Digital Expressions

The Global Kids Digital Expressions program works with young people to foster the acquisition of digital media production and analytic skills through youth engagement in participatory media or "Web 2.0" tools. Participants use web tools to map, remix, blog, create multimedia presentations and slideshows, do graphic design, create data visualizations and more in order to gain critical social skills and cultural competencies that will be critical to their participation in civic life. In its first iteration, Media Masters, the program was a partnership with MIT's Project New Media Literacies in which Global Kids brought its global issue oriented and interactive educational approach to MIT's new media literacy Learning Library, running the program within the Prospect Heights Campus in Brooklyn, NY. This year the program will be expanded to serve youth in libraries around New York City in a partnership with the New York Public Library.

All entries for this category

January 22, 2010

[conf] Three Social Media Trainings for Jewish Educators


This past Monday, January 18, Barry Joseph and I got the opportunity to conduct three intensive trainings for Jewish educators in Teaneck, New Jersey. The occasion was the "Jewish Day School Leadership Conference" which brought together some 500 jewish educators from 300 different institutions to the Marriot in Teaneck. It was a really interesting experience and exposure to the unique educational setting of Jewish day schools.

Continue reading "[conf] Three Social Media Trainings for Jewish Educators" »

October 29, 2009

[staff] Using Alternative Assessment Models to Empower Youth-directed Learning

Tashawna is a high school senior in Brooklyn, NY. In the morning she leaves home for school listening to her MP3s, texting her friends about meeting up after school at Global Kids, where she participates in a theater program, or FIERCE, the community center for LGBT youth. On the weekend she'll go to church and, on any given day, visit MySpace and Facebook as often as she can. While she misses television and movies, she says she just can't find the time.

This describes what we can call Tashawna's distributed learning network, the most important places in her life where learning occurs. Not just at home, school and church but also through digital media, like MP3s, SMS and social networks, and at youth-serving institutions, like Global Kids and FIERCE. Some are places that require her presence, like school, while others are opt-in, like MySpace. But the learning she gathers across the nodes in her network are preparing her to succeed in the classrooms, workplaces, and civic arenas of the 21st Century.

And Tashawna is not alone. In part due to the changes in education, in part due to the affects of digital media, youth have a wide array of options for learning knowledge and developing skills. But how many youth feel in charge of their networks, or are even aware they exist as an interconnected whole? How do they learn to synthesize what they learn and communicate it to future employers and college admission staff who won't learn of their strengths on most school transcripts?

Continue reading "[staff] Using Alternative Assessment Models to Empower Youth-directed Learning" »

October 23, 2009

[conf] Bringing Youth Voices to Breakthrough Learning Forum

Breakthough%20image.png

Next week, Global Kids will be leading a team of youth leaders to a landmark event in the world of digital learning. The event, titled Breakthrough Learning in a Digital Age, is being organized by the Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop, Common Sense Media and Google and will be held at the GooglePlex on October 27th and 28th. It's aimed at bringing attention to new forms of learning facilitated by technology, and will be attended by policymakers, industry leaders, education practitioners and researchers, and, of course, by digital youth. The youth team will consist of kids from Global Kids, the Bay Area Video Coalition and MOUSE, and will aim to bring in a youth voice to the forum in a variety of ways. We're really excited that the organizers put a priority on making sure actual teens were a part of this important conversation, as so often they aren't.

Leading up to the event, our Online Program's Director, Barry Joseph, has contributed to the Breakthrough Learning Blog with a post about using alternative assessment models to empower youth directed learning. We're excited about the post here at GK, as it's one of the first times we've articulated some of our recent efforts using digital transcripts, digital portfolios, and distributed learning maps as methods of alternative assessment that help youth to think critically about their learning across multiple spaces. Definitely check it out and comment!

We're also excited to release at the event our report, Meeting of Minds: Cross-Generational Dialogue on the Ethics of Digital Life, which highlights findings from the Focus Dialogues, held last Fall, which brought together parents, teachers and teens to talk about ethics online. We look forward to releasing the report more widely in the coming weeks.

For those that won't be at the event, you can watch the webcast on both the opening and main day and submit questions via Google Moderator.

October 16, 2009

[mm] The Media Masters Digital Literacy Transcript

We realized that while we'd posted student Digital Portfolios from Media Masters, we'd yet to share the associated Digital Literacy Transcripts that we used to track student progress during the program. Check out the full transcript below, click here for a blank transcript, and here for a sample transcript from a student that completed the program.

Full Digital Transcript from Media Masters

September 10, 2009

Project New Media Literacies is hiring

Our friends and partners in crime for the Media Masters program, Project New Media Literacies, are hiring for a new project called the Educator's House, a professional development program for teachers of Rio de Janiero, Brazil. This international project joins the NML team with The Alchemists and Rio de Janiero's Department of Education to implement a new paradigm for teaching that fully integrates the new media literacies across curricula.

Very exciting!

Read more about the open positions on the NML Blog.


Featured Resources
In the Media

Programs


Youth Voices


Professional Services


Resources




Where is GK


Get Involved

Donate


Follow Us

twitter You Tube flickr FaceBook MySpace





Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Powered by Movable Type 3.33 Designed by studio h2o