SwiftPageEmail Subject: Update from Civitas
 

Dear Bobbi, 

Survey on Spring Vacation

While this may not be the most weighty survey issue we have ever presented, it is currently relevant to both students and teachers (or anyone who has ever gone to school).  Click here for the short survey.

Further Description of Black History
program with History Museum and
St. Louis Rams
 


The program was jointly sponsored by the Museum, the St. Louis Rams, and Civitas.

Students from the following schools participated:
Crossroads, Maplewood-Richmond-Heights, Metro, Miller Career Academy, Rosati-Kain, S.L.U.H., Soldan International Studies, and Webster Groves.


Below are photos from the event.   We hope to have a link to more pictures from the Rams Gallery next week.

By Cassidy Cleveland
Special to Stlouisrams.com

The Rams celebrated Black History Month with a special program for local high school students at the Missouri History Museum last week. The program featured a group of panelists leading students in critical thinking conversations surrounding black history. With the help of Civitas Association, students from ten local schools gathered to discuss the importance of trailblazers such as Kenny Washington and President Barack Obama.  

Over 60 students filled the AT&T room at the History Museum and enjoyed healthy snacks before the large group divided in half. The program began with half of the students touring the Missouri History Museum’s “St. Louis in Black and White” exhibit. The other students watched a selection from President Obama’s inaugural address and learned about the history of Kenny Washington as an agent of change in ending the official segregation of pro football. Washington, a member of the Rams, broke the color barrier of professional sports one year before Jackie Robinson integrated baseball.

The panelists leading the discussion included: Director of Diversity Awareness Partnership Reena Hajat, Retired SBC Executive Priscilla Hill-Ardoin, St. Louis University professor Dr. Jonathan Smith, Rams linebacker Chris Draft, Sales and Support Manager for Pepsi Esther Walker and Executive Vice President of the Rams Bob Wallace. After the students watched an excerpt from President Obama’s inaugural address, the panelists initiated conversations about diversity and the changes occurring within our country. Many of the panelists lived through segregated times and had interesting stories to tell, which prompted questions from the students. In President Obama’s speech, he talked about how America is a patchwork society, with the word “and” being used countless times. The panelists then used the patchwork concept to spur discussion on the challenges associated with such diversity. 

The next part of the program was the “St. Louis in Black and White” exhibit. While touring the exhibit, students tried on shackles that slaves wore around their ankles. They were then given a piece of paper and asked to describe how the shackles felt in one word.  To complete the exercise, the students were divided into two groups and had to arrange the words in a verse. Each group then read their verse either in unison or one by one. As the students spoke words such as “confined, heavy, trapped, hopeless,” everyone felt the somberness of the moment.

The next stop of the tour was a reenactment of a local lunch counter during the 1950s. Five students were chosen to sit at a lunch counter and order food. Three students were served food, while two were completely ignored. The two that were ignored were playing the part of African-Americans. At the end of the simulation, the two students said they were angry that they hadn’t been served. The students left the tour with a better understanding of what it would be like to be an African American during those discriminatory times.

The evening concluded with both groups reconvening in the AT&T room where they were asked to brainstorm ideas for change. What would they like to see changed in their school, community or St. Louis? And how were they going to be that change? The students presented their ideas to the panelists and the underlying theme was education. Each group mentioned education first, then open-mindedness, inclusion and breaking down stereotypes.

The students recognized that in the instance of racism and diversity, it starts with the youth. They concluded, “It’s not a question about race, it’s a question about love and hate.

Rams linebacker Chris Draft, a graduate of Stanford University, addresses students.
Rams Executive Vice-President/General Counsel Bob Wallace facilitates discussion.
Chris Draft responds to a question.
Participating student describes suggestions for St. Louis from his group.
Chris Draft and student share thoughts on improving St. Louis.

Plans Proceed for next Pulitzer
Global Gateway Project
As mentioned last week, the topic for the third and final Pulitzer Global Gateway project for 2008-09 is "Women, Children, Crisis."   The topic is clearly relevant, both globally and locally.  As described below, the structure of the program will be different this Spring because we will have three journalists bringing information from three countries (Nepal, Iraq, and the Congo) and weaving together the common threads of oppression in each country.

