Nat'l Jazz Museum and the World Wide Workshop Join For Youth Program
The National Jazz Museum in Harlem (NJMH) announces a new partnership with the World Wide Workshop to teach youth jazz and digital literacy through Globaloria, the first-of-its-kind youth network for learning how to make videogames.
Starting this summer and throughout the school year, NJMH will run a series of a new kind of creative education workshops for youth ages 13-19. The workshops are led by Jonathan Batiste, a music curator at the museum, who comes from a celebrated family of musicians in New Orleans. At 24, Batiste has performed in 40 countries and collaborated with Prince, Jimmy Buffet and Wynton Marsalis. He is a Juilliard graduate, a Movado Future Legend award recipient and the youngest ever Steinway Performing Artist. He is featured on HBO's "Treme" and has conducted clinics and master classes worldwide.
"In my Globaloria workshops I want to collaborate with teens from Harlem and other NYC communities to create games and programs about the history of Jazz," reflects Jonathan Batiste. "The experience is going to be super-interactive, with live performances and trips to historic jazz locations in Harlem to give us ideas about games and programs we want to design."
This week, NJMH launched the first Globaloria-Jazz Summer Workshop. Batiste and his young mentees formed a game-design team. Guided by the World Wide Workshop team of experts and the Globaloria digital curriculum, they'll work together 3-hours daily in creative sessions straight through mid-August. They'll listen to and play jazz, and at the same time, learn how to imagine, research, design, and develop their ideas into an interactive game demo with music and animations. On the final day of the workshop, they will present their vision to a live audience, including their parents. Later, during the school year, they'll have the opportunity to complete and publish their games online, with the support of professional Flash and game design experts from the World Wide Workshop. 3-4 such Globaloria-Jazz Workshops are planned for 2011-12.
The National Jazz Museum in Harlem(www.jazzmuseuminharlem.org) is dedicated to fostering this spirit and music of jazz as a living, breathing entity that looks as far into the future as it does into the past. The museum was founded to make the rich history and experience of jazz accessible to all, and to ensure that the heart and soul of the music remain forever entwined with the Harlem community. In the words of jazz pianist and Duke Ellington mentor Willie "The Lion" Smith, "I'd rather be a fly on a lamppost in Harlem than a millionaire anywhere else." NJMH offers a range of free concerts, exhibitions and educational programs, and is thrilled now to include the Globaloria-Jazz Workshops.
Funding for the Globaloria-Jazz at the NJMH was made possible by NJMH Board Member Jonathan Scheuer and NJMH Member Jim Lecinski..... and donors like you....
NJMH welcomes support from people who care about jazz, children and computer literacy!
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