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- Maude Carroll | EVC
Maude Carroll (she/her) Alumni Advisory Council EVC Films: Waiting to Inhale (1998), Hip Hop: A Culture of Influence (1999). Maude Carroll is a proud EVC alum from 1997-1999 and helped produce films as part of both the Doc Workshop ("Waiting to Inhale") and Youth Organizer's Television ("Hip Hop: A Culture of Influence"). After pursuing a bachelor's degree in documentary video from Antioch College, Maude has followed a near 20 year career path in the nonprofit sector and specializes in digital communications. Currently, Maude serves as the Digital Engagement Strategist at the American Constitution Society, a membership network and educational resource for the progressive legal community. Originally from the Bronx, Maude currently lives in and works remotely from Chicago, where she misses real pizza on a regular basis. (ella) Consejo Asesor de Ex-Alumnos Películas de EVC: Esperando para Inhalar (1998), Hip Hop: una Cultura de Influencia (1999). Maude Carroll es una orgullosa alumna de EVC de 1997-1999 y ayudó a producir películas como parte del Taller Documental Juvenil (Esperando para Inhalar) y la Televisión de Organizadores Juveniles (Hip Hop: Una Cultura de Influencia). Después de obtener una licenciatura en video documental de Antioch College, Maude ha seguido una trayectoria profesional de casi 20 años en el sector sin fines de lucro y se especializa en comunicaciones digitales. Actualmente, Maude se desempeña como estratega de compromiso digital en la Sociedad Constitucional Americana, una red de miembros y recurso educativo para la comunidad legal progresista. Originaria del Bronx, Maude actualmente vive y trabaja de forma remota desde Chicago, donde extraña la pizza de verdad con regularidad.
- Abortion: Past, Present, Future | EVC
< Back Abortion: Past, Present, Future This documentary explores the history of abortion rights, American attitudes towards abortion, and efforts to promote women's rights to choose. EVC youth producers examine how cultural factors--such as religion--affect people's ideas about reproductive justice Project Gallery Previous Next
- Chris Caraballo | EVC
Chris Caraballo (he/him) Alumni Advisory Council EVC Films: Drug Dealers: Societies Unwanted Children (2006). Chris Caraballo is an EVC graduate and an actor turned photographer turned software engineer for Google. Chris has always believed in non-linear paths to success. In a short time, Chris found success in networking and studied his way from a two-hour commute to his tech Bootcamp training program in Brooklyn, to being scouted and offered a full-time Software Engineer position at Google. He spends his free time hiking nature trails and taking online certification courses to further his skillset. He has returned to EVC as an alumni leader and joined EVC's new Alumni Advisory Council. (él) Consejo Asesor de Ex-Alumnos Película de EVC: Traficantes de Drogas: Los Niños No Deseados por la Sociedad (2006). Chris Caraballo es un graduado de EVC y un actor convertido en fotógrafo convertido en ingeniero de software para Google. Chris siempre ha creído en caminos no lineales hacia el éxito. En poco tiempo, Chris encontró el éxito en la creación de redes y estudió su camino desde un viaje de dos horas para su programa tecnológico Bootcamp de capacitación en Brooklyn hasta que lo seleccionaron y le ofrecieron un puesto de ingeniero de software de tiempo completo en Google. Pasa su tiempo libre caminando por senderos naturales y tomando cursos de certificación en línea para mejorar sus habilidades. Regresó a EVC como un líder de alumnos egresados y se unió al nuevo Consejo Asesor de Ex-alumnos de EVC.
- EVC | Timeline
19 84 Dreams of the Future EVC students explore career options and imagine what their futures will be in this whimsical film. 85 2371 Second Ave: An East Harlem Story EVC student Millie Reyes documents her family's conditions living in a rat-infested building with no heat or hot water, and leads the other residents to confront the landlord and go on a rent strike. JVC Tokyo Video Festival, President's Award, 1988 London International Annual Film & Video Competition, Gold Seal Award, 1988 National Educational Film and Video Festival, Bronze Apple, 1987 85 Teacher Training Video Workshops EVC offers its first video workshops and in-class coaching for teachers to integrate student video projects into NYC Alternative High Schools and Programs at Satellite Academy Chambers Street and Bronx Regional High School. This progam is soon expanded with support from the New York State Council on the Arts and the Office of the Superintendent of Alternative High Schools and Programs. 85 EVC Summer Video Camp Hosted by Marie Cirillo and the Woodland Community Land Trust, EVC students live, learn and produce documentaries in a summer camp together with youth from Kentucky, Virginia and Tennessee. 85 Letta's Family Young filmmakers from EVC's summer video camp in Tennessee document a nearby family's daily struggles amidst poverty and cultural richness in the Cumberland mountains of Appalachia. 86 EVC Films Hormel Strike EVC students from Bronx Regional HS film the Hormel meatpackers strike in Austin, Minnesota. While there, they meet Jesse Jackson and filmmaker Barbara Kopple. 87 Awarded JVC President's Prize JVC flies EVC student and staff to Tokyo to accept the top prize in the festival. They spend a week in Japan as the guest of JVC. 88 Cracks Clouds Featured on Barbara Walters Barbara Walters interviews an EVC youth producer and features his team's documentary on crack in her ABC series, Survival Stories. 13th Annual Council on Foundations Film and Video Festival, 1993 JVC Tokyo Video Festival Special Merit, 1988 National Educational Film and Video Festival, Gold Apple 1989 88 First Summer Teachers Institute EVC launches its first summer video institute for teachers in partnership with the NYC Writing Project. Teachers collaboratively plan, produce, and edit VHS video projects as they learn to use video inquiry as a strategy for developing student literacy and voice. 88 Awarded New York Area Emmy Award EVC wins an Emmy for three documentaries featured on the opening program of The Eleventh Hour with Robert Lipsyte on WNET: Crack Clouds Over Hells Kitchen, 2371 2nd Ave: An East Harlem Story, and Life in the G: Gowanus Gentrified. Soon after, they are invited to screen segments of their films on the NBC Today Show with Bryant Gumbel. 