Roots with Wings, a Floyd County Place-Based Education Project:: Intergenerational Connections

Floyd Story Center

Since 1998, a community oral history collection partnership of the Old Church Gallery, Ltd., Radford University’s Center for Social and Cultural Research, Honors Program, Scholar-Citizen Initiative, Appalachian Regional and Rural Studies Center, and Floyd County High School. Our archives now hold over 100 interviews.

In our Roots with Wings project, college mentors, high school staff, and community volunteers meet weekly during the school year to teach the discipline of oral history collection.


Students learn ethical, methodologically sound interview techniques, practice and complete several interviews, transcribe the audiotapes, create searchable content logs, archive interviewee resources and period photographs, learn the technology of audio and video recording, research historical backgrounds, acquire proficiency in iMovie and storytelling, and finally extract a theme from an hour long interview to create a seven minute movie production.

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Connecting with Our Community Partner

A Visit to the Old Church Gallery


     After everyone recovered from flu season and bad weather, we gathered at the Old Church Gallery for our weekly class.  For the Radford University students and some of the Floyd County teachers, this was our first time at the Gallery.  Some local Roots with Wings Project participants were pleased to point out displays of their own family’s crafts.  Alice Slusher's father, R.O., for instance, created the Gallery’s dancing dolls.  
One of Kathleen's favorite books:
Saving Stuff, Smithsonian Publications

     As we settled into a circle in the Gallery's exhibit room (surrounded by beautiful, early Floyd County baskets), we discussed the goals, outcomes, and twelve-year history of the project.  Kathleen Ingoldsby, our top-notch digital archivist, emphasized the importance of saving stuff and preserving history, topics she'd presented in her Ted-X Floyd talk, which can be seen here: 

     Catherine Pauley shared her own experiences with cultural anthropology and stressed the importance of conserving the cultures of Floyd County.  She reminded us that we'll preserve an artifact (our interviews), and then analyze the meaning of the artifact in relation to the culture.  Catherine, who once intended to be an archaeologist herself, said, “I did not expect that what I studied--what I have documented--would be my own culture.”  

I wish to remind everyone of the Old Church Gallery’s motto:  
We remember. We collect. We protect.   

     And, by the time this blog entry is posted, we should have completed our first oral history interviews.   Thank you for visiting, and stay tuned for our reports!

Blog Author:  Shaylee Hodges, Radford University

No comments:

Post a Comment