The Freedom Project is an independent non-profit
organization dedicated to educational excellence and leadership
development in Sunflower County, Mississippi.
The Freedom Project offers middle and
high school students intensive academic enrichment, mentoring,
educational travel, martial arts training, drama performances, and
media production classes.
Following the same set of students from seventh grade through high school, the Freedom Project fosters academically capable, socially conscious, and mentally disciplined leaders who are willing and able to make positive changes in their communities.
By the end of their senior year in high school, Fellows are honor roll students who have earned both a scholarship to a four-year college and a black belt in the Korean art of taekwondo.
Some of the Freedom Project's site-based history and civics projects are described in the following article from Edutopia:
Plan a Service-Learning Project Around Real Needs. Greg McCoy, executive director of the Sunflower County Freedom Project, is a big believer in discovery work in any setting.
 Credit: Katherine Emery
"Present a problem, issue, or idea and have students reflect on it,
problem solve, and come up with their own ideas," McCoy says. Look at
neglected areas in your region as potential service projects and
learning opportunities. Faded murals can be repainted, and you can
reteach the mural's history. An intersection may have many car
accidents, and students can write letters advocating for a traffic
light.
McCoy recently led students through a business plan for a vacant
site in Sunflower County, using math to calculate construction and
human resource expenses. Students developed a proposal for a community
arts center that would hold classes and house a civil rights tour
program, to both capitalize on and inform people about the Mississippi
Delta's history. A number of students are now trying to make that
business plan a reality.
By visiting the Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory's
online tool kit, teachers can get step-by-step instructions on how to
identify projects, plan service learning with curriculum, take action,
and evaluate projects. The site has lots of online resources, too.
Use Positive -- and Difficult -- History to Inspire Creativity. Help students write a simple script from a book or story based in your region, or even from local legends or tall tales.
Lukendric Washington, a 2007 Freedom Project graduate, recalled that
the first play the group performed was written by students in a book
group. Students can convert the story to dialogue, develop backgrounds
for characters, and assign each other parts to play. Hold performances
at your school site for parents, community members, and other classes.
Plan Service Projects That Celebrate Unsung Local Heroes.
In 2001, the gravesite in Ruleville, Mississippi, of civil rights
activist Fannie Lou Hamer and her husband, Pap, was marked by just a
few headstones. The Freedom Project spent a day beautifying the area,
planting bushes, shrubs, and a few trees. "I thought it was the least
we could do to honor Mrs. Hamer, who is one of the most inspiring
figures of the civil rights movement," says Chris Myers Asch, cofounder
of the Freedom Project.
Help Students Discover and Utilize Local Lore.
Personalize a time in history or a topic relevant to your region by
having students conduct oral histories. Freedom Project students
conducted interviews about the history of the Delta by talking to known
civil rights activists like Charles McLaurin and David Matthews. They
talked to community educators, business owners, students, and community
elders. You can plan a visit to a retirement or veterans' home, partner
with younger or older students, or ask your students to interview a
family member. You can find three-day, five-day, and unit-length lesson
plans on doing oral history work with your class or after-school
program in the Info for Teachers section at the Voice of Witness Web site.
Let Visitors Reinforce Your Message. Seek out
special guests to come to your program or classroom. Freedom Project
cofounder Chris Myers Asch suggests: "Start with the strengths of your
community."
First, he says, think about contacting people who come from or
represent your region, who already do work to support it, or who have a
special connection to your content area. Politicians, community
organizers, librarians, judges, and retired people from any field can
have a vested interest in kids, and can inspire them with their
stories. Second, write a letter or email, and don't forget to follow up
with a phone call if you haven't heard back. "They can't say yes if you
don't ask. And if you don't ask, the answer is no," Myers Asch says.
Finally, make it easy for them to fit into your class. One Freedom
Project teacher asked famed investigative reporter Jerry Mitchell to
speak to her journalism class, and he made the two-hour drive from
Jackson to meet with the students. McCoy underlines the importance of
visitors emphasizing education, service, and action: "The more that we
can bring outside people in here to deliver that message, the more it
becomes believable and real to the students."
Most importantly, view every visitor as an opportunity for students
to learn. When someone new visits the Freedom Project, class stops and
students jot questions down on index cards and ask the visitor about a
range of topics, from political predictions to skills needed for
different professions to travel experiences. "We can learn from
anyone," Myers Asch says.
This article was also published in the June 2008 issue of Edutopia magazine.
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