89 AIDS: Facts Over Fear EVC youth travel to Washington, D.C. to interview former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop to educate their peers about this new epidemic called AIDS. London International Amateur Fim and Video Competition, Gold Seal, 1990 National Educational Film and Video Festival, Silver Apple, 1990 Canadian International Annual Film Festival, Two Stars Award, 1989 89 Nicaragua: Through Our Eyes EVC students spend a week visiting the baseball fields, schools and prisions of Nicaragua to tell the story of everyday life there during a time of turbulence. 90 Melissa Brockett, EVC Graduate, 1990 "Thank you to EVC for helping me pave my early career in media. It was because of my work with you guys that I realized how powerful media can be and that you can change and touch so many lives with just one story." 90 Hard Times in Cypress Hill Moved by the tragic death of their friend and fellow EVC student, students film this portrait of one student’s daily life in one of the most violent housing projects of the times. Opening her home to her son's friends, the grieving mother shows grace and resilience in the face of the crack and gang fueled gun violence in the surrounding community. Association of Visual Commuicators, Gold CINDY Award, 1991 National Educational Film & Video Festival, Bronze Apple, 1991 IAC International Film and Video Festival, Bronze Seal, 1992 90 Video Workshops EVC youth producers Derrick Dawkins and Isiah Miller travelled to Croatia to conduct video workshops. 90 Youth Crime Who's To Blame? Investigating the causes and possible solutions to youth crime, students talk with youth offenders and those working to help them. National Latino Film and Video Festival, Honorable Mention, 1990 Big Muddy Film Festival, Jury Award, 1991 90 Trash Thy Neighbor EVC youth producers document recycling and garbage reduction, and take their cameras to Staten Island where the largest landfill on the east coast is running out of space. National Educational Film & Video Festival, Gold Apple,1991 JVC's Tokyo Video Festival, Work of Special Distinction, 1990 CINDY Competition, Gold CINDY Award,1990 91 Black & Jews: Are They Really Sworn Enemies EVC students collect stories from both sides of the conflict between the African-American and Hasidic communitites in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, and explore the historical relationship between African-Americans and American Jews. The documentary was screened at both the Jewish Museum and the Black International Cinema in Berlin. 7th Annual Black International Cinema Berlin, 1992 14th Annual WNET Student Arts Festival, 1992 Rochester International Amateur Film Festival, Certificate of Merit, 1992 National Educational Film and Video Festival, Silver Apple, 1993 Birmingham International Educational Film Festival, Finalist, 1993 91 New York City & The Hudson River EVC youth producers highlight the importance of the Hudson River and examines the causes and consequences of its pollution. The Hudson Riverkeeper warns of the dangers of DDT and other chemicals dumped into the river by GE and other corporate polluters. 92 7th Annual Black International Cinema EVC youth producer Julius Bogen presented Black & Jews: Are They Really Sworn Enemies at the 7th Annual Black International Cinema in Berlin in 1992. 92 Unequal Education: Failing Our Children Following two gifted and talented students over their 7th grade year in two schools located in the same Bronx district, one in a low and the other in a middle income community, "Unequal Education" bears witness to the failure of NYC's inequitable school system - a tragedy of national proportion. Finalist,International Monitor Awards, 1993 National Educational Film and Video Festival, Bronze Apple, Best College Documentaries: Society's Concerns, 1993 92 We the People Produced on the quincennial of Columbus' "discovery" of America, students give voice to Native American youth and elders living in New York City. They also analyze popular culture stereotypes and misconceptions about America's indigenous peoples. National Educational Film and Video Festival, Silver Apple, 1993 Black Maria Film and Video Festival Director's Citation, 1993 The American Indian Film and Video Competition, Non-Indian Production, Student Category, 1997 92 PBS Listening to America with Bill Moyers Unequal Education: Failing Our Children is broadcast nationally on the PBS series, Listening to America with Bill Moyers. Aired during the1992 Bush-Clinton presidential campaign, the documentary was followed by a debate on educational equity that Bill Moyers moderated between Jonathan Kozol and John Chubb. 93 Home Sweet Gone Angry at the abandoned buildings and vacant lots in their neighborhoods in the early 1990s, youth producers investigate poor housing conditions in New York City owned apartments and bank “redlining” policies that prevent investment in low income housing. 10th Annual Suffolk County Film and Video Festival, 1st Prize, Student Documentary 93 That's What They Call Art! A collaboration between YO-TV and The Whitney Museum of American Art documents the making and unmaking of the controversial 1993 Whitney Biennial, interviewing the curators and artists as they are installing, and in some cases, even creating their works. Among the artists interviewed by the students are: Janine Antoni, Jimmie Durham, Glenn Ligon, Byron Kim, Zoe Leonard Leone & Macdonald, Daniel Martinez, and Pepon Osorio. 26th Annual Sinking Creek Film/Video Festival, Juror's Merit Award International San Francisco Film Festival, Golden Gate Awards, Special Juy Award, 1994 National Educational Film & Video Festival, Gold Apple, 1994 94 Student Portfolio Assessments The Center for Children and Technology conducts a study of EVC's inquiry based documentary workshops and supports the staff in developing its portfolio assessment process for students to collect evidence over time of their learning and creative work at EVC. The Nathan Cummings Foundation supported the project, which EVC still uses to asses student learning. 95 Interview with Secretary of Health and Human Services EVC youth producers travelled to Washington, DC to interview the Secretary of Health and Human Services, Donna Shalala, for their documentary The Vicious Cycle of Domestic Violence. 95 New Home: School for the Physical City EVC moves into shared space in Manhattan's Flatiron district in the newly built School for the Physical City. The partnership not only includes shared rent free space, but also shared methodology with its inquiry based, expeditionary learning, alternative school, educational philosophy. 