Students take on new challenges at summer center myeasternshoremd kent county news

Page 1

Students take on new challenges at summer center By MAEGAN CLEARWOOD Student intern | Posted: Thursday, July 26, 2012 12:00 am CHESTERTOWN ­ At a premiere screening of four movies last Friday, an audience of filmmakers and their families was transported to a beach, an airplane and the streets of Paris. They witnessed a daughter mourn her mother's death, laughed at the antics of two troublemaking high school seniors and gripped their armrests in terror as a killer penguin stalked her innocent prey. If they hadn't known any better, viewers never would have guessed that the filmmakers were rookies to the world of camerawork and editing. And they certainly couldn't have known they were a group of middle schoolers.

Young and Gifted Dick Goodall, CEO of Dixon Valve & Coupling Co., asks 12­year­old Joy Nichols about her short story. The final draft is the product of her work with the Dixon Summer Center for Creative Writing and Film Production.

The 15 filmmakers were participants in the first Dixon Summer Center for Creative Writing and Film Production. They spent two weeks of their summer vacation at Washington College, honing their writing skills and familiarizing themselves with the art of filmmaking, then collaborating to create a final, edited project. The Dixon Center is one of 14 Maryland Summer Centers for Gifted and Talented Students offered this year to students grades four through 12. For 45 years, summer centers have challenged public school students on college and university campuses throughout the state, teaching programs on everything from engineering and space science to law and government. "They're exposed to things in this gifted and talented program that they wouldn't in a normal classroom. It's not just a fun camp with recess all day," said Stephanie Zenker, specialist for gifted education at the Maryland State Department of Education. Zenker said the programs have relied on corporate sponsorship since state funding for the summer centers was cut three years ago. "The thought of the centers closing was just heartbreaking," she said. Students and parents have always expressed interest in a creative writing center, but it wasn't until Dick Goodall, president and CEO of Dixon Valve & Coupling Co., approached Zenker about sponsoring a program that the idea became a reality. "We wanted to add enhancement to offer some more rigor for kids in Kent County. Writing was a great way to start the program," said Goodall, whose son and daughter are graduates of Kent County High School. "Writing well for employers today is so important. It's a key to success." Goodall, a former member of the state board of education, said he purposefully made the program non­residential, opening it up to students from across the state. Five of the Dixon Center participants were not county residents; their parents either drove them to Chestertown each day or vacationed nearby. "I wanted local kids to get exposure," he said. "Every school has its strengths and weaknesses."

Zenker said there are 20 Kent County students participating in summer centers this year, a significant increase from previous summers when involvement was virtually non­existent.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.