Another unique feature of this program will be a Tuesday (April 21) evening program for students, teachers, and parents from all participating schools.  The presentation and dialogue that evening will be more comprehensive than the classroom visits.  It will be one of the few occasions when all three journalists will be present at the same location.  Nerinx Hall High School has graciously offered to host this event.  We will provide more details in the next few weeks. Below is Pulitzer director Jon Sawyer's description of the program:

The Pulitzer Center's Global Gateway presentation for spring 2009 (April 20-23) addresses the issue of women and children in crisis, drawing on Pulitzer Center reporting projects from three different regions -- Nepal, Iraq and eastern Congo -- and addressing topics that range from rape as an instrument of war to the abuse of young girls through entrenched patterns of indentured servitude.

Much of the reporting is already available on the Pulitzer Center site, under the specific project web pages. By early April we will produce an interactive web portal that showcases key elements from each project and that will also contain lesson plans and the opportunity to engage directly with the journalists and with other Gateway participants.

The featured journalists coming to St. Louis are as follows:

(1) Meredith May, the veteran feature writer for the San Francisco Chronicle (and a professor at Mills College/Oakland) who reported this winter on child indentured servants in western Nepal; http://www.pulitzercenter.org/showproject.cfm?id=90

(2) Alaa Majeed, Iraqi former McClatchy Baghdad bureau reporter, winner of the 2007 Courage in Journalism award, and collaborator with her husband, journalist  David Enders and with filmmaker Rick Rowley on their many documentaries on Iraq. She is just back from a month in Iraq, successful after three years in trying to get her two sons, 7 and 10, out of the country; http://pulitzercenter.org/showproject.cfm?id=36

(3) Michael Kavanagh, just completing his third month-long trip to eastern Congo for the Pulitzer Center. Michael is primarily a radio journalist, with reports on NPR and PRI/The World. He also produced video reports for WorldFocus, the new weeknightly program on foreign affairs for public television. http://pulitzercenter.org/showproject.cfm?id=58 

This is going to be a powerful presentation, with compelling video from each project and journalists fresh from the field. Alaa Majeed will be accompanied by her sons and all three journalists bring a deep personal commitment to the subjects they have covered. We will be presenting all three journalists at an event Wednesday night 4/22 at Washington University and we hope to do another combined presentation at one of our partner high schools Tuesday night 4/21 (an event that would be open to all Gateway students and teachers as well as parents, other students and the general public). Between Monday and Wednesday (possibly Thursday) the journalists will fan out individually to as many of the participating schools as possible, so that participants will have the opportunity for in-depth discussion in small groups.

Suburban Journal Article on Green Deal Conference

Thanks to Danette Thompson of the Suburban Journals for writing such a fine article on the Civitas "Green Deal" conference last month.  You can access it by clicking here.

Several Urban Studies Programs on Horizon
The number of students indicating interest in Civitas' Urban Studies "Go-Team" the week of June 8 continues to grow.  We will have more information on the program no later than March 24.


A reminder that the Young Planners Network Conference will be held in San Francisco from June 4-7.  We thank former Civitas staffer Ryun Miller for this information.

Upcoming Civitas Events
 
     
(Actual events in bold -- always subject to change when change occurs!)      

Black: High School                                  Blue: Middle School       

 
DateTimePlaceActivity
Sat.,
03/21/2009
9:00 AM -
11:00 AM
Crossroads (map)Discussion #13
Thurs.,
03/26/2009
9:00 AM -
12:00 PM
Creve Coeur Gov't Center (map)Middle School M.U.N. #1
Sat.,
03/28/2009
9:00 AM -
11:00 AM
Crossroads (map)Discussion #14
 

Civitas Associates
10845 Olive Blvd.
Suite #155

Saint Louis, Missouri 63141
Phone: (314) 367-6480

Fax: (314) 367-7742
info@civitas-stl.com
www.kidswhothink.org
Director: Arthur Lieber

Tuesday, March 10, 2009 

 
What's Civitas?  See video below:
Civitas simulation on  
"Carefully Getting out
of Iraq"