95 Co-Sponsored National Conference EVC co-sponsors the National Conference on Media Education and School Reform with the Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Wingspread near Racine, Wisconsin. The gathering brought teachers, media activists and education reformers together at the Johnson Foundation's Frank Lloyd Wright designed conference center. 96 Coming Up Taller Ceremony at the White House First Lady Hillary Clinton congratulates Steve Goodman at the White House Reception 96 Students at the Center Initiative A 4-year grant from the DeWitt Wallace Reader's Digest Fund enabled EVC to provide professional development for teachers in small and reforming schools throughout the city as part of this national "Student and the Center" Initiative, in partnership with the NYC Writing Project, the Social History Project, the City College Workshop Center, and others. 96 Media Education: Culture and Community in the Classroom This essay lays out the guiding principles and practices of EVC's pedagogy. As a manifesto of sorts, it calls for a pedagogy that teaches both with, and about, media arts, and engages students and teachers in critical explorations of their local community that engender reflection, dialogue, and action. 96 ATL Youth Media Exhibit in New Museum EVC and youth advisors are invited to co-curate a selection of video projects in this groundbreaking exhibition at the New Museum. EVC youth produced videos are also featured in the exhibition. 97 US/UK Models of Media Education Executive Director Steve Goodman co-taught "Media Education and Media Studies: Comparative Views," an undergraduate course at New York University and University of London, Institute of Education - London Study Abroad. 97 Disorderly Conduct: Are the Police Killing Us? COTV community activist documentary the growing epidemic of police violence in poor neighborhoods and communities of color and those organizing to resist it. 97 Young Gunz Combining images of violence in the media, poetry and brutally honest interviews, students interweave stories from victims of gun violence, some who admit to shooting others, and those who struggle to survive. 98 Out Youth in Schools Weaving together moving personal stories, archival news footage, street interviews and dramatizations, this documentary examines the critical problem of homophobia in schools and the national movement of gay/straight alliances that has grown up in response. Featured: Nashville Independent Film Festival, Best Young Filmmaker; 2nd Annual Urban Visionaries Video Festival 98 AWOL: From the Fatherhood EVC youth producers set out to find whether the role of fatherhood has become an outdated concept. Interviews and family self-portraits among the youth team help address their documentary's question. 98 Hidden Faces: Women Seeking Refuge COTV community activists explore the lack of serious U.S. immigration policy regarding gender-based persecution, and look at women's rights as human rights. Featured in: Other American Film Festival, Esperanza Center; South Bronx Film & Video Festival 99 Featured in NY Times: "Video Verite" EVC is featured on the front page of the New York Times Education Life Section. EVC is described as, "A media literacy program [that] helps teenagers document their lives on cameras and discover truths about themselves along the way." "Video documentary enables students to bear witness to their social conditions and look for solutions," says Steven Goodman, the center's founder and executive director. 99 Shared Space: University Neighborhood High School University Neighborhood HS generously provides space for EVC's workshops. YOTV and the Documentary Workshops are temporarily relocated in the new school on Manhattan's Lower East Side. 99 Hip Hop: A Culture of Influence Commissioned by the Brooklyn Museum of Art for an exhibition on Hip Hop and African American fashion, this documentary includes interviews with Mos Def and Talib Kweli, among other hip hop artists and music critics, to give a critical look at hip hop culture while celebrating Hip Hop as a unifying force among youth of different backgrounds and communities. Featured In: CINDY Competition, Silver Award; 43rd Rochester International Film Festival, Honorable Mention; 34th BAC International Film & Video Festival; Fledgling Film Festival; H20 Hip Hop Odyssey International Film Festival, Honorable Mention 00 New Home: Satellite Academy HS EVC moves to Satellite Academy HS midtown site 00 Toronto Youth Literacy Summit EVC presented on its methodology at the "Toronto Media Literacy Conference Summit 2000: Children, Youth and the Media, Beyond the Millennium" Conference 00 EVC Staff Retreat Blue Mountain, NY 00 Turn On The Power! With an introduction by community media pioneer George Stoney, this guide is an indispensible resource for grassroots community activists who want to use media production for community empowerment and social change. Funded by the New York Foundation, this handbook was disigned to support EVC's COTV (Community Organizers TV) training program. 00 ICC: A Call for Justice Produced in collaboration with the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival, EVC students report on the need for the International Criminal Court through stories of Chilean survivors of Pinochet's torture chambers of the 1970s. This film was screened at the Hague, in the Netherlands where the ICC sits. Featured in: Human Rights Watch International Film Festival; 4th Annual Urban Visionaries Video Festival; 4th Human Rights in Images Festival, Lisbon 01 Tough on Crime, Tough on Our Kind YO-TV producers examine the New York City juvenile justice system incorporating personal stories of incarcerated youth and interviews with lawyers, community activists and social workers. While producing their documentary, the crew also gives video training workshops to court involved youth participating in the CASES alternative to incarceration program. Featured in the 6th Annual Urban Visionaries Youth Film Festival 01 Coming Up Taller EVC was awarded the "Coming up Taler Award" sponsored by the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities 02 Not Me, Not Mine: Adult Survivors of Foster Care Nine years after the production of Some Place to Call Home, the YO-TV crew set out to learn what happened to the seven youth who originally appeared in this documentary. As the, now adult, survivors reflect on their struggles to "age out" of foster care and move on to their current realities, we gain a profound understanding of the long-term challenges facing both foster care youth and the policy-makers working to support them and to reform "the system." 