StoryCorps Launches “The Great Thanksgiving Listen”

StoryCorps, the pioneering oral history project, has launched “The Great Thanksgiving Listen” – its most ambitious initiative to date. WKSU and Kent State University are promoting the project in hopes of encouraging high school and college students throughout Northeast Ohio to participate.

StoryCorpsStoryCorps is working with high school teachers across the country to ask students to interview a grandparent or elder over Thanksgiving 2015 using the new free StoryCorps mobile app. Resources available at www.WKSU.org include a short video tutorial on creating good audio interviews. The app allows students to use their smartphones as recording devices, eliminating the need for them to have access to expensive equipment. Thanksgiving weekend is Thursday, Nov. 26, through Sunday, Nov. 29. Information about the project can be found online at www.WKSU.org/greatlisten.

Participants will upload their recordings to the StoryCorps archive at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress. In one holiday weekend, StoryCorps hopes to gather more interviews than it has in the 12 years since its founding, and to capture an entire generation of American lives and experiences. StoryCorps has established a reputation for drawing attention to the lives of individuals who could be anyone’s neighbor – proving that everyone has a story to tell and it is vital to capture these diverse narratives for future generations. StoryCorps segments air each Friday during NPR’s Morning Edition, heard on WKSU at approximately 6:20 a.m. and 8:20 a.m.

Dave Isay, founder and president of StoryCorps, launched the StoryCorps mobile app using the $1 million 2015 TED Prize. The app takes the StoryCorps experience out of the booth and puts it entirely in the hands of users, enabling anyone, anywhere to record conversations with another person for archiving at the U.S. Library of Congress and on the new https://storycorps.me/ website.

For more information about WKSU, visit www.wksu.org.

POSTED: Monday, November 2, 2015 03:01 PM
UPDATED: Friday, April 26, 2024 05:12 AM

The Kent State University Board of Trustees today established a comprehensive, national search to recruit and select the university’s 13th president.

 

The events of May 4, 1970, placed Kent State University in an international spotlight after a student protest against the Vietnam War and the presence of the Ohio National Guard ended in tragedy with four students losing their lives and nine others being wounded. From a perspective of nearly 50 years, Kent State remembers the tragedy and leads a contemporary discussion and understanding of how the community, nation and world can benefit from understanding the profound impact of the event.

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