DDFR Media Literacy Workshop @ Gowanus Houses

Digital Diaspora Family Reunion (DDFR) had a workshop at Gowanus Houses, one of the New York City Housing Authority’s housing developments in Brooklyn on Saturday, June 30th. It was yet another stop in DDFR’s One City, One Family Tour of all five boroughs of New York City as part of our Rockefeller Foundation NYC Cultural Innovation Fund Grant project. Residents of Gowanus Houses had the chance to learn both background information on DDFR and DDFR SocialNet as well as storytelling skills via their family photos in the tenant association room.

Residents of Gowanus Houses participated in Digital Diaspora Family Renion (DDFR)’s workshop. Before the workshop, they take a moment to share their family photos and stories with each other.

The workshop primarily focused on instructing participants how to protect their family photo archives by digitizing their images. (The digitized images can be uploaded to DDFR SocialNet.)

Thomas Allen Harris (right), founder and director of Chimpanzee Productions, Inc. and DDFR is giving participants the basic information on DDFR and DDFR SocialNet at the workshop that took place at Gowanus Houses.

Don Perry, writer and producer of Chimpanzee Productions, Inc. and DDFR, gives a lecture on Media Literacy: What Images Tell Us & How Images Define Us at the workshop.

In addition, Nonso Christian Ugbode, director of Digital Media at the National Black Programming Consortium (NBPC), gave a presentation on “Becoming Talented Witnesses in Your Own Life”. He introduced and informed participants of various tools they can use to record the their everyday experiences, from family life to conditions in their neighborhood that require community action, including small format technologies such as cell phone cameras, digital recorders and so on.

Nonso Christian Ugbode, director of Digital Media at the National Black Programming Consortium (NBPC), takes questions from one of participants after his session.

Residents of Gowanus Houses are taking notes during the workshop.

Chan Kim (center), intern of DDFR teaches Gowanus participants how to scan images using their family photos.

At the Saturday workshop, Pratt Institute and Healthy Families Brooklyn helped the DDFR RoadShow team recruit residents of Gowanus to participate, which culminated in a great event.

Exterior of Gowanus Houses

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Healthy Families Grow in Brooklyn - August 22, 2012

    […] only did we have an enthusiastic reception for our Media Literacy Workshop, but the response to the actual DDFR Roadshow photo-sharing event was extraordinary! This became […]

Leave a Reply