03 Whose Streets? Our Streets! The True Face of Youth Activism Youth producers skillfully weave a historical overview of student and social protest movements together with current testimonies from young, outspoken New York City activists. 03 Teaching Youth Media Published Published by Teachers College Press, EVC Executive Director Steve Goodman's book "Teaching Youth Media: A Critical Guide to Literacy, Video Production and Social Change" explores the power and possibilities of using media education to help students develop their critical thinking and literacy skills. Foreward is by Maxine Greene. 04 National Youth Media Staff Retreat EVC staff and students attend a national youth media staff retreat at Appalshop in Whitesburg, Kentucky. 04 Back Off: The Inside View on Youth Anger EVC youth producers go behind the scenes of youth violence and investigate how many young people are raised to deal with their anger. Feature in: Tribeca Film Festival, Urban Visionaries Film Festival, Museum of Television & Radio, NYC 04 Actions of Today, BluePrints for tomorrow With funding from The Ford Foundation, on the 50th anniversary of the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decisions, EVC youth producers examine the current state of this civil rights cause -- equitable school reform. In their documentary, they examine school reform through the perspectives of education youth organizers from 'Make the Road by Walking,' and 'Sistas and Brothas, United' who were starting new schools. Featured In: Human Rights Watch International Film Festival; San Diego Latino Film Festival; Brooklyn Arts Council International Film Festival; Urban Visionaries Film Festivals, Museum of Television & Radio, New York City; Westport Youth Film Festival, Most Outstanding Documentary Award 04 All That I Can Be Segments of All That I Can Be are featured in Eugene Jarecki's critically acclaimed film, Why We Fight, which won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival in 2005. The documentary follows the stories of William, Dorian and Shinel as they embark on a separate journeys with the U.S. Army. Their stories shine a light on the problem of the economic draft as they enlist with few options in a time of war and economic downturn. Featured in: Los Angeles Film Festival; Tribeca Film Festival; Media That Matters Film Festival, Economic Justice Award; Human Rights Watch International Film Festival; Council on Foundation Film Festival. 04 Alienated: Undocumented Immagrant Youth Alienated gives voice to undocumented youth immigrants facing life after high school with no options for legalized work or college. Featured in: Urban Visionaries Film Festival, The Museum of Television and Radio (2006); Brooklyn Arts Council International Film & Video Festival (2006); 12th Annual Los Angeles Film Festival (2006); 24-Hour Film Festival (2006); Locomotion International Youth Film Festival, Short Documentary (2006); Ocean County Library Festival (2007); New Orleans Human Rights Film Festival (2007). 05 Patriarchy is Malarkey EVC youth producers weave interviews with peers, feminist scholars and social workers, and join a demonstration in Washington to examine the causes of discrimination and violence against women. Featured in: Human Rights Watch International Film Festival; Women of African Descent Film Festival, Juror's Choice Award for Outstanding Achievement in Documentary; Locomotion International Youth Film Festival; Brooklyn Arts Council International Film Festival; 2nd International Children's Film Festival, Istanbul, Turkey 05 The Practice and Principles of Teaching Critical Literacy Using examples from EVC's Documentary Workshop contextualized by Dewey and Freire's learning theories, this chapter explores the ways in which EVC's dialogic pedagogy teaches students multiple literacies, continuous inquiry and reflection. 05 16th Vermont International Film Festival, Burlington Vermont EVC documentary 'All That I Can Be' was screened at the 16th Vermont International Film Festival. 05 Video Workshops: Belfast Ireland EVC staff and graduates were invited by the Nothern Ireland Film and Television Commission and the British Film Institute to give video workshops for Protestants and Catholic youth in Belfast, Northern Ireland. 05 2nd International Children Film Festival, Istanbul Turkey Invited by the Istanbul University Faculty of Communication, Executive Director Steve Goodman speaks about EVC's methodology and its role in the youth media field. 05 Fifth Annual Media That Matters Film Festival EVC documentary 'All That I Can Be' awarded and screened at the Fifth Annual Media that Matters Film Festival. 06 Youth Powered Video Curriculum Published EVC publishes 'Youth Powered Video: A Hands-on Curriculum for Teaching Documentary.' This guide offers a collection of over 200 pages of lesson plans, hand-outs, assessment rubrics and model student journals. Two DVDs accompany this guide: one for teachers showing EVC instructors guiding their student groups through project activities, and the other for students giving models from student videos of documentary elements such as narration, interviews and edit styles. 06 London Educators at EVC Summer Teacher Intsitute EVC facilitates intensive "Youth Powered Video" workshops for London teachers and youth workers. EVC provides follow-up coaching remotely, with support from Adobe Youth Voices 06 Keeping America Open, OSI U.S. Programs Tenth Anniversary Report Amplifying Young People's Voices provides an overview of the goals and impact of the youth media field that had grown with the support and leadership of OSI's Youth Initiatives program. Youth Initiatives included both the Urban Debate Program and the Youth Media Program, which was established in 1999 to place young people at the center of public discourse, promoting youth development, raising visibility of youth voices and youth-generated media more generally. 