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Trenton, NJDuring the summer of 2006, Shari Sabath
had a center-changing experience. Sabath, director of the Kenyon
Hodges Computer Learning Center, registered to attend the Neighborhood
Networks Regional Technical Assistance Workshop (RTAW) that was
being held in Boston. After reviewing the list of scheduled sessions,
Sabath was excited to take part in the training event that she knew
would provide her with the information and resources she needed
to improve and invigorate the center. Just how positively the RTAW
would impact the center, Sabath could not have imagined.
Inspired
at Harvard, Implemented in Trenton
Sabath's
moment of inspiration came to her while she was participating in
an RTAW digital arts session sponsored by the Neighborhood Networks
National Consortium and held at Harvard University. Presented by
Craig Davis, president and chief executive officer of the Youth
Digital Arts CyberSchool (YDACS) and Vanessa Pabon of Telling
Our Legacy Digitally, the session emphasized that becoming proficient
in digital arts (painting, music, animation, and video game design)
in college is too late. Children as young as third grade can learn
the necessary skills and create professional-looking projects.
"I thought the whole concept was cool," said Sabath. "The paintings,
video games, and music the instructor shared with us were amazing.
I knew we had to launch a similar program at our center."
When
Sabath returned home, she focused her efforts on implementing a
digital arts program at the Kenyon Hodges Computer Learning Center.
Her first step was to purchase five MPEG Audio Decoder (MAD) players,
the devices used to compose music demonstrated at the workshop.
Sabath then called Craig Davis of YDACS and registered some of her
students for the Learning Through Music Technology course. An online
school, YDACS focuses its instruction on students in the third grade
through high school. Each $60 course is self-paced and allows students
to enroll at any time online.
"I
began with five students," said Sabath. "And from the very first
session, I knew it was a great program that we had to expand. These
courses are not like traditional learning. They allow the students
to express their creative side."
Sabath
then worked with Davis to expand her digital arts curriculum. "Craig
helped me determine what I needed and who could help me get it,"
said Sabath. "I then began building relationships with organizations
and securing funding."
One
organization that helped Sabath expand the center's digital arts
program was MassIMPACT. With grant money awarded by MassIMPACT,
Sabath purchased the software to offer two different video game
design courses.
"For
the future, I imagine how amazing it will be for a high school graduate
to go to a college interview for the Media Arts with a portfolio
of computer games, digital paintings, digital music, and animated
characters that she has created," said Sabath. "I can also imagine
the micro-enterprise opportunities for the residents of our housing
complex in selling their games, paintings, and/or music."
Cool
Program for the Hot Summer
This
past summer, the center offered an expanded digital arts curriculum.
Sabath applied for and was awarded a Community Development Block
Grant (CDBG) grant from the City of Trenton that funded 15 spots
in the program. The other spots were funded by donations from the
property management company and private donors.
"For
the summer program, students were divided into age-appropriate groups,"
said Sabath. "We had 17 six- and seven-year-olds, 12 third through
fifth graders, and 12 sixth through ninth graders. The participants
all worked on various digital arts projects. And what was neat to
see was how they all served as each other's mentors and collaborators."
Focused
on the Future
The
history of the Kenyon Hodges Computer Learning Center confirms the
fact that center staff is always looking for ways to improve and
grow. "The residents at the Kingsbury Twin Towers have always supported
the center," said Sabath. "When the center opened in 1996, it offered
access to three computers with dial-up Internet access that were
housed in a 250-square foot closet. In less than a year, we moved
to a 1,500-square foot space with six computers that offered high-speed
Internet. Today, we have nine computers. Even though we've accomplished
a great deal, we're always asking, 'What next?'"
This
fall, Sabath will use the remaining money from the CDBG grant to
launch the Teen Academy. "This program is important to offer because
it fulfills a need that the city has to provide more teen programs
between the at-risk hours of 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. when the incidents
of vandalism seem to peak. To participate, students must attend
school. In addition to offering online courses, the academy will
take students to art shows and on other field trips."
Sabath
is also planning to implement a mentor program in which the older
students will mentor the younger students. Establishing an internship
program for teens and young adults is another area that Sabath wants
to explore.
"Even
though the digital arts program is one of our most cutting-edge
programs, it's not the only program I am hoping to grow," said Sabath.
"I'm still looking for that big donor, or multiple donors, to fund
a literacy program and mentoring programs. We already have an alternative
high school program for adults, and we're constantly trying to find
new ways for the center to be all it can be for all of our residents."
For
more information about Neighborhood Networks centers in New Jersey,
contact:
Pamela
Breitenbach
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentNewark Field
Office
One Newark Center, 13th Floor
Newark, NJ 07102
(973) 776-7254
For
more information about the Kenyon Hodges Computer Learning Center,
contact:
Shari
Sabath
Kenyon Hodges Computer Learning Center
1 Kingsbury Square
Trenton, NJ 08611
(609) 599-111
More information about Youth Digital Arts CyberSchool (YDACS)
can be found on their website,
or you may contact them via email.
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