Of the Student, By the Student, For the Student™
Monticello, Journey Through Hallowed Ground Partnership and
Albemarle County Schools Team Up to Produce Student Movies
For Immediate Release
March 5, 2010
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CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA — What doesn’t belong in this group – moviemaking,
sixth-graders, service learning, Thomas Jefferson, or Monticello? The answer
is none of the above. In fact, they all fit into a groundbreaking multimedia
project sponsored by the Journey Through Hallowed Ground Partnership, the Thomas
Jefferson Foundation, and Albemarle County’s Sutherland Middle School.
This initiative – Of the Student, By the Student, For the Student™ – is
a 21st-century, student-inspired, servicelearning@@project in which Albemarle
County students will produce original mini-documentaries, or “vodcasts,” over
the next three months. These productions will present the students’ perspectives
on the complexities of our country’s early republic, based on their personal,
hands-on experiences at Monticello and analysis of primary source materials.
This project has been made possible through the generous contribution of the
Arundel Family Foundation. All eight sixth-grade English classes at Sutherland
will participate in the project, and in turn will collaborate with students
in other classes, such as science, math, art, band, and technology. They will
select the subjects of their productions and serve as writers, editors, photographers,
choreographers, set and costume designers, videographers, public relations
personnel, and even accountants to produce the two-minute mini-documentaries. “We
all experience life differently, and the student viewpoint is both special
and unique,” said Cate Magennis Wyatt, president of the Journey Through
Hallowed Ground Partnership. “Students relate best to other students – their
peers. So why not take a look at history through their lens to focus on Jefferson
and the people of Monticello to bring them to life for young people around
the world to appreciate?”
The students’ finished productions will be unveiled in June at the Journey
Through Hallowed Ground Partnership Annual Meeting in Charlottesville. The
students’ movies also will be used as interpretive material by both Monticello
and the Journey Through Hallowed Ground National Heritage Area, and be posted
on YouTube, so students of all ages can view them and learn from the Albemarle
students’ unique perspectives. “Today’s young people are
connected to a high-tech media world,” said Leslie Greene Bowman, president
of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, the private, nonprofit organization that
owns and operates Monticello. “This is a wonderfully dynamic opportunity
for these students to connect the past to the present, to become engaged with
Jefferson’s times and legacies and with the history of this area, and
to tell those stories with their own voices in their media.”
The project was introduced to Sutherland Middle School on Feb. 24 with an
event that featured singer and storyteller Calvin Earl. The students made their
initial on-site visits to Monticello on March 2 and 4. “We believe that
combining multimedia with service learning is a terrific way to truly connect
our students with authentic history and real life lessons,” said Dave
Rogers, principal of Sutherland Middle School. “Partnerships like this
benefit the students, their families and our communities alike. This is a wonderful
project and we are as excited as we can be about it.”
The Thomas Jefferson Foundation’s dual mission is preservation and education,
and Monticello offers a wide variety of educational programs for students in
grades 2 through 12. Approximately 15,000 students participate in Monticello’s
curriculum-based enhanced programs each year. Monticello also conducts a Summer
Adventures day camp in addition to holding workshops and other developmental
activities for both students and teachers and offering an array of resource
materials in print and online though the “Monticello Classroom” feature
on the Web site monticello.org.
Educating teachers, students, citizens, and visitors is one of the primary
objectives of the Journey Through Hallowed Ground Partnership. Since its inception
in 2006, this nonprofit, four-state, public-private partnership has developed
a variety of educational programs, including the highly acclaimed Extreme
Journey camps for middle-school children in Albemarle and Loudoun counties
and Adams County, Pa., along with a high school Summer Enrichment Camp with
the University of Virginia, programs for applied history classes in Loudoun
County, the semester-long teacher certificate course taught through the Virginia
Community College System, teacher workshops, and semester courses for graduate
students at the University of Virginia and Virginia Tech. With 400 years of
European, American, and African-American heritage, the Journey Through Hallowed
Ground is a National Heritage Area with a National Scenic Byway running through
it. From Gettysburg to Monticello, it’s known as the region Where
America Happened. It contains more history than any other region in the
nation and includes: National and World Heritage sites, over 10,000 sites on
the National Register of Historic Places, 49 National Heritage districts, nine
presidential homes, 13 National Park units, hundreds of African-American and
Native American heritage sites, 30 Historic Main Street communities, sites
from the Revolutionary War, French- Indian War, War of 1812, and the largest
collection of Civil War sites in the nation. |