is broken down into the following, primary areas:

hy Elling hy EllingtonW tonW ng

yE

W

gt on

llin

gto n

Why Ellingt Ellington

Why Ellingt ton ng

Why

gt llin in

n gto

lin El

hy W

yE

g

W ton

g Ellin

hy nW gt o llin E hy

in Ell

hy W on

y Elli Wh

l

hy

hy Ell ingtonWhy Ellington Wh yE

y EllingtonWhy

hy

nW gto

nW hy E

hy

on

Wh

hy Ellingto

Wh y El ling ton

gto n

tonWhy El

llin

hy Ell ing to

S

gto

ling t n

lingtonWhy EllingtonWhy Ellin

Elli

Ellin gton Why

on W

ory

h

EllingtonW

hy St or yW

to yS Wh

yWh

ng tonW

tonWh ng

lli yE

tor

yWhy

S to

hyS ryW

to ry

Why

y St ryWh y Sto Wh Story

W

yS StoryWh

oryW hyS t ory

Why

hy or yW

yW hy St

hy E l

on

hy Ellingt

nW

Stor

o ry St

to r

r y hy W yW hy ryW Sto

Why

hy

yS

tor y hy S

S toryW

Sto ryWh

W tory

oryWhy

r yWhy Sto

yWhy

gto

ryWhy StoryW

toryWhy S to

tickets can be purchased via box office or reservations to: mwill209@yahoo.com

hy StoryWhy StoryWhy StoryWhy StoryWhy StoryWhy Story

y tor

tor yWhy

W hy

W

h

Why St or

S hy

yS

Wh yS to ry

y

Why

tor

Wh yS

tor yS

tory

ryW hy S

nW hy

y

Sto r

Why

tory

yS

h yStor yWhy StoryW hy StoryWhy Story Wh y S tor

St

ry Wh y S to S toryWh

hy Sto

S Why

o ryWhy

y StoryWhy

W tor y

St hy

y StoryWh StoryWh

W

StoryWhy

StoryWhy

ryW

y St oryWhy ryWh

yS y Wh Stor

o hy St y St ory W S toryW h

S tory Why S to

EllingtonWhy Ellingt onWhy

o gt

or yW hy S tory Why

y Ellingto

gto EllingtonW llin hy

Wh y Sto r yWhy Stor

yE

yWh y St

nWh yE

to ry

lingt o

hy Ellin

hy S

nWh y Ellington Why El

yW h

Elli ngto

gto ngto nWhy Elli

Ellin gton Why

h gtonW

tonW hy

y Wh

to r

tonWhy

llin

hy Elli n

W

hy yW

hy S

Why EllingtonWhy Elling ton

y yWh Stor

y S to ryWhy

hy ry W Sto

y ingtonWh

Ell in

ling y El

W ton lling gtonWhy E

hy E onW y Ellingt

W ry to Why S toryWhy S

yWh y Why Stor Why Stor

hy StoryW

Sto

ry Why

ry Sto

yS to

ryW hy

Sto ryW

hy Sto ryWhy S to

r St o hy yW tor yS yWh Stor hyhySto W ryW h

yW

S hy

ry to

ry Why

Wh

Story W hy

tor yS

h yW

yS

Why Story

hy Elling ton onW Wh

r to

y y Sto y Stor hy StoryWh h y Wh y Story y Sto ryWhy Stor yWh

W

tonWhy EllingtonWhy y Elling Wh

yW hy Stor y Why S tor

St or yWhy

gto nWhy EllingtonWhy El

n Elli gto nW hy hy onW

tor

tor yWhy

Ellin nWhy Ellingt gto

yWh y St oryW hy S

nWh y

yW hy S

y

llingtonWhy Ellingto

to r

r

E nWhy gto

gt on W hy Elli n

W

nW h

n Elli

y StoryWhy

Why StoryW hy

llin

yE Wh ton

hy S r yWhy toryW hy Sto ry W hy Story hy StoryW Why S hy W or y Sto St ryW ryWhy hy Sto hy Story Why StoryW

hy StoryW

g lin

o

or yW hy

y El Wh

Ell

Sto r

E hy

y Ellington

Why

or

ryWhy StoryWhy Stor yWhy Stor yWhy StoryWhy

ryWh y St ory

ton

n

gt llin yE

W hy E

Ellington Student Center 3500 R Street NW Tickets are $20 yS

yW hy Sto ry Why StoryWhy StoryWhy StoryWhy StoryWhy StoryW

Why StoryWhy StoryWhy Sto

toryW yS

y Sto

h W ry y St o StoryWhy Story h

r

y ryWh Why Sto

ing ton Wh y Ellington

Why

lin gt

y nWh

Elli

Why

y Sto StoryWh

r

y Ellingto

hy tonWhy hy Ellin ling tonW llingtonW Elli y El Elling Why E ngt Wh Why gton on ton Ellin W ling ington y El Why y E ll Wh gton onWh ton Ellin ingt lling Why hy Ell ton hy E onW nW lling ingt hy E lingto y Ell nW onWhy El nWh tonWhy Ellingt llingto gtonWhy E ling llington hy EllingtonWhy E W y El n Wh gto Wh llin yE nW hy EllingtonWh hy y EllingtonW Ellin ingtonWh n gtonW y Ell hy Ellingto Wh Elling nWh ton Why gto W Ellin llin Why gtonWhy Ell ton ington lingto nWh Elling y Elli hy n gtonW Ellin hy nW ngtonWhy EllingtonWhy Ellin Why Elli Elling E nW gt lingto gtonWhy llington hy E Why y El llington onWh

