High School for Recording Arts
Transcription
High School for Recording Arts
High School for Recording Arts www.hsra.org Ind. Charter School District 4039-07 • 550 Vandalia Street • St. Paul, MN 55114 • Phone 651.287.0890 • Fax 651.287.0891 Notes Students and staff with Dr. Michael Eric Dyson ...[standards] "that don't simply measure whether students can fill in a bubble on a test but whether they possess 21st century skills like problem-solving and critical thinking, entrepreneurship and creativity." President Barack Obama TAKING HIGH SCHOOL TO ANOTHER LEVEL High School for Recording Arts: Overview Classes are small. The education is tailored to students' interests and needs, and guided by faculty advisors. But it's the school's respect for the hip hop back beat and poetry of today's inner-city youth that make the High School for Recording Arts (HSRA) in Minnesota's Twin Cities a model educational program for at-risk youth, grades 9-12. Vision Studio 4 is the bridge linking students' musical dreams to educational success. Using their expertise in the recording arts, technology, and curriculum, Studio 4 designs, develops and provides creative services and products for educational providers and learners. Founder David "TC" Ellis, a recording artist and native Minnesotan whose own troubled youth was redirected by a nontraditional education, is the glue holding it all together. Table of Contents 1 Mission 2 Program & Outcomes 2 Student-run Ventures 3-4 The HSRA Story 5 Our Challenge 6 Partners 7 International 7-8 The Future of HSRA 9 You Can Help 9 Overview Building on the four pillars of Studio 4 -- Family, Community, Respect and Education, along with music and the recording arts, High School for Recording Arts builds self-esteem and marketable music business skills into the lives of at-risk youth earning a high school diploma. Taking High School to Another Level -1- Necole & Dera in science lab HSRA Students Teaching ProTools to educators at a CES conference Mission The mission of HSRA is to provide youth the opportunity to achieve a high school diploma through the exploration and operation of the music business and other creative endeavors. HSRA Learning Environment The HSRA learning environment is a culturally sensitive, diverse, drug-free, adult supervised, safe space that offers positive mentoring, career and post-secondary preparation, and standards-driven, project-based learning in a non-traditional educational environment. Embedded in that learning environment is the belief that our students must be prepared for a life of creative entrepreneurship. This philosophy is represented through our students’ involvement in Another Level Enterprises, an in-school, student-operated entity that incorporates various businesses normally associated with the music industry into their daily learning. The HSRA Program & Outcomes Experiential learning connects core subjects like English, science, social studies and mathematics to the music business. Devon teaching Chris how to create a CD cover in Photoshop. By understanding the relationship between academics and thier musical interest, students gain mastry in business areas such as: Graphic design (i.e. designing CD covers, music websites, marketing materials) Advertising / copy-writing Engineering and production Operating digital and recording technology New artist representation Artistic performance Contract negotiation Copyrighting and protecting intellectual property Manufacturing, marketing and distributing recording projects completed by HSRA students and new talent. OUTCOME HSRA students receive music industry expo sure, knowledge, credentials and recognition for professional quality work. INSPIRE “Read and write yourself into freedom. Read and write to assert your identity as a human…” -- Malcolm X Taking High School to Another Level -2- The HSRA program boasts several student-run ventures. Another Level Music Group (ALMG) is a student-operated record and net label developed along with www.anotherLevelmusicgroup.com and www.ALEworldwide.com, an online music and educational community. Another Level Music Group allows students to explore operation of the music industry firsthand as they discover and record student artists, negotiate contracts, and publish and copyright new music. ALMG manufactures, markets, and distributes recording projects completed by HSRA students and other student artists worldwide and provides participating students with valuable entrepreneurial skills to start their own businesses. To date, ALMG has released eight CDs produced by HSRA students and additional CD projects from students at schools across the country. “Wow, these kids are really talented” -- Ross Raihala (Pop Music Critic, St. Paul Pioneer Press) Another Level Enterprises is a school-wide student-operated business entity that provides hands-on experiences in various areas of the music industry. These areas include music production, publishing, performance, radio broadcasting, marketing, promotion, merchandising, web development and graphic art. Some of these businesses include Another Level Music Group, Another Level Entertainment, a sound and production company that provides state-of-the-art equipment and professional services for various clients and activities such as corporate meetings, special events, concerts and forums, and Sweat Equity Enterprises (SEE) which designs groundbreaking collaborations between youth and industry. Taking High School to Another Level -3- ENTERPRISES HSRA students with rapper/actor Ice Cube. Lynn Whitfield The Fo-Show, a half-hour student produced weekly radio program, airs Sundays at 8 AM on the Minneapolis/St.Paul top-rated urban radio station B96/FM on the Radio One Network. Guests have included rapper Chingy, professor and activist Dr. Michael Eric Dyson and actress Lynn Whitfield. These shows are available for download as Podcasts at www.TheFoShow.com or on the iTunes Music Store. Community Service Community service is also a strong component of HSRA's educational process. One student service learning project of note – Get Ready – is an early intervention and college awareness program that prepares youngsters