06 Still Standing Still Standing provides an intimate portrayal of the challenges faced by Hurricane Katrina survivors six months after the storm. Featured in: The Soros/Sundance Documentary Fund - A Tenth Anniversary Film Festival; Cine, Golden Eagle Award; Reel Teens Festival, Best Short Documentary; Media That Matters Film Festival, Jury Award; Los Angeles Film Festival; Tribeca Film Festival; Oakland International Film Festival; Worldfest - Houston International Film Festival, Bronze Remi Award 07 Council on Foundations' 40th Annual Film & Video Festival Grantmakers in Film and Electronc Media select the EVC documentary 'All That I Can Be' to be featured in The Council on Foundations 40th Annual Film and Video Festival. The festival celebrates films of independent filmmakers that were made possibly by the support of the Council's funds and philosophy. Selections cover a broad range of issues; economic justice; the impact of incarceration on adults and children; identity; human rights; genocide; and immigration. 07 5th World Summit on Media for Children, Johannesburg, South Africa EVC staff present a workshop and panel at the 5th World Summit on Media for Children in Johannesburg. While there, they also lead a three day documentary production workshop for young adults in Soweto, sponsored by the US Consulate and the Hector Pieterson Museum. 07 Production of Documentaries: Bangalore, India Teachers and youth workers, trained by EVC staff, created documentaries on issues in their communities. The project was supported by Adobe Youth Voices and explored runaway children, railway stations occupants and globalization in India. 07 Shame on You: That Can Be Reused! Shame On You: That Can Be Reused! uses interviews, puppetry and even a recycling game to teach about environmental justice and recycling in NYC's urban communities, with a focus on the South Bronx. 08 It's Not About Sex Shocked by the statistic that more than half of all rapes happen to people under 18, student producers search for the roots of the violence. They examine why many survivors are afraid to report their assaults, and challenge their own assumptions, while calling for society to take prevention seriously at an earlier age. 08 Open Society Institute Youth Initiative's BarCamp: Istanbul, Turkey EVC alumni Luis Arcentales presents EVC documentary 'Still Standing' and co-facilitated a workshop on youth media and activism at the Open Society Institute Youth Initiative's BarCamp in Istanbul. 08 Harlem 2 Guadalajara EVC youth producers worked with Major League Soccer and travelled with a Harlem-based youth soccer team to Guadalajara, Mexico, to document their community service for an orphanage there. 08 Drop It to the Youth: Community Based Youth Video as a Tool for Building Democratic Dialogue in South Africa Reflecting on their experiences teaching video workshops to young adults in Soweto, EVC staff and graduates propose strategies for using video more broadly to promote community dialogue. 08 Outreach Campaign: Clevland and Columbus, Ohio; Philadelphia, PA EVC youth producers travel to Ohio and Pennsylvania to screen 'Journeys Through the Red White and Blue' and register first-time voters. 08 People's Inaugural Ball: Washington, D.C. EVC students present their documentary 'Journeys Through the Red White and Blue' at the People's Inaugural Ball. This was an alternative, grassroots event for people who couldn't afford to attend the official festivities of President Obama's inauguration. 08 Journeys Through The Red White and Blue Exploring young adults understanding of, and complex relation to, the voting process, this film captured the hope and enthusiasm of the 2008 presidential election. Youth producers screened it in Ohio and Pennsylvania to register young voters and at the People's Inaugural Ball in Washington, D.C. when President Obama was elected. 09 Participatory Media Forum: England, United Kingdom EVC presented a case study of its methodology and model of work at this international Participatory Media Forum in England 09 The War Within: Youth Depression YOTV producers focus on the problem of depression among youth of color and collect powerful stories of their experiences and the treatments they have found to cope with it. 10 Media Artist Residency EVC Director Steve Goodman is an Artist in Residence at Muhlenberg College and gives a lecture on youth media, critical inquiry and social change. 10 Shadows of Ignorance Combining personal stories with historical and contemporary struggles for gay rights, EVC youth producers give voice to the discrimination and in some cases, acceptance, that LGBT youth experience with their friends and family on a daily basis. 10 Crossing Waters Liberian immigrant youth tell stories of their struggles to heal from the traumas of war and make a new life here in Staten Island, support of their local school and community center. Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting provided mentoring for the project. 10 As the Sun Comes Up, the Bricks Fall Down Through the process of exploring gentrification in their own Bronx and Brooklyn neighborhoods, landlord harassment, and neighborhood displacement, EVC students discover critical information about how long-time tenants can maintain their homes and their civil rights. 11 A Clouded View In partnership with Harlem Hospital, EVC students investigate why, every day, thousands of teenagers pick up their first cigarette, what addiction means for them and their families and how they can kick this habit. 11 Our Inheritance: Growing Up in a Decade of War EVC students producers explore what 10 years of war have meant to today's generation of youth both here and overseas. 11 The Great Divide: Wealth Inequality in America Interviews with Professor Fances Fox Piven, David Jones of Community Service Society, and Occupy Wall Street protestors give a critical perspective on the growing wealth gap. 11 Mad Hard Fun: Building a Micro-culture of Youth Media in NYC Transfer Schools A case study that takes a close look at the challenges and success two transfer schools experience bringing EVC's student-centered media program into their classes for overage and under-credited students. 11 Mortgage Mayhem EVC students investigate the foreclosure and predatory lending crisis in New York City and document a crew member's own family struggles to hold on to their home. 12 New Home: City-As-School EVC moves its offices and workshops to City-As-Schools HS. Along with generously sharing space with EVC, City-As-School shares EVC's values and practices. Its students and teachers have participated in EVC workshops for the past three decades. As CAS Principal Alan Cheng says, "EVC has been a tremendous resource for our school community. We are excited to be entering the next stage of this collaboration. 12 Under 21 Turning their cameras on themselves, the team creates an intimate portrait of how two youth get access to alcohol, why they drink and the potential consequences. 