h

y tor

Why Stor yWhy

Wh yS to

g

ton Wh yE ll

El

EllingtonWhy Ellin l gtonWh EllingtonWhy E y Ellin nWhy gton ingto Why EllingtonWhy Ell

llin

Why ton

y Wh

hy yW t or

Sto

ryWh

Wh ory y St

t or yS

y Stor r yWh to yS y Wh

hy yW

r Sto

h

y StoryW hy StoryW hy Stor yW hy StoryWhy S toryWh y StoryWhy S toryWh y Stor yWhy St or yW hy S S to r yWhy Story Wh tory Why St St oryW hy StoryWhy or yW hy StoryWhy or yWhy

Ell ing t

l

Wh ton lingtonW ing

y StoryWhy Stor yWhy Wh Sto hy S r yW W r yW hy S tor yW hy St or y Wh y S oryWhy t

nW

nWhy ngto

E lingtonW nWhy hy hy Ellingt onWhy EllingtonW

Why

S

Why StoryWhy

S hy ryW Sto hy W ory St hy W

in llin gtonWhy E

ry

yWhy

y Wh

y Stor Wh

or St

tor

W

St

r yW hy S

y Ellin

Why EllingtyonW h

Why

hy

yE

n

ry

oryW hy Sto

ngt o

Sto

y St

lli

nW h

Why Ellington Why Elli

ryW hy

Why St

E hy y EllingtonW

EllingtonWhy EllingtonWh Why ton tonW hy Elling

llin Why E gtonWhy EllingtonWhy Elling ton ton ing Wh y El hy Ellingt o tonW l g Ellin

hy

Sto

oryWhy StoryWhy Why St y StoryWhyWh

hy nW gto

o to nWhy Ellin to g n

y

Sto

yW y StoryWhy Stor hy StoryWhy StoryW Wh hy tory hy S

llin

n

ing

St oryW

lingt y El Wh

Ell

hy

hy W

hy W t on ing

gt on

Why St oryW

hy St y Wh

ry

l hy El

in

S to ry

ryW Sto

yE Wh

n

StoryWhy

Sto hy W ory y St yWh

Elli

StoryWhy

hy nW gto

hy Elli

lin g

S to ryWhy

tor yWhy Story Why hy S S yW

r yWhy

y

Why

y or St

yWh y Sto

y

or Why St y Story ryWh Sto

hy

St or yW

yWh

tonW

Why

Wh

ll

nWhy EllingtonW to hy ng Ellin g

El

Why

Thursday, December 3rd & Friday, December 4th @ 7:30pm

Stor yWhy Stor yWhy StoryWhy hy StoryW yWhy Stor hy ryW to yS Wh

W llington

hy S

Elling

or y

yWhy

n

St

r Sto

oryWhy Story y St Wh

Elli

yWhy

yWh y Sto ryW hy

Why

yW

hy nW llingto

or

or

yWhy

tonW

St

h W

or hy St oryW St hy

ing Ell hy ton W lling

St or yWhy

yWhy St

ryW

E hy W

hy

StoryWhy Stor

y Wh

on gt in

or yW

yW hy StoryW

y Stor

W hy

Ell

St

hy

Why hy StoryWhy Stor yWhy Stor y

hy S tor y

Wh yS to

Wh

to nW

nW hy

hy E llin gt o

W Why EllingtonWhy EllingtonWhy Ellington

hy nW

Why Sto ryW

yW hy Sto r yW

ry

Elli

Ell ing

El

to

hy

y

yWhy Stor Stor

i Ell

ng

hy St or yW

to

ryWhy Stor yWh Sto yS hy to

hy nW to ing Ell

Why El li

W hy

g lin

Wh yS tor

hy

Ellington

llin llin gtonWhy E

on gt

or y W

y Wh

in g ton

hy St

Why

yW

ton in Wh Ell y EllingtonWhy

St o r

nW hy E

tor yWhy

llingtonWhy

nWh y Ellin

Why

hy nW to ng

W

hy S

gtonWh Ell

yW hy Sto ry W

ling tonWhy

Wh yE lling tonWhy

St o r

hy El

Elli ng to n

ory Wh y

gto

Ell

Why Ellin gt onW Elli hy hy E llingtonW Why Ellin gto n

hy Story Wh y St

nW

hy

gt on

ryWhy St oryWhy Stor yWhy Sto ryWhy StoryWhy Stor yWh y StoryWhy StoryWhy Sto r y W hy y Sto Sto ryWh y Stor y W hy S tor yW

