FOLKWRITING FINAL REPORT
Original
Project Title Connecting
Homes, Schools, and Communities: A Collaborative
Teacher Enrichment Project Using Folklife and Writing
Grantee
Project
Director Name Diane W. Howard
Address
Approved Budget GHC
Grant $12,210.00
Project Summary
“The
inclusion of folklife studies in the curriculum is important, not only to help
students appreciate the importance of previous societies and cultures, but also
to help them recognize the relevance of their culture. Integrating folklife into the curriculum is a
perfect opportunity to take a more interdisciplinary approach to
education. The students will learn to
draw connections, better understand the incredibly diverse nature of society,
and gain a better “sense of place.” This “sense of place” seems to be eluding
many of the students of today’s generation, and is leading to a lack of
identity. The stronger a young person’s identity becomes, the more responsibly
that person will function in society” J.M. Chamberlain, Traditions and
Treasures:
This
pilot project was a collaboration between the South Georgia Writing Project,
the South Georgia Folklife Project (both housed at Valdosta State
University), and the Cook County Public
School System to enhance writing skills across levels using the humanities
discipline of folklife as the subject matter. The project created a teacher-tested, self-contained teaching unit,
in workbook format with web-based technology links, which was piloted in
AUDIENCE INFORMATION
1. Total number in attendance at all session 5,819
If
the figure above represents a cumulative total in which one person may be
counted several
times,
please estimate as accurately as possible the actual number of individuals who
attended
the program, and rewrite here. 4,819
September 2001 Adel Kiwanis
Club lunch. (19 attendance)
October 2001
November 2001NCTE Conference
Demonstrations. (52 attendance)
November 2001NWP Rural Sites
Network Demonstrations. (7 attendance
November 2001 Exhibit
Lean-Ox Festival a record crowd of “as many as 5,000 folk.” (5,000 attendance)
January 2002 “
February 2002 Georgia
Council of Teachers Conference Presentations. (41 attendance)
2. Estimate the audience profile with reference to sex,
age, ethic representation and educational level.
SEX EDUCATIONAL
LEVEL
Male
40% Elementary 35%
Female 60% High School 50%
Under 12 35%
Graduate Work 2%
12 – 18 25%
Professional/Tech 8%
Training
18 – 25 5%
25 – 35
10% ETHINIC REPRESENTATION
35 –55
20% Causian 55%
55 & up
5% African/Amer. 40%
Latino 4%
Asian 1%
3. Was the audience primarily made up of representatives
of any specialized type of group, such as clubs, civic organizations,
professional associations?
Most
of those who attended the events were adults in
4. Briefly evaluate the project’s success in reaching
its target audience. Include your observations concerning reasons for the
success or failure.
The
folklorist and the project director were disappointed more teachers did not
step forth and pilot the lesson plans that the six teachers wrote in Summer
2001. However, having spent several days
a week in the schools September through December, the project director became
aware of the workload and difficulties facing the classroom teachers. The September 11 events added to the troubled
atmosphere in many of the classrooms.
PUBLICITY
The
local newspaper, The Adel News Tribute, was supportive of the project. The editor, Ann Knight, and the project
director have become friends as a result of the project. The Valdosta Daily Times also published
several stories. (See attached news
articles.)
The
project director phoned the offices of the
EVALUATIVE NARRATIVE
Program Events and Sessions:
Kindergarten 20
1st
Grade 5
2nd
Grade 8
3rd
Grade 9
4th
Grade 15
5th
Grade 5
6th
Grade 45
7th
Grade 62
8th
Grade 90
9th
Grade 52
10th
Grade 51
11th
Grade 48
12th
Grade 35
Collegiate 5
Other
Adults 75
(500
attendance)
Planned events: November 2002—One-day workshop at National
Council of Teachers of English
February 2003—two-day workshop at Georgia Council of Teachers of English
AUDIENCES’ EVALUATION OF PROGRAMS
October 2001—Four Cook
County Exchange Club Fair exhibits displayed by 1) 37 Elementary School
students—first place, 2) 112 Middle School students—third place, 3) 28 High
School Students—second place, 4) 2 VSU Faculty Team members were very well
received by the members of the community.
Local adults were very interested in the project and the students’
writing on display.
November 2001—NCTE
Conference Presentations in
November 2001—NWP Rural
Sites Network Demonstrations in
November 2001—Exhibit at the
Lean-Ox Festival in
January 2002—Held “
HUMANITIES PROFESSIONALS
Included in the programs for
the project were the following: