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Ellis Marsalis, an internationally
acclaimed
New Orleans musician and teacher, was named
"2008 Humanist of the Year" by the Louisiana
Endowment for the Humanities during special
ceremonies March 29 at the Houmas House
Plantation and Gardens.
In addition, Dr. Norman Francis, long-time president of Xavier University in New Orleans and recipient of the President's Medal of Freedom, received the LEH's "Lifetime Contribution to the Humanities" award. Also recognized during the special ceremony as the new Louisiana Poet Laureate was Darrell Bourque, a resident of rural St. Landry Parish, La., and professor emeritus of English from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. LEH president and executive director Dr. Michael Sartisky received a special award, recognizing his 25 years as head of the nation's largest state humanities council. Each year, the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities, or LEH, honors Louisianians who have made outstanding contributions to the study and understanding of the humanities. In addition to Humanist of the Year, awards are given for Lifetime Contribution to the Humanities, Chair's Award for Institutional Support, Humanities Documentary Film of the Year, Individual Achievement in the Humanities, Public Humanities Programming, Humanities Book of the Year, and the Humanities Teacher of the Year award.
Other award winners included:
Public Humanities Programming Award -
John R. May, an English professor at LSU
in Baton
Rouge.
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From July 7 to July 31, approximately 25 New
Orleans kindergarten through 8th grade
teachers will participate in the "Prime Time
for PRIME TIME in New Orleans Schools"
Institute for Advanced Study (TIAS).
A partnership between the LEH and the University of New Orleans, the Institute will be co-directed by Dr. Nancy Dixon, who teaches at the University of New Orleans and has been a PRIME TIME scholar for several years, and Dr. Olivia Pass, the associate director of PRIME TIME who has served as a PRIME TIME scholar for 7 years as well as a program coordinator for PRIME TIME. The Institute will be held at the Louisiana Humanities Center at Turners Hall in New Orleans. Guest instructors include Jack Heflin, Endowed Professor of English at the University of Louisiana at Monroe and a PRIME TIME scholar, and Cindy Tremé, a PRIME TIME storyteller from Lake Charles. In this Institute, teachers will employ PRIME TIME methodologies and books to enhance their ability to teach reading and critical thinking skills in grades K-8. They will also learn techniques for character education. "Teachers will learn to foster discussion, focus on real-life issues, and explore humanities issues by means of award-winning children's and young adults' books," said Nancy Dixon. Participating teachers will create lesson plans for use in their classes during the upcoming school year.
Teachers who participate in the Institute
will receive a $750
stipend and are eligible to receive 3 hours
of graduate credit from the University of New
Orleans, as well as 45 CLUs. Furthermore, UNO
has waived tuition.
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A collaborative effort among the City of
Thibodaux, the local Rotary Club and the
Lafourche Parish Library proved to be a
success this spring for a PRIME TIME
at the
Thibodaux Library. Wanting to do something to
counteract the illiteracy and semi-literacy
problems in Lafourche Parish, Woody Falgoust,
local attorney, bookstore owner and president
of the Thibodaux Rotary, conceived this
collaborative idea and did the groundwork for
the event.
Woody Falgoust invited Dr. Olivia Pass, associate director of PRIME TIME, to speak about the literacy program at a meeting of the Thibodaux Rotary Club last year. That meeting cinched the Rotary Club's involvement. Then, Falgoust and Pass met with Ron Alcorn, Thibodaux's director of recreation. Alcorn embraced the idea and talked with Mayor Charles Caillouet, who agreed that this program was a most worthy one for the city to undertake. From that point, Alcorn took the lead and met with Allison Clark, the Lafourche Parish Library's PRIME TIME liaison and a PRIME TIME veteran program coordinator. Clark was delighted to have the able assistance of Rotary and the city to help her with a PRIME TIME program in her parish.
The Rotary Club and the City of Thibodaux
picked up the expenses for the PRIME TIME
program and also helped with the donation of
door prizes and food for each of the six
sessions. Ron Alcorn had attended the PRIME
TIME training workshop held in New Orleans in
December. "I think we can do this every
year," said Alcorn, who has become a PRIME
TIME devotee.
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PRIME TIME FAMILY READING TIME® will
host a
training workshop on Saturday, July 26 -
Sunday, July 27, 2008. The workshop will
take place at the Louisiana Humanities Center
at Turners Hall in New Orleans, LA.