yW

li

St or hy

El

oryW

hy hy El lingt nWhy EllingtonW o

Stor yWh

St oryW hy St o ryWhy Story Why St ory Why

St hy yW

llin gtonW

r Sto

hy Elling nW to

Ellington Why hy W Elli on ng tonW

hy ryW S to

Why Ellin gtonWhy y Ellin EllingtonWhy Ellingto gtonW hy Ell gtonWhy E llington Why EllingtonWhy Ellin nWhy Ellingto llingto yE nWh gto lin y El y Ellingto Wh nWh on gto llin yE Wh on

gt

W hy y St ory

hy yW

hy ry W

yW

Sto hy yW

Stor

h S tor y

yWh y

hy St oryW

Ellingt onWh

llin

Stor

S tor

to r yW

in Ell hy W on gt

EllingtonWhy Ellingto Why nWhy

yE Wh

Wh Story

Sto ryWhy S to ryWhy S t oryWhy

yS

ngton

llington hy E Wh yE onWhy E llingt llin W on Wh y

Why Ellington

y Why

ryWhy y Sto

hy Stor yW hy

Wh

Sto r yW hy

y Story Wh

to ryWh

StoryW h y St o ry W

S tory

Why

hy StoryWhy Stor W ry to

to r hy S r yW y Sto

Story Why

W hy

S tory

Sto ry

yW Stor hy Sto hy ry

yWh

hy StoryW

y Wh

ryWhy

y Sto yWh Stor

y Stor

yS Wh

S tory

StoryWhy Sto

StoryWhy StoryWhy S hy y StoryW StoryWh

hy ryW

yWh

Why

toryWhy Sto tor r yWhy Stor yWhy Sto

toryWhy StoryWhy StoryWhy StoryWhy

Sto Why

Stor

S toryWhy

tory hy S ryW y Sto

r yW

ory Why

Story

hy yW

to

hy St W

W h

y El

Why Ellingto o nWh ton lingt y Elli ng ngtonWhy El

St

ry

StoryWh hy

hy St or y

yE

Wh

hy W

t oryW

W hy S

S hy

ry Wh y S tory

yW

hy Stor y

Stor

toryW hy St o

Why

Why S

ry

S to ryW hy Stor yW

Sto

Why S

Why

y Sto

hy

hy toryWhy StoryW yS Wh h y Stor y ryW to

ry

r Sto hy ryW

?

Why Elli

a series of staged readings of scenes written by LMC senior playwrights. ryW Directed by Jessica Burgess, Artistic Director of the Inkwell Theatre, Produced by Mark A. Williams, Chair, Literary Media and Communications W

y StoryWhy S Wh tory

W hy Stor y toryW yS

ry

Sto

r to

S hy

Why StoryWhy

Wh

W

toryWhy StoryWh hy S y Sto Why StoryW r yW toryWhy Sto hy t hy S ryWh Why S StoryW y Sto S yWhy Stor yWhy

hy

ry Sto

oryWh y Sto r yW

hy S to

hy E

yW hy St

E Why Elli ngtonWhy EllingtonWhy

gt onW

toryWhy StoryWhy Stor yWhy StoryWhy StoryWhy S Stor

on

hy Ell in

ryWhy Sto

yWhy St Stor hy ryW

or St hy yW

hy ryW Sto Why tory hy S yW

y or Why StoryWhy St tory hy S or yW

t or yS Wh

ryWhy StoryWh hy Sto y Sto yW r yW

Wh y El ling ton

or St

l lingtonWhy El ington Why EllingtonWhy Ellin gt

gt on W

llingtonWhy Ellin gton Wh gto y El nW hy E lin lling ton gt W hy on E

STORY h

Why El gton llin

hy Elli W ngtonWhy hy Ell EllingtonWhy EllingtonWhy Elli gton ington n

Elli always be told by the hunter"..African proverb hy W

tory

Additionally, LMC has a vibrant partnership with the Horwitz Family Fund in developing and growing LMC’s Playwriting component. The partnership allows not only for developing student plays but also working with a professional theater in developing the work, creating a school-wide competition culminating in a significant scholarship for the winner of the competition, and a staged reading of the winning submission, mounted by theater professionals.

