Umd Students Partner With Northwestern High School To Promote Social Change
April 24, 2016
Students in English department's Writing for Change class work with ninth-graders to express "marginalized voices."
By Alex Carolan, The Diamondback
Photo Courtesy of Rachel George
Local ninth-graders, along with senior English and anthropology major Tarika Sankar, wanted to represent the voices of children with incarcerated parents. Their project is part of a larger collaboration with Northwestern High School to promote social change, specifically regarding "marginalized voices."
Students enrolled in English department's Writing for Change class at the University of Maryland are working with Northwestern High School ninth-graders to organize a performance featuring documentaries, skits and other educational content to represent "unheard voices," said Justin Lohr, the instructor of the university English class.
This course has run every spring semester since 2013, and the ninth-graders present different performances based on a new theme at this university each year.
"We were trying to explore, like, marginalized voices, that don't get heard in public discourse," Sankar said.
Lohr said these performances stand up for those without voice, and also explain "the processes that marginalize those voices and why these voices are unheard in the first place."
Each group is composed of two college students paired with about four ninth-graders. Sankar's group of four ninth-graders wrote a video skit about a child being raised by his grandmother, to show the effects of having a parent who is imprisoned.
Cindy Rockefeller, a junior marketing major also enrolled the course, said her group is going to present an original documentary about the misconceptions of abuse victims, which is based on interviews with university students, as well as students and counselors at Northwestern High School.
Though Northwestern High School is less than a mile away from this university, Lohr noted there is a disconnect between university students and the surrounding communities, such as Hyattsville.
"It's an opportunity to mend … distanced relationships between the university and its local community, and to sort of bring the two into greater dialogue with each other," Lohr said.
Read more here.