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GrizzCom is the new program at Granite Hills that will help students with digital communications and design. The program will officially start next year. |
SSP grant takes action
Ebony Bailey | 2/29/08 | News
he new GrizzCom program, also known as the school of digital communications and design, will kick off next year with new equipment, new books, and new classes for students who are interested in taking the journalism, video production, graphic design or yearbook classes here at Granite Hills High School. This new program is made possible by the SSP grant given to Granite Hills last school year, for a total of $235,000.
Students have been going to Web design and Photoshop workshops because of this grant; they have also gone to film school in Los Angeles.
"[This grant] is something for students to hook them into school," grant adviser Catherine May said.
May has been looking into Granite's feeder schools so that she can recruit students to join the program. Before, Granite Hills was not able to recruit from any middle schools because the new Harmony Magnet Academy they are building in Strathmore had top priority, but Granite Hills is once again able to recruit from schools.
One event for recruiting schools to join the program is the Night of Welcome, a night where Granite gathers their entire incoming freshman to show them what our school is about. Industrial Design teacher Dean Morris is making brochures to hand out to the incoming freshman.
"Part of the grant was to promote and recruit, and go to feeder schools," May said.
According to May, if they do not use the money to recruit students, then the money is taken back.
Due to the recent budget cuts, Granite Hills may lose money from the SSP grant. The advisory board was planning on making a new building for GrizzCom, but they cannot do that anymore because of the budget cuts. According to video production adviser David Coldiron, having the program all in one building would have been very beneficial.
"Right now it's a real problem for [the classes] to share information," Coldiron said. "It would be a lot easier if we were in the same building."
With one building, each class would have information on the same server. If the journalism class wanted a video, then they could just ask the video production class for help, or if the yearbook class wanted to learn Web design for a digital yearbook, then they could just ask the journalism class for help.
Coldiron said that there is a possibility that the program will be held in one of the buildings already built at Granite, but that would have to involve teachers switching rooms with other teachers.
The school is paid in increments and the school has to spend that much amount of money then the money is taken back. This year, Granite was given $35,000 for planning.
The purpose of this program is to help students get a basic knowledge of the background that they will be working with before they get into the more advanced classes, so instead of having other students teach a student how to work a video camera in the video production class, the student will already know how to work a video camera because of prior classes.
The classes will be broken up into three tiers. The first tier is a "wheel" of classes for freshman and sophomores to take. Each student will have one quarter of photography, one quarter of web design, one quarter of beginning video production, and one quarter of communications.
The second tier will be the intermediate classes; this will be for sophomores and juniors. These classes include beginning journalism, beginning video production, beginning yearbook, and 3D Viz & Animation.
The third tier will be the advanced classes, the classes where they actually produce their products. These classes include, advanced journalism, advanced video production, advanced graphic design, and advanced yearbook.
The staff and administration think that this program can be very beneficial to Granite Hills.
“It opens the door for their future careers,” Principal Veryl Ann Duncan said.
David Coldiron thinks that this program will help improve the reputation of Granite Hills.
“Look at what [the journalism class] has done; it would be great if we had similar types of recognitions for our other programs,” Coldiron said. “When students walk out of GHHS they know they can compare with everyone else.”
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