WHY

"Until lions have their historians, tales of hunting will

Why Story

-First Advisory – Character/Character Development, Six Elements of Aristotle, as well as Aristotle’s, “Poetics”, Compelling Characters, and Primacy of Plot/Action vs. Character -Second Advisory – Monologue/Dialogue, Voice, Tone, Mood Setting, Action, Language, and Rhythm -Third Advisory – Ten Minute, and Twenty Minutes -Fourth Advisory – One act, and Staged Reading

Literary Media and Communications presents A Dinner Theater

9


POETRY Among the prerequisites for the poetry course is a positive attitude and the willingness to reexamine your work. This course asks students to examine poetry with a “new set of tools”, and take into consideration the speaker's intent, tone, physical, and psychological details—all of which will help their poems perform well on the page. Students are introduced to various published poets and poems and are encouraged to analyze these poems with the very tools they will use to critique their work. In addition to utilizing these new tools, there is a unit on publishing. The young poets on the program are provided with online resources to help inform them about the poet's market. Teachers discuss the advantages of publishing poems online vs. in print publications as well as writing query letters as that first step towards submitting work to journals. The outcomes for the poetry course are to improve students’ writing, creative and critical thinking skills. Through this course, students will also learn about the importance of advocacy, which, according to poet and activist Martin Espada, involves poets “speaking on behalf of those without an opportunity to be heard.” So far, the students have written poems about the "underdogs" in their lives. Later in the course, they'll write persona poems in the voice of a hit-and-run victim or injured bystander, learning how empathy moves readers to action. Through in-class recitation of their poems and the R Street Collective, a performing arm of the Literary Media Department, students will improve their speaking and performance skills. In a July 2007 interview with Bill Moyer, Espada explained the use of poetry in building students’ confidence that benefits them beyond the classroom. “Poetry will help them survive to the extent that poetry helps them maintain their dignity, helps them maintain their sense of selfrespect,” the poet said. “They will be better suited to defend themselves in the world.”

10

From top: The R-Street Collective takes a bow after their performance at the Corcoran. 12th graders Allantra Lewis and Diamante Dorsey receive a standing ovation at their graduation day performance.


Last Kiss

LAST KISS (GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN): LAURYN NESBITT

God said Thank you You have devoted your life to the betterment of young people Accepted the challenge of enlightening those that think they know everything Clock out for the last time Job well done You never took no for an acceptable answer and excuses were mere mountains of nothingness Stood on you own two feet With cain in hand You were monumental My very own life size hero I didn’t have to go to toys-r-us to buy What extraordinary looks like Hidden in the mahogany sands of your cheeks was the cheat sheet to any test this world hands you SMILE Try not to complain on your worst days Because there are better days coming You are legendary in these hallways I tried to give you roses while you could still smell them but you weren’t in school on Valentines Day This morning I walked the same routine you walked for more then twenty years Hoping I could grasp wisdom from your foot prints They tell me your in a better place now But what better place then your classroom Your heart beat synchronies with the voice of a child reading a textbook Held out your soul and even when we gave up You never stopped believing in us People say you always set down because of your foot I knew it was because you were hiding your wings Always told me to push in my chair so the possibility of me having some too wouldn’t escape The pain is over for you now You have gone to a place where there is no pain And that’s good I guess But the pain of your absence if present today Today I watched a grown man weep Watched as someone cried beauty out of a violin For one day everyone’s favorite color was purple Royalty Queen your absence is a wound that may never heal properly Dear God There is a lady be the name of Ms. Avant on her way up there Please make sure she has the biggest black roller chair so she can comfortably watch over me Amen The numbness, disbelief, tears, questions, more tears, wake, funeral, and the pain Pain that will never go away I’ll always love you I’ll always miss you I’ll never forget that its ok to make frogs passes and put prayers in your tears Cry in your hand Hold them up to God And say taste this When they lay you down And close the doors of your coffin Please Finally Rest in Peace God said, Welcome home how was your trip Muah!

11


PROJECTS

R STREET COLLECTIVE The R Street Collective perform at Ted X Potomac.

The R Street Collective is the performing arm of the Literary Media Department.

Th e y h a v e p e r f o r m e d a t n u m e r o u s Washington venues, including, Busboys & Poets, TED-X Potomac, and The Fridge Art Gallery. Members of the R St. Collective are members of an ensemble, recognizing that their stories share a link with others. And it's that link, that must be shared through narrative and poetry, on stage. R St Collective members are commited to excellence, presence and intregrity. Through rehearsals, master classes and workshop R St Collective becomes a valued, performance and poetry arm of Washington DC.

The hosts of LMC’s R Street On H Street.

R STREET ON H-STREET The Duke Ellington School of the Arts’ Literary Media & Communications (LMC) Department presents a monthly premier showcase of Ellington students at the H Street Playhouse Theater. R Street Speaks provides a platform for young, metropolitan artists to share their creative works and engage with other high school students. A safe space for young people and their families, R Street Speaks strives to become a vibrant addition to Washington’s young artist community. Formerly a youth open mic housed at Ellington, R Street Speaks now curates each month’s line up, including performances from every department, ranging from live painting, to jazz, dance, and vocal talents. Thanks to our partner, H Street Playhouse and other community sponsors, this event is for young people, by young people. With the advice of an instructor, LMC students are charged with responsibilities from being producers and artistic directors to operations and marketing. R Street Speaks acts as a major learning experience to their development as arts administrators and valuable community members.

