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.

Saturday, April 13, 2019

LOCAL HISTORY IN THE COMMUNITY

(FCHS art teacher, Kimberly Ingram
& RU student, Cora Bland,
interviewing Kimberly's father, Charles Kingrea)

Interviews to Hear and Read

Pairs of ROOTS WITH WINGS Floyd County Public School teachers and Radford University students interviewed Floyd County grandparents, in-laws, good friends, and dads.  After we interviewed we set to work diligently transcribing and reflecting on our experiences.  We learned that transcribing can run the gamut from phonetic spellings of dialect to converting to the elusive “standard English.”  We took a dialect quiz from the New York Times and got a kick out of the results.  We decided the quiz was a bit biased toward urban dwellers.  For example, when it came to this question, “What do you call the area of grass between the sidewalk and the road?,” we thought one of the multiple choice answers should be “had no sidewalk -- no need for this word.”  We would have added a few questions like, “What do you call a baby cow?” and “Is the way to your house a driveway, a boulevard, a lane, or a farm road?”  For our transcriptions we decided to take a middle ground that is readable, relateable, and respectful to what Appalachian scholar, Cratis Williams, called “a beautiful stream of speech.”  We are scanning and preserving photographs, too.  (See “The importance of saving stuff” from our last blog.)  The footprints of our interviews will include audio recordings, photographs, and transcriptions – treasures for families and for the community, conserved by the Floyd Story at the Old Church Gallery.  We Remember, We Collect, We Protect.
                                                                            







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