Peace everybody! Been a second since I have been able to participate in the posse discussions....miss you all.
Here are some websites that serve as excellent resources for studying hip-hop from various perspectives. I have included a list that goes from products, to film sites, to hip-hop community organizations, to educational hip-hop forums.
I have included a short description of the link, so that you know what you will be getting into!
alternativesyouth.org
Alternatives Community Center in Chicago is one of the motherships for our group, the University of Hip-Hop, and offers myriad youth programs, from circus training, to community organizing projects, to community gardening.
graffiti.org
The original Art Crimes site. A great resource for exposing students to graffiti from around the world. Photographs are categorized by nation, then down to city, an some cities have more than a hundred photos on-line.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/54079585@N00/
This is a link to photos from the Oakland organization, Weapons of Mass Expression, a sister group of UHip-Hop that does community work distinct to Oakland and the Bay area. Desi is one their primary educators, and he also does work on various reservations from New Mexico to South Dakota.
montanacolors.com
The source for spray-paint supplies! This company was started by graffiti writers and distributes from Barcelona. The US distributor is located in the Bay, and this is where we purchase most of our paint for community projects.
testracks.com
Many people have heard of and used flocabulary, but testtracks has some unique tracks for history and vocab development for middle school to high school. One of the best songs is a listing of the US presidents and what they have been `notorious' for in their time in office.
h2edwiki.wetpaint.com
At this time, this is probably the best source for conversations and resources for hip-hop education and using hip-hop for interdisciplinary work in the classroom. They have done two major conferences brigning educators together to learn and teach hip-hop ed practices. Check it out!
www-news.uchicago.edu/releases/02/021113.oi-hiphop.shtml
A link that I am very proud of...an article that covers a collaborative hip-hop graffiti project we did with the Oriental Institute in Chicago. This is the one of the most imminent institutions covering Middle Eastern history from Egypt to Mesopotamia. Our youth met with University of Chicago educators, museum educators, archeologists, and experts in hieroglyphics to create murals depicting what they learned with graffiti arts.
www.tolerance.org/teach/activities/activity.jsp?ar=815
An awesome collection of hip-hop educational curricula compiled by Teaching for Tolerance magazine. A variety of teachers from various backgrounds submitted lessons that you may want to use or borrow from for your classroom.
www.omai.wisc.edu/firstwave
The first strong urban arts bachelors program in the nation! First Wave is in its third year at UW Madison, and students can major in two disciplines: one of their choosing, and the other in an aspect of urban arts. They particularly specialize in spoken word, and are expanding to include graffiti, breaking, and dee-jaying. If you have a student who loves hip-hop, use this site as motivation to let them know that they can do academic work focused on the street arts.
www.swyc.org/uhiphopsession
The Southwest Youth Collaborative in Chicago! The other mothership for the University of Hip-Hop in Chicago...where it all began for thirty kids twelve years ago, now serving hundreds of youth a year. Check out the other awesome programs run by SWYC.
wallstreetmeeting.de
One of the most incredible international graffiti festivals in the world is the Meeting of Styles. The graffiti tour brings together artists from around the world with local artists in 21 cities to do burners on walls. In begins in Berlin and ends in Rio de Janeiro. Run by an incredible group of organizers is an exceptional example or the ramifications global hip-hop has had in the last ten years.