OPERATION: SOAPBOX Students collaborated to construct a project “Operation Soapbox,” a concept based on the traditional “Speaker’s Corner” in London’s Hyde Park, in which on Sunday individuals publicly debate on various issues of politics and culture. The construction of the actual Soapbox (see image), a mobile platform, includes images and works of noted African American, African and Caribbean writers and publications. Conceptually, the inclusion of these works represents a foundation from which students can stand upon, reinforcing the idea that young writers and literature today stands on basis of those writers and the works that have come before them.

12

OPERATION: SOAPBOX

Operation Soapbox at Department of Literary Media and Communications at Ellington KOYE OYEDEJI, applicant for Assistant Professor of English/African American Literature


DOCUMENTARY PROJECTS Why Ellington? Why Not Western? The Student documentary explored the history of Western High School and its evolution into Duke Ellington School of the Arts. The documentary premiered at the Literary Media and Communications Coffeehouse, in addition to this, it was screened at the Arts Club of Washington, the School of Media & Public Affairs at George Washington University and the Edmund Burke Student Film Festival, where it collected an award. The Dream Working The Dream Working explored how “the dream”, created by the founders of Duke Ellington School of the Arts over 30 years ago, has grown to encompass the creative media that defines the 21st century artist. Technology, film, and language fuse together to form a modern narrative of dreams and dreaming and the working process of achievement in the global community. The Literary Media and Communications department of Duke Ellington School of the Arts invites you to

R STREET SPEAKS: SPEAKERS SERIES

The Dream Working LMC Night at Dreamgirls

Friday, December 10, 2010 6:30 p.m. Second Floor Lobby Please join us for the premiere of “Making the Dream” an original documentary film produced by the LMC students followed by Dreamgirls at 7:30 p.m. an all-school collaborative musical to benefit the Duke Ellington School of the Arts

The Dream Working explores how the dream created by the founders of Duke Ellington School of the Arts over 30 years ago has grown to encompass the creative media that defines the 21st century artist. Technology, film, and language fuse together to form a modern narrative of dreams and dreaming and the working process of achievement in the global community.

Tickets: $25 - $35 Buy tickets online at www.ellingtonschool.org and click on “Box Office” or call 202.337.4825 Literary Media and Communications Dept. Duke Ellington School of the Arts 3500 R Street, NW • Washington, DC 20007 202.282-0123 Visit LMC online: www.lmcellington.blogspot.com

The Literary Media & Communication Department invited renowed educator, poet, writer and activist Sonia Sanchez to speak as our inaugural guest of the R Street Speaks, Speaker Series. The theme of her visit was "The Greatest Civil Rights Issue Facing the United States is Public Education" and featured a rigorous examination of this issue, starting with the premise that every person, regardless of race, religion, class, is born with the right to receive an education. Ms Sanchez spent the entire day at the school, participating in a school-wide assembly in the morning before giving a intimate reading and question and answer session to the Literary Media & Communications Department.

THE STORIES OF SONG PROJECT The National Black Programming Consortium worked with Literary Media and Communications students to harness the spirit of traditional songs of protest in a modern context, incorporating a medium that has now become ubiquitous and connects more directly with the youth of today through short-form digital video. Stories of Song was a digital literacy video training experience; after a 3-hour intensive video training session using the Flip video camera, involving instruction on both storytelling and the ethics of information sharing in a digital age, students were tasked with creating a one-take video inspired by a civil rights song and/or using a civil rights song in the public domain.

Songs of Protest Flip Video Competition Sponsored by The National Black Programming Consortium, Self Destruction : Self Destruction by Public Enemy

13


DAISY JAMES Th e L i t e r a r y M e d i a & C o m m u n i c a t i o n Department produces DAISY JAMES an Arts & Lifestyle Magazine that extends to a wider market beyond the schools walls, reflecting not just the department, but the school and youth culture in general. The magazine is a colourful cosmopolitan journal that’s bright, vibrant and reflective of DCs young heterogeneous communities. Its focus is on style, trends, music, literature, film, art, criticism, review, technology, culture plus more.

ROOM EIGHTEEN

12th grader Margaret Gushue signs a copy of her chapbook. 12th grader Caroline Hall reads from her chapbook Abuelita.

ROOM EIGHTEEN is a Literary “Zine” produced by students in the Literary Media & Communications Department. A pseudo-digital throwback to the “lo-fi” years of producing publications in your bedroom with paper, scissors and glue. ROOM EIGHTEEN exists not just as an outlet for LMC students to showcase their fiction and creative work, but also as a vehicle in which to experiment with form. Students are encouraged to push the boundaries in consideration of the limitations placed on the written word and use the likes of graphic illustration, satire and concept art to convey their messages.

