coeNEWS  
  Subscribe to:     Connect to:  
  SUBSCRIBE TO:   CONNECT TO:
bulletcoeUPDATES
bulletHigher Ed Today
bulletEmail the editor
bulletSubmit story ideas
 
Tuesday, November 24, 2009 08:07 PM EST
go coeNEWS HOME

INSIDE
 
ALUMNI
space
Career Notes
News
Make a gift
 
coeSUGGESTION BOX
space
 
COMMUNITY FORUM
space
 
FACULTY / STAFF
space
Awards/Honors
Publications
Speaking Out
 
FEATURES
space
 
IN THE NEWS
space
 
ON THE AIR
space
 
PRESS RELEASES
Counseling professor Rosemary Phelps receives APA award
Associate dean James Marshall to help develop Common Core K-12 Standards
UGA to co-host White House Initiative’s Community Conversation on Latino education
space
 
RANKINGS
space
 
STUDENT NEWS
space

Coe home
COE CALENDAR
coeNEWS ARCHIVEs
faculty expertise
NEWS office
publications
ways to give

RELATED SITES
UGA Home
UGA News
Columns
Georgia Magazine
Campus Calendar

coeNEWS
University of Georgia
College of Education
Office of Communications & Publications
G9 Aderhold Hall
Athens, GA 30602
706/542-5889
coenews@uga.edu


goABOUT coeNEWS
goContact Webmaster

 




Oct 7, 2009

Profs’ film focuses on support of diverse sexual orientations

Writer: Genevieve di Leonardo, 706/542-5889, gedileon@uga.edu
Contact: Corey Johnson, 706/542-4335, Anneliese Singh, 706/542-5341, cwjohns@uga.edu, asingh@uga.edu
email Email | print Print



Two University of Georgia College of Education professors will premiere a new documentary film this week they produced which focuses on the need for research and effective interventions to reduce homophobia and heterosexism in public schools.

Johnson
Be There For Me: Collective Memories of LGBTQ Youth in High School was produced by Corey W. Johnson, an associate professor, and Anneliese Singh, an assistant professor, in the department of counseling and human development services. They created the film to reveal the experiences of LGBTQ high school students, with the ultimate objective of creating safer school settings.

“’Be There For Me’ and its associated curriculum and resources are just one small contribution toward helping Georgia school systems respond to the needs of their lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered students and to create safer spaces,” said Johnson.

Singh
Singh notes “the film also helped spark the formation of the Georgia Safe Schools Coalition, a group of educators working to provide resources for school teachers, counselors, administrators, and parents to address.”

The brutal murder of a gender non-conforming adolescent in Oxnard, Calif., by his 14-year-old classmate, the suicides of 11-year olds Carl-Walker Hoover in Boston, Mass., and Jaheem Hererra in Dekalb County (Ga.) who experienced gay bullying, and similar but less tragic incidents in Athens-Clarke County inspired the professors to produce the documentary, Johnson said.

The documentary was filmed primarily at Clarke Central High School in Athens, with some additional shots filmed at Emory University in Atlanta. The cast includes Johnson and Singh, as well as Women’s Studies lecturer Shannon Miller, three UGA students and one from Emory University.

The documentary was directed and filmed by Jyoti and Rishi Kaneria (www.mindfulcreations.com) who represent their work as a glimpse into lives and experiences that are not normally represented in mainstream media.

The film will premiere at 7 p.m. on Thursday, October 8 in Room 148 of the Miller Learning Center. It runs approximately one hour and will be followed by a panel discussion with Singh and Johnson, the filmmakers and cast. An additional screening will be held at Emory University’s Harland Cinema on Thursday, November 5 at 7 p.m.

The documentary is sponsored by a grant from the UGA Vice President for Public Service and Outreach, and was completed in partnership with the Georgia Safe Schools Coalition (www.georgiasafeschoolscoalition.org, UGA’s GLOBES, Lambda Alliance, PFLAG (Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays), Clarke County School Counselors Collaborative and Emory Pride.




Top of Page