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youth media resources

Check these out:

Shout Out! - A Kid's Guide to Recording Stories

Sound Portraits – Record Your Own Radio Documentary

Some Other Youth Media Organizations in New York City

CHILDREN’S PRESSLINE: New York, NY
If you're between the ages of 8 and 18 and want your opinion to be heard, you can be a reporter or editor for Children's PressLine! They’re free and open to all children who live in the New York City area. They hold new member trainings every other month on a Saturday afternoon and work in print and radio. Once you attend training, you can sign up for stories and get involved!

DCTV(DOWNTOWN COMMUNITY TELEVISION): New York, NY
From its headquarters in a landmark firehouse in downtown New York City, DCTV serves individuals who could not otherwise afford a media arts education. DCTV's broadcast studio allows artists to broadcast work live over cable television and the Internet to millions of households and also runs various youth programs such as Pro- TV, and on-and off-site program that trains and provides mentorship in TV and internet arts for inner-city youth.

EDUCATIONAL VIDEO CENTER: New York, NY
The Educational Video Center (EVC) is a media arts center that teaches documentary video production and media analysis to youth, educators and community organizers. Its signature program, the High School Documentary Workshop, helps youth develop research, interviewing, and writing skills, enabling them to produce in-depth documentaries focused around diverse social issues of concern to them. EVC’s mission is dedicated to the creative and community-based use of video and multi-media as a means to develop the literacy, research, public speaking and work preparation skills of at-risk-youth.

GLOBAL ACTION PROJECT: New York, NY
Global Action Project (G.A.P.) provides media arts and leadership training for thousands of young people living in underserved communities throughout the world. Their mission is to provide youth with the knowledge, tools, and relationships they need to create powerful, thought-provoking media on local and international issues that concern them, and to use their media as a catalyst for dialogue and social change.

GLOBAL KIDS: New York, NY
Global Kids supports urban youth to become global citizens and community leaders, and they offer trainings (usually at schools) to help connect academic subjects to students' lives and current world events. Global Kids also offers training for youth in leadership development, conflict resolution, school change, respect for diversity, civic participation, voting, violence prevention, sexual harassment/appropriate behavior, global awareness, and other issues. Their Newz Crew Project(link to: http://www.newzcrew.org) aims to introduce youth to young people around the world who care about what’s happening in the world. Newz Crew is open 24/7 during the school year and any youth from 14-19 can register – with just a four week commitment.

LISTEN UP! YOUTH MEDIA NETWORK: New York, NY
This website and organization is a great resource for young video producers. Sign up and be part of a national network of youth making video, and get connected to resources, support and other projects.

MNN’s YOUTH CHANNEL: New York, NY
Manhattan Neighborhood Network’s Youth Channel offers an opportunity for youth to make television/video media and decide what they broadcast. The Youth Channel strives to build confidence, establish role models, inform, educate, entertain, and empower youth to believe they are capable of creating change within their communities and the world. The Youth Channel is governed and programmed by youth who want to make a difference.

MEDIA RIGHTS: New York, NY
Have you made a film with a strong message? Media Rights wants to bring your message to audiences all over the country. Students are more than welcome and they offer a youth internet workshop on how to get your work out there!

RADIO ROOTZ: New York, NY
Radio Rootz is a youth media training center, dedicated to teaching media literacy, media activism and empowering young people in marginalized communities to become media makers.

YOUTH COMMUNICATIONS: New York, NY
Youth Communications helps teenagers develop their reading, writing and thinking skills through training them in journalism and related skills, publishing magazines and books written and illustrated by young people, and encouraging teens and adults who work with them to use the publications to stimulate reading, writing, discussion and reflection. They publish books of young people’s writings, and two magazines: New Youth Connections – a general interest magazine with a readership of 200,000 and Foster Care Youth United – a magazine written by and for young people in foster care.

Some Other Youth Media Organizations outside of New York City

911 Media Arts Center:
911 Media's Young Producers Project (YPP) offers youth in the Seattle area a number of innovative media training programs in animation, filmmaking and digital media.

Appalachian Media Institute (AMI):
A community-based media arts and education center located in the coalfields of Central Appalachia.

Bay Area Video Coalition:
The Bay Area Video Coalition (BAVC) provides a number of workshops, education tools and access to state-of-the art technical facilities to residents of the Bay Area.

Blunt Youth Radio:
The Blunt/Youth Radio Project produces a weekly call-in public affairs radio show with teens in Portland, Maine.

Plugged In:
Through a variety of programs such as a youth-operated design firm and a creative arts and technology studio, Plugged In has created opportunities for community residents in East Palo Alto, California to produce, express and contribute using technology.

Radio Arte:
Radio Arte, a youth initiative of the Mexican Fine Arts Center Museum, is an educational radio station, and trains, motivates and encourages youth in the Pilsen/ Little Village neighborhood of Chicago to develop self-expression through the broadcast medium. It is the only bilingual (Spanish/ English), youth-operated, urban, community station in the country.

Southwest Youth Collaborative:
Southwest Youth Collaborative (SWYC), a network of local youth and community development organizations on Chicago's Southwest side, provides leadership and creative arts programs for youth that help them become successful and actively contributing members of society.

Spy Hop Productions:
Spy Hop Productions is a youth media and educational enrichment center in Salt Lake City, Utah. In their six-month Media Studio Youth Apprenticeship Program, apprentices work with professional mentors and educators to develop personal multimedia portfolios and to produce, design and develop affordable media works for local organizations.

Video Machete:
Video Machete's Global Youth program gives inner-city immigrant youth in Chicago the opportunity to tell their stories and give voice to their experiences through video.

Uniquely Spoken/Baltimore Youth Radio:
Uniquely Spoken provides the East Baltimore community with radio training.

Youth Radio:
Bay Area-based Youth Radio has reaches teenagers through free, after-school programs in radio, TV and video, and web production.

Youth Voices:
The Youth Voices project teaches high school youth in Washington, D.C. how to create a radio feature about an issue that affects their lives and the larger community in which they live.

Other Resources

The National Federation of Community Broadcasters runs an annual youth in radio training project/conference and also otherwise supports the development of the youth radio field. Their manual Let a Thousand Voices Speak is designed to share information about many radio projects so that community radio stations, high schools, non-profit arts organizations and community groups can start and grow their own youth in radio programs.

Next Generation Radio is a series of one-week, student radio training projects co-sponsored by NPR and several journalist and media organizations.

The Open Society’s Youth Media and Communication Initiative engages youth in creating media in order to encourage social consciousness, commitment to civic society, and critical thinking and communication skills. See list of their youth media grantees.

The Radio-Television News Directors Foundation’s (RTNDF) High School Journalism Project seeks to identify, inspire, train and challenge the next generation of diverse electronic journalists and First Amendment advocates by developing new scholastic broadcast journalism programs and strengthening existing projects through collaborations with the professional journalists who are members of Radio-Television News Directors Association (RTNDA)..

Time Warner supports high-quality, community-based after-school programs which give young people opportunities to create media such as documentaries, public service announcements, radio programs and newspapers, and utilize the products to address important social issues.