12 Life Under Suspicion The NYPD stopped and frisked nearly 700,000 people in 2011 in an effort to remove guns from the streets. But 90 percent of those stopped are black and Hispanic males. In this powerful film, EVC youth producers give a human face to this critical problem that is criminalizing and dehumanizing their generation. The Manhattan Borough President's Office and the NYCLU were among EVC's partners on this project. "The Educational Video Center has done a remarkable job empowering youth in our community," says Melissa Mark-Viverito, Speaker of the NYC Council.. "This project is giving voice to those who are most victimized by the alienating stop-and-frisk policy. These young people are being trained to be journalists and documentary film makers who can fight this injustice and make a difference." Winner of Honorable Mention in the New York Civil Liberties Union’s 2012 Freedom of Expression Contest Media for a Just Society Award, 2014 12 Breathing Heavy: Breathing Easy: Environmental Hazards in Public Housing EVC students partner with West Harlem Environmental Action to investigate the harmful impact that lead poisoning, mold, and pesticides in low-income housing have on the health and wellbeing of their communities. They report on a team member's family suffering from asthma and a widespread infestation of black mold in their apartment. 13 Beyond Buillying Through personal stories of their friends and family members, youth producers challenge the common idea that the bully and victim are dissimilar. 13 Critical Teaching in Action: Los Angeles, CA Executive Director Steve Goodman participates in Mount St. Mary's College conference on Teaching, Technology and Social Justice as the keynote speaker. 14 The International Forum on the Development of Children's Films EVC travels to China to present "Youth Media Trends in the USA" at The International Forum on the Development of Children's Films supervised by the Film Bureau of State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film & Television, People's Republic of China. 14 Unequal Education Revisited EVC youth producers reunite 22 years later to film the followup to Unequal Education. This film bears witness to the long-term impact that inequities plaguing our society -- in education, justice, and healthcare -- have on those struggling to survive poverty without a safety net. 14 High on Perceptions Turning the cameras on themselves and their friends at home, in therapy offices, and secret hangout spots, EVC youth producers give an intimate portrayal of teens and their families trapped in a world of pain and addiction. 14 Gender Power Through startling interviews with street harassers and the harassed, the EVC team investigate the causes of street harassment and possible solutions for creating more equitable gender power relations in society. 14 US Senator Kirsten Gillibrand Recognizes EVC US Senator Gillibrand congratulates EVC saying: For three decades The Educational Video Center (EVC) has been a transformative force in the lives of our youth... It is my hope that all your efforts inspire others to be as impactful in their communities as you have been in New York City. 14 EVC 30th Anniversary EVC celebrates its 30th Anniversary at the Film Society of Lincoln Center 14 Media for a Just Society Award EVC youth producer Raelene Holmes accepts a "Media for a Just Society Award" on behalf of her team for their stop and frisk documentary, Life Under Suspicion, at the National Council on Crime and Delinquency gala in San Francisco, CA. 14 Conversations Across Cultures Youth Media Visions Co-sponsored by Teachers College Columbia University and the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations, this publication grows out of an international symposium where EVC was invited as one of the only seven participating youth organizations. EVC's chapter describes the pedagogic possibilities of its work teaching youth with and from media. 14 Spaces of Action: Teaching Critical Literacy for Community Empowerment in the Age of Neoliberalism Featured in the English Teaching: Practice and Critique journal, this article examines the theories of critical literacy, identity and communities of practice that effect the development of youth voices and social activism. 15 BronxNet’s OPEN 2.0 Following the broadcast of the documentary Making A Way, focusing on college access, YDW co-director Tanya Jackson and Youth Producers Giovonni Rodriguez appeared on BronxNet’s OPEN 2.0 television program to discuss the film. 15 Media Lab Capital Project Thanks to capital funding from Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, and New York City Council Member Corey Johnson, and in partnership with City-as-School EVC renovated our media lab with new production, digital editing, and archive facilities. 16 Know Your Rights: Transfer School Students and Police presentation Three transfer school students who were involved in the making of “Policing the Times,” Orlando Ramos (Innovation Diploma Plus), Jordi Perez (High School for Excellence and Innovation), and Sharington Haynes (City-As-School) were invited to participate in a screening and panel discussion for teachers and principals at the annual Transfer School Conference. 17 We Are All Connected revived EVC revived it’s urban rural exchange program from the early ‘80’s. Youth from NYC and Appalachia lived and worked together during the summer and winter breaks to collaboratively produce documentary films and websites focusing on the opioid crisis, as well as the digital divide. 17 Harlem NeON Arts premiere at National Black Theater Court involved youth participating in EVC’s program with Harlem NeON Arts premiere their community inquiry film on gangs at the National Black Theater. 17 EVC films air on Manhattan News Network EVC Youth Documentary Workshop films “Family Portrait: Growing Up With Divorce and Family Separation” and “Moving Without Direction” air on Manhattan News Network, Manhattan’s public access TV station. 18 Steve Goodman retires, Ambreen Qureshi welcomed as new Executive Director After almost 35 years at the helm of the organization, EVC’s incredible founder Steve Goodman retires. Ambreen Qureshi, is welcomed as EVC’s new Executive Director, the first woman, person of color, and immigrant to lead the organization. 