Approximately 60 individuals from California,
Kansas, Nebraska, New York, and Louisiana are
expected to take part in two days of intense
practice and instruction on PRIME TIME
methodology and program implementation. This
promises to be an enlightening event as
librarians, school administrators, teachers,
university scholars, and storytellers learn
to use the humanities to reduce illiteracy.
For more information about the July 2008
PRIME TIME Training Workshop, contact
Shantrell Adams at 504-620-2625 or adams@leh.org.
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The deadline to apply for a PRIME TIME FAMILY
READING grant for the Fall 2008 session in
Louisiana is April 15. Public libraries,
schools, community centers, and other public
institutions are eligible to apply. To fill
fall and spring sessions, PRIME TIME
grants
are awarded twice per calendar year.
The grant provides:
For more information about PRIME TIME, visit
our webpage
http://www.leh.org/html/primetime.html.
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The LEH - funded by two $1 million grants
from the U.S. Department of Education's
Teaching American History program - has
organized institutes in American history this
June for public school teachers in Caddo and
Calcasieu parishes. Three summer institutes
will be held in Caddo Parish in partnership
with LSUS and four institutes in Calcasieu
Parish in partnership with McNeese State
University. The LEH also is serving as the
fiscal agent for the Algiers Charter School
Association's Teaching American History
summer institutes for New Orleans public
school teachers.
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The spring 2008 edition of Louisiana Cultural
Vistas, featuring New Orleans artist Jean
Seidenberg, is now on newsstands and in the
mail. Seidenberg's works are currently on
view at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in
New Orleans, and a book featuring his
paintings and sculptures, funded in part by
the LEH, is scheduled for release later this
year.
Other stories include:
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With the upcoming Smithsonian Institution
Museum on Main Street and Louisiana Endowment
of the Humanities tour of the exhibition
entitled "New Harmonies: Celebrating American
Roots Music," the following activities are
planned:
Abita Springs - "New Harmonies" opens its Louisiana tour at the Abita Springs Trailhead Museum. The exhibition will be on display in Abita Springs April 12-May 24; selected public programs scheduled for April are listed below. For more information, contact 985-892-0711 or 985-892-3597.
The Smithsonian's "New Harmonies" Louisiana tour schedule: April 14-May 24, Abita Opry Inc., Abita Springs; June 2-July 12, Lincoln Parish Library, Ruston; July 21-Aug. 30, Jeanerette Bicentennial Park and Museum, Jeanerette; Sept. 4-Oct. 15, Le Musee de la Ville de Kaplan, Kaplan; Oct. 23-Dec. 5, Delta Music Museum, Ferriday; Dec. 11-Jan. 15, 2009, Louisiana State Oil and Gas Museum, Oil City. |
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Beginning in late March, RELIC is sponsoring
adult reading programs at a number of
libraries throughout Louisiana. They cover
topics such as "The Creole Experience and
Identity in Louisiana Literature and
History," "Elizabeth I of England and Her
Times," "Battleground Louisiana: Civil War
Events and Experiences," and "The Native
American World of the Southeastern United
States." Sign up by contacting the hosting
library and requesting that your name and
information is added to the library's
outreach list. These and other programs
available in the winter and spring can be
found in the schedule.
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On April 19th, the Louisiana Humanities
Center at Turners' Hall will present "The
History of the Creole Wild West, as Told by
Themselves." An oral history project created
by the LEH and the New Orleans Mardi Gras
Indian Council, the event will include a
performance by the Creole Wild West, followed
by a panel discussion moderated by Bruce
Raeburn, PhD, of the Hogan Jazz Archive at
Tulane University. Doors open at 8 p.m. For
reservations, contact Brian Boyles at
504-620-2632 or boyles@leh.org.
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April 2008 marks the 7th Annual Celebration
of Jazz Appreciation Month (JAM)! The
Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of
American History has led this nationwide
effort to draw public attention to jazz as a
living and historical treasure and will kick
off this year's celebration, as it has in the
past, with a special program at the end of
March. This year's program will be a Town
Hall meeting hosted by Ramsey Lewis, host of
the Legends of Jazz radio and PBS television
series, to discuss jazz's global impact and
the role of jazz advocates in preserving
jazz's heritage and performance.
NEH has participated in JAM by featuring
jazz-related funded projects and resources on
the NEH website (www.neh.gov) and lesson
plans on EDSITEment (http://edsitement.neh.gov/view_lesson_plan.asp?id=379)
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