from economically and racially underrepresented groups for post-secondary education. The program involves a HSRA curriculum, skits and a music Political activist, Kevin Powell addresses the student body. Chingy Dr. Michael Eric Dyson CD. Targeted students receive college planning information, academic tutoring, as well as career and higher education options. Get Ready prepares elementary, middle and high school students for post-secondary education by giving them motivational tools and experiences that encourage high school graduation and the pursuit of a post-secondary education options. Get Ready has distributed more than 5,000 music CDs to 19 middle schools since the program began in 2006. Taking High School to Another Level -4- The HSRA story True Confessions Released 1991 Warner Bros. Launched as an educational pilot program in 1996, HSRA is the vision of recording artist and rap lyricist David "TC" Ellis who gained fame in the 1980s as the first artist to release a rap record in Minnesota. The regional success of "Twin City Rap" earned Ellis the notice of music legend Prince and a Warner Bros recording contract at Paisley Park. His works include the movie soundtrack for Graffiti Bridge as a member of the New Power Generation. Eventually, Ellis started his own production company, Studio 4, where a number of young black artists who had dropped out of high school soon became a permanent presence. These young artists would ask Ellis questions about recording their music, copyrighting and publishing their work, reading and understanding a recording contract, etc. Guiding them through the creative and business process of the recording industry, Ellis was struck by the way the youth naturally embraced academic subjects that supported their pursuit of music careers. With that realization, and after a twoyear pilot program, the High School for Recording Arts was born. It received a charter from the Minnesota Department of Education and emerging as the only public school of its kind in the United States. HSRA Today The High School for Recording Arts is a 501(c) 3 nonprofit corporation and remains the only recording arts school of its kind in the United States. Based on the small schools model concept, annual school enrollment averages 200 students; faculty and staff number about 30; the student/advisor ratio (HSRA teachers are called advisors) is 20 to 1. The school targets youth who have opted out of traditional schools in favor of a creative, non-traditional setting with an educational culture that better fits their learning styles and needs. HSRA students have the opportunity to (1) obtain a high school diploma Taking High School to Another Level -5- while learning about the music/ recording business and (2) create a professional webbased digital portfolio that includes a résumé and college acceptance letter. Students are recruited through a variety of methods (i.e. public announcements, open house events, HSRA student visits to area middle schools, etc.) including word of mouth and HSRA student referrals. To earn a high school diploma, HSRA students must master Minnesota’s content standards, complete all coursework required for graduation, accomplish the 12 HSRA validations of learning, and pass the state’s standardized assessments. Our Students, Our Challenge Who are the HSRA students? Meeting an Educational Need Sixty-four percent of HSRA students are male and thirty-six percent are female. AfricanAmerican students comprise the largest racial/ ethnic group at HSRA at eighty-eight percent of the student population. Six percent of the students are Caucasian and four percent are Hispanic. While Minnesota has one of the best educational systems in the country, boasting lower than average high school dropout rates, high graduation rates and a well educated workforce, the educational reality is much different for students of color. More than half of all African American (63%), American Indian (57%), and Hispanic (53%) students living in Minnesota graduate late or not at all. Many HSRA students are overcoming obstacles ranging from homelessness and gang violence to single parenting and serving as heads of households with sick or drug addicted parents. Other HSRA students come from solid middle-class and more advantaged backgrounds. Yet all HSRA students share a common need to learn within a non-traditional school environment supported by an innovative learning community. No high school diploma means a life of unfulfilled dreams and potential. For racial and ethnic minority males, no high school diploma often means a life of recurring incarceration. Research suggests that 44 percent of AfricanAmerican men without high school diplomas remain idle year round (or in a state of joblessness).1 For HSRA graduates, earning a high school diploma is a significant milestone in their journey to personal success. 1 Sum, Andrew et al. (2004). Trends in Black Male Joblessness and Year-Round Idleness: An Employment Crisis Ignored. Boston: Center for Labor Market Studies, Northeastern University. Taking High School to Another Level -6- To the contrary, the HSRA educational experience is vastly different from typical secondary schools in the United States. The 2004-05 HSRA graduation rate was 72.5 percent, which compared favorably to the 2003-04 U.S. public school graduation rate of 75 percent. The overall Minnesotan high school graduation rate of 84.7,2 the 2001-02 U.S. graduation rate for African-American students at 56 percent and the Minnesotan graduation rate for black students in 2001-02 at 54 percent.3 (All stats gleaned from the most recent data available). The difference between Minnesota’s graduation rate overall and the state’s African-American student graduation rates represents the widest achievement gap in the nation. - - Partners Aiding HSRA - HSRA is a grant recipient of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation receiving funds to replicate the Edvisions project-based small schools model. - HSRA is one of 22 secondary schools across the United States designated as a Coalition of Essential Schools (CES) Mentor High School. - HSRA first earned accreditation in the 200405 