18 20th Annual Allied Media Conference Youth and staff across all EVC programs facilitate 3 workshops at the 20th Annual Allied Media Conference in Detroit, MI. This national convening cultivates media-based organizing strategies for a more just and collaborative world. 18 “It’s Not About Grit” by Steve Goodman Published Teachers College Press published “It’s Not About Grit: Trauma, Inequity, and the Power of Transformative Teaching” by our founder Steve Goodman. This overview of EVC’s work over 35 years, shares the stories of our youth and their formidable resilience and sense of agency, and references the scholars and education movements that have informed EVC’s pedagogy. 19 We Are All Connected on MNN Manhattan Neighborhood Network’s Artists Forum program featured two films made by EVC students in the We Are All Connected Program. EVC Youth Producers Mediba, Yhenni, and Illiana appeared on the program to discuss their experiences working collaboratively with students in Central Appalachia. 19 Inaugural District 79 Film Festival EVC’s Professional Development Program organizes the first District 79 Film Festival as part of their spring art show “Changing the World With Our Work,” at the Queens Museum. 19 Represent Film Festival Selection The Ones Who Bought Bushwick is an official selection at the Represent Film Festival in Los Angeles. 20 EVC receives Google News Innovation funding EVC is one of 33 organizations in North America to receive prestigious Google News Innovation funding to encourage diversity and sustainability in local media. 20 EVC alum profiled as Filmmaker Making a Social Impact EVC alum and staff member, Raelene Holmes, profiled in Authority Magazine and related publications as a filmmaker making a social impact. 20 Youth Eco-media in Appalachia article published “Connecting Youth, Eco-Media and Resilience in Appalachia” article collaboratively written by EVC’s We Are All Connected teams in NYC and TN published in the Journal of Sustainability Education. 21 EVC alumni speak at Media Literacy and Social Justice Conference EVC alumni from the films Cops Are(n’t) Colorblind and What’s Gender Got to Do with It? speak on a panel at the 2021 National Association for Media Literacy Educational annual conference. 21 EVC youth in conversation with Abigail E. Disney EVC youth producers in conversation with documentary filmmaker Abigail E. Disney, about the future of documentary filmmaking and the importance of young people’s voices in media. 21 EVC films selected for BHERC Youth Diversity Film Festival EVC films The Ones Who Bought Bushwick, Cops Are(n’t) Colorblind, Melanated: The Color Underneath, and Living with the Enemy are official selections at the 11th Annual Black Hollywood Educational Resource Center Youth Diversity Film Festival in Los Angeles.
- Unequal Education Revisted | EVC
< Back Unequal Education Revisted In 1992, EVC’s youth team produced Unequal Education for the national PBS series, “Listening to America with Bill Moyers.” Their film revealed the stark contrast in resources and opportunities offered to students in two Bronx middle schools — one in middle-class area and one in a low-income community — in the same district. More than twenty years later, the crew reunited to produce Unequal Education Revisited, bearing witness to the long-term impact that inequities plaguing our society — in education, justice and healthcare — have on those struggling to survive. A film produced by high school students who participated in EVC’s Youth Documentary Workshop, 2014. Project Gallery Previous Next
- EVC | YDW
The Youth Documentary Workshop is the Educational Video Center’s award-winning signature program that has been preparing students for active community engagement, successful media careers and college since 1984. YOUTH DOCUMENTARY WORKSHOP The Youth Documentary Workshop, Educational Video Center’s flagship program, has been preparing young people for community action, successful media careers, and college since 1984. Our Youth Documentary Workshop (YDW) is a credit-bearing afterschool program in which high schoolers learn and work on all aspects of documentary filmmaking. The result: documentaries that investigate social justice issues from the perspective of those who are most impacted yet seldom heard. And a life-changing experience for many youth. Participants learn storyboarding, interviewing skills, editing, cinematography, and industry standard tools such as Adobe Premiere. They share all decision-making from selecting the topic of the film to how the end credits roll – and everything in between. At the end of each semester, the films premiere at theaters across NYC including at HBO, Film at Lincoln Center, and SVA Theatre. Through our signature portfolio roundtables, the newly-minted filmmakers discuss the films and reflect on their experiences making them. The films are entered in film festivals, screened at the students’ schools, and in many other venues, reaching new audiences, and winning awards. Participants also have the opportunity for paid internships with our media partners including Firelight Media, Union Editorial, and Bloomberg News. Many graduates of the workshop have gone on to work at media companies including Univision, CNN, Bloomberg News, Urbanworld Film Festival, PBS’s POV series, and more. Want to enroll students from your high school? Simply fill out the form below, or email Ines Morales , Programs Manager. PARTNER WITH EVC CONTACT US YOUTH DOCUMENTARY WORKSHOP AT A GLANCE Young people make a documentary film – from start to finish! On a social justice topic important to them. 15 weeks, 4 days a week, 3 hours a day (after school.) Open to all public high schoolers citywide especially Transfer, International, Consortium, and District 79 schools. Paid internships for students in work-based learning programs (such as Learn to Work, Work Learn Grow, and more.) NEXT SESSION: October 15th 2024 to January 16th 2025 (15 weeks) SCHEDULE: Monday to Thursday, 3:30pm - 6:30pm (12 hours/week) LOCATION : 16 Clarkson Street, 4th Fl, New York, NY APPLICATIONS : Accepted now through October 10, 2024 APPLICATION LINK RECENT DOCUMENTARIES
- PUBLICATIONS | EVC
PUBLICATIONS BY AND ABOUT EVC As a thought leader in education and youth media, publications by and about EVC are read and taught at universities and teachers colleges worldwide. BOOKS & CURRICULA IT'S NOT ABOUT GRIT Out of Stock TEACHING YOUTH MEDIA Out of Stock YOUTH POWERED VIDEO Out of Stock TURN ON THE POWER! Out of Stock YO-TV PRODUCTION HANDBOOK ! Widget Didn’t Load Check your internet and refresh this page. If that doesn’t work, contact us.
