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Cherokee High School students at the Native Youth Video Production Workshop

By Kristin Dowell, Ph.D. candidate, NYU Dept. of Anthropology

Cherokee High School students at the Native Youth Video Production Workshop An exciting explosion of Native media projects is occurring across the country as Native youth take up the camera to tell their own stories. Native youth are creatively using media to engage their cultural traditions and to convey their unique experiences. This feature explores Native youth media programming at the National Museum of the American Indian and highlights some of the innovative youth media projects happening throughout Indian Country.

Teen Video Program of the Native American Film and Video Festival 2000 National Museum of the American Indian

Instructor and students from Hannahville Indian School, Four Directions Project The National Museum of the American Indian was honored to present, for the first time in the festival's twenty-year history, the work of young Native media makers in a special teen video program of the 2000 Native American Film and Video Festival. Three works produced by Native youth from the United States and Canada were screened in a special program with a Native teen and youth audience. The media instructors and young Native media makers involved with the featured productions introduced their work and participated in a lively roundtable discussion about the Students from Hannahville Indian School, Four Directions Projectrole of media in expressing the experiences of Native youth.

Titles Screened:

Four Directions Project

Instructor and student from Marty Indian School, Four Directions Project Contact:
Marty Kriepe de Montano
Cultural Resources Center
4220 Silver Hill Rd.
Suitland, MD 20746
Phone: 301-238-6624, ext. 6422
demontano@si.edu
www.conexus.si.edu/vrtour

Student from Santa Clara Day School, Four Directions Project - Enter here for credit informationThe NMAI has worked in collaboration with Native communities on projects that provide students with skills in computer-based technology and video. A virtual tour of NMAI exhibitions was developed through the Four Directions Project, funded by the U.S. Dept. of Education and designed to provide Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) schools with technology and training for developing culturally relevant curriculum materials. Students from three schools were trained in using QuickTime Virtual Reality software to create a three-dimensional, interactive Web tour of two NMAI exhibitions at the George Gustav Heye Center in New York. The project enabled them to learn about NMAI's resources and their own cultures while providing them with the skills to produce a virtual product.

Native Youth Video Production Workshop

Cherokee High School students at the Native Youth Video Production Workshop - Enter here for credit informationIn 2000 NMAI held the Native Youth Video Production Workshop for three Cherokee high school students and their teachers from Cherokee High School in Cherokee, North Carolina, The skills learned at the workshop at the Heye Center in New York were taken back to the school to be used in the development of a video program to help teach Cherokee language and cultural practices.

Image credits All photographs by Georgetta Stonefish, NMAI of NMAI Native American Youth Media Projects: Cherokee High School students at the Native Youth Video Production Workshop; Cherokee High School students at the Native Youth Video Production Workshop; Instructor and students from Hannahville Indian School, Four Directions Project; Students from Hannahville Indian School, Four Directions Project; Instructor and student from Marty Indian School, Four Directions Project; Student from Santa Clara Day School, Four Directions Project; Cherokee High School students at the Native Youth Video Production Workshop

Teen Video Program of the Native American Film and Video Festival 2000

Four Directions Project

Native Youth Video Production Workshop

Resource list - For Youth Media Makers


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