R-STREET CHAPBOOK SERIES “R St. Speaks” is LMC’s poetry imprint. “R Street Speaks” attempts to showcase the literature, poetry and voices of the DC’s youth. LMC students are trained to connect with and engage disparate communities by utilizing language and narrative to construct work, across genre, that illuminates these communities. A chapbook is a small collection of poems, writings and musings. After working with local DC poets and faculty within LMC, our seniors studying history, and being immersed in writing intensive projects, are afforded the opportunity to take this body of work, in the form of, but not limited to poems, and make a concerted statement in the shape of a short book. Whether a novella, a collection of poems, a series of essays, the chapbook project is a process. Students will engage with, learn about, and ultimately produce product that reflects the publishing industry which they will enter as they continue their undergraduate/graduate, and ultimately writing careers. Students will be required to workshop poems, write book proposals, as well as scout local bookstores that might afford them shelf space.

14

THE SIDS AWARENESS PROJECT LMC has partnered with Children's Hospital and George Washington University in the development of several educational video shorts, and the development of appropriate messaging via text messaging, email, and other social media venues, to create campaign/mobilizing applications, with the goal of initiating and maintaining a dialogue amongst medical professionals and the clients they serve, particularly young people. The project highlights issues ranging from SIDS to Birth Control/ STD Awareness, Drug and Alcohol Awareness and AIDS/HIV awareness to name a few.


AWARDS Larry Neal Awards 2011 Sarai Reed (1st Prize), Zachary Clare, Reggie Conway 2010 Kyndal Brown (1st Prize), Caroline Hall (1st Prize), Jillian Burford, Margaret Gushue, Sahara Artiga-Oliver DC POET LAUREATE CONTEST 2011 Khat Patrong (1st Prize), Bridget Dease, Reginald Conway, Quadaja Herriott Excellence in Journalism Awards from Prime Movers / GWU Zachary Clare, Helen Steinecke, Laura Funderburk, Cara Racin for Documentary Short: WHY ELLINGTON? WHY NOT WESTERN? Creativity Foundation Legacy Prize Winner 2010 - Sarai Reed Arena Stage Ten Minute Play Competition Winners2009 - Madison Hartke-Weber and Diamante Dorsey 2010 - Carol Ann Collins Finalists in Parkmont Poetry Contest 2010 Dayanaira Hough, Lauryn Nesbitt, Cara Racin 2011 Reggie Conway, Miriam Rappaport-Gow 2009/10 Youth of the Year Award - 100 Black Men Dante Williams DC Youth Slam Team 2009 Diamante Dorsey 2010 Asha Shannon 2011 Asha Shannon, Lauryn Nesbitt PEN Foundation of Women Writers Scholarship Recipients 2011Asha Shannon, Miriam Rappaport-Gow Edmund Burke Film Festival Winner 2009/10 - Zachary Clare, Helen Steinecke, Laura Funderburk, Cara Racin for Documentary Short: WHY ELLINGTON? WHY NOT WESTERN? Horwitz Young Playwright Competition Winners 2009/10 Allantra Lewis 2010/11 Sara Phillips Mayor's Arts Award for Teaching - Language Arts

Mark A. Williams, chair of the Literary Media and Communications department, delivers a speech at the annual graduation ceremony.

15


THE CREATIVE ECONOMY by Mark A. Williams, Chair, Literary Media & Communications “I’m not a businessman….I’m a business,…man.” Jay-Z The award winning faculty and students of the Literary Media and Communications Department (LMC) of the Duke Ellington School of the Arts represent some of the most powerfully innovative examples and instances of Arts Education (training and learning) in the DC Metropolitan area. LMC not only adheres to the fundamental mission of the Duke Ellington School by providing pre-professional, college preparatory training for its developing artists but has expanded said mission towards training the “21st century writer” for entry into the “Creative Economy”. In their 2008 Report on the Creative Economy the United Nations posits, “In the contemporary world a new development paradigm is emerging that links the economy and culture, embracing economic, cultural, technological and social aspects of development at both macro and micro levels. Central to the new paradigm is the fact that creativity, knowledge, and access to information are increasingly recognized as powerful engines driving economic growth and promoting development in a globalizing world. “Creativity” in this context refers to the formulation of new ideas and to the application of these ideas to produce original works of art and cultural products, functional creations, scientific inventions and technological innovations. There is an economic aspect to creativity, observable in the way it contributes to entrepreneurship, fosters innovation, enhances productivity, and promotes economic growth. The 21st Century has seen a growing understanding of the interface between creativity, culture and economics, the rationale behind the emerging concept of the creative economy.” (United Nations 2008 Report on the Creative Economy) The United Nation clearly recognizes that creativity, the engine of art and artists, can be a “powerful engine driving economic growth” and a necessary tool for participation in and with a global economy. This is further reinforced by the following statistics from Americans for the Arts’ report, Economic Prosperity III: the Economic Impact of Nonprofit Arts and Culture Organizations and Their Audiences in the Greater Washington Metropolitan Region, which states, “Nationally, the nonprofit arts and culture industry generates $166.2 billion in economic activity every year—$63.1 billion in spending by organizations and an additional $103.1 billion in event related spending by their audiences.