- EVC | Contact Us
CONTACT US Please reach out to learn more about the EVC community and ways to support. EDUCATIONAL VIDEO CENTER 16 Clarkson St, #401 New York, NY 10014 For general information please call us 212.465.9366 (ext. 0) contact: info@evc.org SUBMIT Thanks! Message sent.
- EVC | Steve Goodman
Steve Goodman EVC Founder Steve Goodman (he/him) is the founding executive director emeritus of the Educational Video Center. After producing an acclaimed documentary on a South Bronx youth gang in the 1970s and teaching video in a Lower East Side alternative high school, he established EVC in 1984 to empower youth to make their voices heard about critical issues in their lives. Under his direction for nearly 35 years, students at EVC have produced powerful social justice documentaries that have won over 100 awards, including an Emmy. Trained as a journalist at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, Goodman has directed award-winning independent documentaries and has taught in New York City transfer high schools; New York University; University of London, Institute of Education; and other universities. Co-author of EVC’s Youth-Powered Video curriculum, he has brought EVC’s methodology to youth through summer documentary camps in rural Appalachia and across the world through workshops in Soweto, South Africa; Belfast, Northern Ireland; London, England; and Bangalore and Delhi, India. Goodman writes extensively on critical media literacy, youth media, civic engagement and education reform for numerous publications. He is the author of Teaching Youth Media: A Critical Guide to Literacy, Video Production, and Social Change and most recently author of It’s Not About Grit: Trauma, Inequity and the Power of Transformative Teaching which was a 2019 Prose Award Finalist in Education and won the 2018 Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Gold Award in Education.
- PRIVACY & FINANCIAL INFO | EVC
This website is owned and operated by or on behalf of Educational Video Center (EVC). EVC does not, under any circumstances share, sell, rent, or trade information collected on our website with any third parties. We are committed to protecting and maintaining the privacy of visitors to our website. The only information we collect, such as name, email, telephone number, mailing address, is information provided voluntarily by visitors to our website. Our privacy policy only applies to the EVC website. We are not responsible for the policies of other websites which are linked on our site, such as Wix, QGiv or Google. Please view the privacy policy of those websites if you have any concerns. When you provide information, we may enter that information into our constituent database and contact you (by mail or email) in order to share information about EVC, process donations and acknowledge donors, or make requests for donations. To ensure the security of the information collected, our constituent database is password protected and only accessible by select staff members. You may opt out of any future contacts from us at any time. You can do so at any time by contacting us via the email address or phone number given on our website: info@evc.org 212-465-9366 Educational Video Center 16 Clarkson St #401 New York, NY 10014 PRIVACY FINANCIAL INFORMATION Financial Information Form 990 Annual Report 501(c)3 Financial Audit CHAR 500
- EVC | SHAKEIMA
SHAKEIMA COOKS Born & Raised: Harlem First EVC Project: The War Within: Youth Depression (YO-TV, 2009) Current Occupation: Freelance Producer Education: BA in Public Relations and Advertising – City College, 2011; MFA in Documentary Filmmaking – City College, 2013 Films: The War Within: Youth Depression, 2009 Shakeima's Story Shakeima first became interested in filmmaking after seeing the movie, The Color Purple. She had been in the foster care system and after being adopted by her great aunt, used that experience to create a film. Soon after, she joined YO-TV, EVC’s pre-professional training program. Shakeima and five other young women spent nine months researching and creating a documentary on depression among youth of color. The War Within: Youth Depression explores this hidden crisis through interviews with youth, clinicians, and mental health advocates. After working as a YO-TV Intern, EVC secured an internship for Shakeima at Union Editorial, a prestigious documentary and commercial editing house. Shakeima spent a year after YO-TV interning there with award winning partner/editor and EVC Advisory Board member Sloane Klevin. She credits this experience with waking her up to the business side of video and filmmaking, making her aware of all the parts involved in being a successful media producer. In 2012, Shakeima interned for POV a small documentary division of PBS, and interned at other well-established film companies such as DCTV (Downtown Community Television) founded by Jon Alpert. Shakeima was a 2018 Bronx Documentary Center Film Fellow. Shakeima has worked for BET Networks, as a Production Associate in development, and worked as a media instructor for The Center For Alternative Learning (CASES) where she taught film to court-mandated youth. Shakeima completed her MFA in Documentary Filmmaking at City College. Shakeima’s thesis film Beauty: Only Skin Deep??? explores the ideology of what beauty is considered to be in the African American community, and won the New York Women In Film And Television Award. Shakeima hopes to help other youth tell their stories, “kids just want to express themselves but if they don’t have the resources, they won’t be able to.” Best Skill Learned at EVC: “Definitely interviewing the subjects – EVC taught me how to do good interviews and develop good interviewing skills. It taught me to just listen and be able to deal with how your subject is feeling – understanding how they think and being able to relate and connect their struggle." Most Memorable EVC Moment: “One experience that stood out was when we got a chance to volunteer for the author Terrie Williams in her campaign, “Healing Starts With Us” and I saw other people from my community go up and talk about their experiences. I got to hear people of color talk about depression. Through that I got the chance to meet with a psychiatrist and discuss issues that I have been battling and struggling with since my childhood. This later on helped me to seek counseling at Full Circle Health. And I realized that I am not the only one battling depression — that there were many others.”