school year from the North Central Association Commission on Accreditation and School Improvement (NCA CASI). - State Farm Insurance Click 4 Life is a teen driver safety project that has been undertaken by High School for Recording Arts students in St. Paul, Minnesota and The Fo-Show with funding from State Farm Insurance. This multifaceted project features a CD entirely produced and recorded by HSRA/Studio 4 students, public presentations of driver safety information researched by the students in conjunction with the Humphrey Institute at the University of Minnesota and Meharry Medical College, a major Minnesota State Capitol lobbying effort, a Click4Life.org website, and weekly spots on “The Fo-Show.” - Lube-Tech is a local, family-owned company specializing in worldwide industrial lubrication and fuel product technology. Through Social Venture Partners, Lube-Tech has partnered with HSRA to implement Sweat Equity Enterprises, a non-profit, New-York-based design program created to connect youth with industry and with real-world design challenges. Lube-Tech has donated both money and time to help our learners authentically connect with the business world. The Under the Radar Foundation exists to focus attention on issues and people that the news media has forgotten, while generating resources to help those in need. In 2008, students from HSRA performed at their annual gala at the Dakota Jazz Club. Proceeds from that event will help continue the artist-in-residence program that Under The Radar Foundation has supported at HSRA. Black Alliance for Educational Options (BAEO) is a national, nonprofit, membership organization whose mission is to actively support parental choice to empower families and increase quality educational options for Black children. BAEO has recently awarded HSRA a grant to replicate the school in New York City. International Connections - In 2005, HSRA Founder David Ellis was honored as an Oxford University Roundtable Fellow for his work with HSRA/Studio 4 and invited to Oxford to present his work before leading educators from around the world. T.C. at Oxford University National Center for Education Statistics. (2006). Common Core of Data. The Averaged Freshman Graduation Rate for Public High Schools From the Common Core of Data: School Years 2002–03 and 2003-04 E.D. TAB. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Ed. 2 3 Greene, J. and M. Winters. (2005). Public High School Graduation and College-Readiness Rates: 1991–2002. New York: Manhattan Institute for Policy Research. To earn accreditation, schools must meet NCA CASI's high standards, be evaluated by a team of professionals from outside the school and implement a continuous school improvement plan focused on increasing student performance. The accreditation process is voluntary and requires annual review. Taking High School to Another Level -7- - INSPIRE HSRA Development Director Tony Simmons was invited to accompany Lt. Governor Carol Molnau in the Spring of 2006 as she led an official delegation to China’s Shaanxi Province. The delegation sought to explore new ways of building Minnesota’s relationship with its “sister state” and “pave the way for new business, academic, cultural, and humanitarian partnerships in Shaanxi.” “The secret of education lies in respecting the pupil.” --Ralph Waldo Emerson Grave-site of W.E.B. Du Bois Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Chinese Trade Center - Xi’an, China - In 2006 fifteen HSRA students and staff traveled to Ghana, West Africa. During this transformational trip the group experienced first-hand the emotional impact and history behind the transatlantic slave trade, and learned how this history has affected Africa and the African-American Pan-African experience through today. The team learned about different cultures, such as the Ashanti tribe, and participated in a traditional naming ceremony where everyone received Ghanaian names. Highlights from the trip will be presented on DVD and in a presentation before the HSRA/Studio 4 community. In 2000 and 2004, a HSRA team traveled to Guatemala as part of a humanitarian project. Prior to each trip HSRA students studied the Guatemalan culture, economy and political system. Once in country, the HSRA team worked with international social service agencies assisting in a variety of community development activities including the building of homes for poor families. The highlight of each trip was the sharing of HSRA students’ music while learning about and experiencing the cultural sounds of the region. Staff and students in Guatemala City Daysha, Necole, Kelli & Kowanna in Accra, Ghana Temple V Taking High School to Another Level -8- Bus to Antigua The Next Level Showcase visits HSRA. HSRA LEADERSHIP David “T.C.” Ellis Founder/ Executive Director [email protected] Tony Simmons Development Director [email protected] YOU CAN HELP The Future of HSRA In addition to its current 12,000 square foot facility housing staff offices, two studios, a conference room, classrooms and kitchen, HSRA has an 8,000 square foot state-ofthe-art advisory and performance space designed by award-winning architect Randall Fielding of Minneapolisbased firm Design Share (http://www.designshare.com/fi elding/projects.asp). You Can Help Whether donating your time, talent or financial resources, the High School for Recording Arts needs your support. To learn how you can help contact: Tony Simmons or David Ellis at: High School for Recording Arts/ Studio 4 550 Vandalia Street St. Paul, MN 55114 651-287-0890 www.hsra.org Plans are underway to build a new Twin Cities school facility for the 2010-11 school year and to replicate the HSRA To make an online model in New York City in 2010. contribution please visit: www.hsra.org/about Taking High School to Another Level -9- Bryan Rossi Program Director [email protected] Paula Anderson Education Director [email protected] Olubukola Ige ALR President [email protected] Notes www.hsra.org www.studio-4.com ©2006 Studio 4 Enterprises Inc. www.anotherlevelrecords.com www.alrw.org Studio 4 Enterprises Inc. High School for Recording Arts 550 Vandalia Street Saint Paul, MN 55114 651.287.0890