The R-Street Collective performs at the Fridge Art Gallery.

16


The study is the most comprehensive study of the nonprofit arts and culture industry ever conducted. It documents the economic impact of the nonprofit arts and culture industry in 156 communities and regions (116 cities and counties, 35 multi-county regions, and five states), and represents all 50 states and the District of Columbia. The $166.2 billion in total economic activity has a significant national impact, generating the following: • 5.7 million Full-time equivalent jobs • $104.2 billion in household income • $7.9 billion in local government tax revenues • $9.1 billion in state government tax revenues • $12.6 billion in federal income tax revenues The Literary Media and Communications Department is ever mindful of these statistics and the Creative Economy as it works towards training the 21st century artist/writer in creating Trans/Narratives which represents the new paradigm that LMC’s training is grounded in. The creative energies that have produced technological behemoths such as Facebook, Twitter, “i/Technologies”, blogs, “YouTube”, social media as a whole, require the ability to engage multiple skill sets. The days of a singular, monolithic identity for artists is near gone; Jack Dorsey, for example, who conceived Twitter, studied botanical drawing and clothing design as a student. The necessity of having multiple skill sets, multiple vehicles to render creativity is essential in competing within a global economy. LMC terms this rendering, Trans/Narratives, and is what our entire curriculum and training is premised on. A student interested in poetry will also train in other creative forms including fiction and non-fiction, the essay, short story, micro-fiction and creative non-fiction, as well as print and web-based journalism, blog, playwriting and screenwriting, performance, film theory, documentary filmmaking, social media, and web narrative. Henry Jenkins, writing about Transmedia storytelling: “[Transmedia]… represents a process where integral elements of a fiction get dispersed systematically across multiple delivery channels for the purpose of creating a unified and coordinated entertainment experience. Ideally, each medium makes its own unique contribution to the unfolding of the story.” This ability to create and render narrative, utilizing multiple strategies, “across multiple delivery channels”, will more aptly prepare students in Literary Media and Communications towards the mission of the Duke Ellington School of the Arts, in the 21st Century, and more effectively prepare them to enter the Creative Economy.

17


FACULTY Kelli M. Anderson is a social media consultant and digital media artist living in the Washington DC metro area. She has just completed her Masters in Internet Marketing from Full Sail University, and has a BA in TV/Film Production from Howard University. Anderson works with professionals, schools, and community organizations in the Washington DC area providing innovative methods of learning, collaborating, and communicating using affordable web integrated solutions. Her work includes RCA Rams a private social networking site for Rock Creek Academy High School, and RCA Renaissance, a blog featuring student created visual and interactive art focused around the Harlem Renaissance. She is the Creative Designer of The DC Way of English, a slang dictionary published by Guerilla Arts Inc in collaboration with Ballou SHS featuring student photography she taught in their summer youth program. In her spare time she hosts TechTasters, technology driven events and social media workshops. Olivia Drake is a filmmaker, visual artist, and scholar. Focusing on causes of Black social problems and issues through visual communication, Drake’s artistic voice manifests itself in much of her illustration and graphic works concerning Black identity. In 2007, she earned a Master of Fine Arts degree at Howard University for her thesis film, A Place In Time, along with corresponding essay, Crossing Over: Moving from Convention to Advanced Digital Technology in Film, Video, and Design, which detailed her philosophy regarding the convergence of current digital media with classic filmmaking methods. Currently, Drake is completing a doctoral degree at Howard University, in the department of Mass Communication and Media Studies. Her dissertation, ‘Action’ as a Practice of Revolutionary Cinema: An Historical Analysis of the Black Independent Film Movement on U.S. College Campuses, 1967-1990, will be defended summer, 2012. Onward, Olivia Drake is expanding her research in visual communication by continuing her practice of web-based interactive media language, design and film, while furthering her examination of the African American psyche. Alan King is a poet and journalist, living in the DC metropolitan area. He writes about art and domestic issues on his blog. In addition to teaching at Duke Ellington, he’s also the senior program director at the DC Creative Writing Workshop, a Cave Canem fellow and VONA Alum. Alan is currently a Stonecoast MFA candidate and has been nominated for both a Best of the Net selection and Pushcart Prize. His book, Drift, will be published through Willow Books in January. Gowri Koneswaran is a performance poet, writer and lawyer. She has worked as a trial attorney and engaged in advocacy around animal welfare, the environment, international human rights and criminal justice issues. Her publishing credits include co-authoring two peer-reviewed journal articles; poetry in Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Bourgeon and Lantern Review; and a chapbook, Still Beating. Gowri was a Lannan Fellow of the Folger Shakespeare Library and has been a featured poet at Lincoln Center Out of Doors, the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage and Smithsonian Folklife Festival. She hosts a poetry open mic every month at Busboys and Poets and serves as the program director at BloomBars community arts space in Columbia Heights, where she hosts, curates and manages events. Koye Oyedeji is a writer and a journalist. His short stories, poetry and essays have appeared in The Fire People (Canongate 1998), IC3 (Penguin 2000), Write Black, Write British (Hansib 2005) , Tell Tales vol III (Tell Tales 2006) and Black British Aesthetics Today (Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2007). As a journalist he has contributed to a number of publications including New Nation and The Nottingham Evening Post. He graduated with an MA from the School of Oriental and African Studies and is currently completing his PhD at the University of London, where his research focuses on writers of Nigerian descent. He is a contributing editor for SABLE Litmag and is working on his first novel. Mark A. Williams, Chair, is a playwright, whose recent works, "Junkanoo" and "Patience Wept" have been performed at the Lincoln Theater and the Duke Ellington School of the Arts, and his latest play, "Zulu Nation" had its initial staging at the Bethesda Writers Center and a full production will be mounted in 2012. He has received the "Mayor's Award for Outstanding Contribution to Arts Education", the "Surdna Arts Fellowship for Arts Educators", and has been named in "Who's Who Among American Educators". He is also working on a book, "3/5's of History", a transnarrative rendering of the training for the 21st Century Writer which has been optioned.

