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DAY THREE November 5, 2005


AFI Screen Education Center Fuels K-12 Learning, Teaching

by Rochelle L. Levy

The AFI K-12 Screen Education Center was founded to create programs that harness the power of storytelling for the improvement of K-12 teaching and learning. The AFI K-12 Screen Education process combines the appeal and techniques of filmmaking, digital tools (computers, digital cameras and the Web) and high-tech mentoring in order to foster 21st century skills and standards-based learning in Americas classrooms.

It has become increasingly difficult for schools to integrate traditional learning with technology, while also meeting federally mandated outcomes. AFI has taken the lead by providing a valuable solution--groundbreaking Web-based training.

AFI.edu--the virtual home of AFI's K-12 Screen Education Center--offers a fun, easy-to-follow, five-step process designed to show teachers how to help students use the tools of filmmaking to master core curriculum subjects-- from literature to math to science.

Since its founding, the AFI K-12 Screen Education Center has trained more than 400 teachers and 30,000 students at 200 schools, with returning teachers sharing the program with new students year after year. By 2006, the program anticipates reaching 5,000 new teachers and as many as 60,000 students.

In November 2004, the AFI K-12 Screen Education Center was granted its most substantial congressional appropriation to date--$1.35 million. With Best Buy Children's Foundation as its anchor partner and the Department of Education facilitating the program's growth, the challenge now is to expand to all the nation's teachers and students, by creating a mode of delivery that will make the program widely accessible.

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