18


LMC Parent Testimonials “For much of my son’s school career I sat through parent teacher conferences and heard, “he just doesn’t seem engaged.” I knew he was listening because he consistently did well on his tests. But they were right - he was not at all engaged in any academic pursuit. . . until Duke Ellington School of the Arts. Although he had other artistic options, he really liked the Literary Media Department and began his freshman year there. I have had the pleasure of watching him grow as a writer and as a young man. Under Mark Williams’ direction, the department has grown into a department of fully engaged students allowed to pursue their creative endeavors while challenging them to consider what happens to them after Duke Ellington. It’s one thing to have an incubator where the students can vent and celebrate their emotions and skills, but quite another to consider how this can help them “in life.” Now in his senior year, I am amazed at the skill set my son has honed. He came in just wanting to write “fan fiction” and poetry. . . he will leave there understanding how to create and maintain a blog, make documentary and experimental film, and has a solid foundation in academic and creative writing. The most unexpected benefit he has received is the performance aspect of writing and creating. He has had the privilege of being a part of the performance group “R Street Collective” for the past two years. This group has made a solitary activity like writing into a fully interactive process that provides immediate feedback. The opportunities he has had to speak in front of dignitaries and professionals, and also get some “street cred” from his contemporaries, have been transformative. As a parent, most of us just want our children to find something that makes them happy that they can do for the rest of their lives. I think the Literary Media and Communications Department at Duke Ellington has prepared him to do just that! — Maureen Freshour, parent of LMC graduate

From Left: 10th graders Madison Hartke-Weber, Isis Cooper and Marcus Brown participate on a guerilla marketing Campaign at Ben & Jerry’s in Georgetown; Duke Ellington alumni and Poetry teacher Jade Foster takes students through their steps in preparation for their performance at the Corcoran.

“My daughter now has the foundation on which she can build any career, provided through her experience in the Literary Media and Communications program at Duke Ellington School of the Arts! Let’s face it, reading and writing are fundamental to all professions, whether in the Arts or not. The faculty, led by Mark Williams, has provided way more than what I could have hoped my daughter would receive in this discipline. I fully believe that most children rise to the level of their environments, and the LMC Department faculty have set the bar very high, both in terms of work ethic and producing quality work. They have taught the kids a love of learning and reading and there’s never anything wrong with that — Eileen Thomas, parent of LMC graduate.

19


PARTNERS & SUPPORTERS ARENA STAGE ARTS CLUB OF WASHINGTON BEN & JERRY’S GEORGETOWN BLOOMBARS BUSBOYS AND POETS CHILDRENS HOSPITAL 826DC FRIDGE ART GALLERY GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY / PRIME MOVERS PROGRAM H-STREET PLAYHOUSE HILLYER ART GALLERY HORWITZ FAMILY FOUNDATION HOWARD UNIVERSITY FILM DEPARTMENT INKWELL THEATRE METRO TEEN AIDS NATIONAL BLACK PROGRAMMING CONSORTIUM PUBLIC MEDIA CORPS WASHINGTON POST ZANAR FUND

Literary Media & Communications Mark A.Williams, chair Duke Ellington School of the Arts a District of Columbia Public School 3500 R Street, NW • Washington, DC 20007 202.282.0123 • www.ellingtonschool.org Please ask us how you can make a tax-deductible contribution in support of the LMC Program.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.