Penn Film Program

The PSTV -Penn Film Program connects Philadelphia high school students to a graduate-level course series- Ethnographic Filmmaking (EDUC 5466.401/ANTH 5830.401) and Community Youth Filmmaking (EDUC 5467.401/ANTH 5467.401) offered by Penn’s Graduate School of Education’s Education, Culture, and Society program and the Department of Anthropology. The Annenberg School for Communication, CAMRA (Collective for Advancing Multimodal Research Arts) at Penn, and CEE (Penn’s Center for Experimental Ethnography) support the series.  In these courses, Penn students are taught ethnographic research methods and filmmaking. Teams of Penn Film students visit selected Philadelphia high schools to get to know the students, teachers, and school community. Over the Spring semester, Penn students, collaborating with high school students, produce a short film (research, write, shoot, edit, and deliver) by the end of the academic year. The students decide what film they want to make, supported by the teaching team. The District’s CIO and PSTV sponsor this program.

PRESS

September 2018 Pennsylvania Gazette magazine

Videos produced in 2023/2024

Videos produced in 2022/2023

SDP-Penn Film Program 2023 West Philadelphia High

SDP-Penn Film Program 2023 Sayre High School

SDP-Penn Film Program 2023 Parkway CCMC

SDP-Penn Film Program 2023 Master Screening

 

 

 

Videos produced in 2021/2022

Master Screening for 7th SDP-Penn Film Program 2022

SDP-Penn Film Program 2022 Parkway CCMC

SDP-Penn Film Program 2022 Murrell Dobbins High School

SDP-Penn Film Program 2022 Philadelphia High School for Girls

SDP-Penn Film Program 2022 William L. Sayre High School

SDP-Penn Film Program 2022 Horace Furness High School

SDP-Penn Film Program 2022

SDP-Penn Film Program Horace Furness High School

[QUOTE: “Our students can’t stop talking about their experience. We at Dobbins loved being a part of the SDP-PennFilm Festival. Our mentor Justin, was incredible. The positive impact in creating this project has already happened in my class, and as a teacher I am grateful. My student, who was the lead character in our project, sent me a wonderful text this weekend thanking me for the experience of making a movie, and now he wants to act more. That happened because he saw himself on screen and went through the experience of making a movie. That’s the beauty of your program.  – Anis Taylor, Dobbins High School”]

 

Videos produced in 2020/2021

SDP-Penn Film Program Ethnographic Filmmaking Course 2021 FULL

SDP-Penn Film Program Ethnographic Filmmaking Course 2021 Part 1

SDP-Penn Film Program Ethnographic Filmmaking Course 2021 Part 2

 

Videos produced in 2019/2020

Sayre High School

CAPA

Philadelphia High School for Girls

SDP -Penn Final Films

 

 

Videos produced in 2018/2019


Sayre High School

The Workshop School

CAPA Strawberry Shakes

SDP -Penn Final Films

Making of Strawberry Shakes

 

Videos produced in 2017/2018

Sayre High School

The Workshop School

Carver HSES Y2

Behind the Scenes and Panel Discussion

Behind the Scenes

Master File

 

Videos produced in 2016/2017

John Bartram High School Y2

Kensington CAPA

Carver HSES - Bound

 

Videos produced in 2015/2016

Bartram High School

Philadelphia Military Academy

Randolph High School

Robeson High School

 

Instagram Videos

Bartram High School

Philadelphia Military Academy

Randolph High School

Robeson High School

Behind the scenes

 

 

 

May 5th, 2022 marked the anniversary of a 7-year ongoing partnership between PSTV and the University of Pennsylvania (Penn). The SDP-Penn  Film Program is a unique creative collaboration between Philadelphia high school students and students from the University of Pennsylvania. Penn students learn filmmaking and partner with high school students to create short films that are broadcast on PSTV’s Xfinity and Verizon channels. The program piloted in 2014 and began broadcasts in the summer of 2015. To date, 47 student films have been produced with 15 Philadelphia High Schools, some schools returning each year. These films encompass a wide array of themes, subjects, and film genres, documentary, and fiction, but are all in some way about school communities, and the lives of Philadelphia students.  High School students learn professional media production skills shoulder-to shoulder with college students. They learn project management, how to conduct research, write scripts, filming, editing and how to bring projects to completion for screening and broadcast. School students are mentored by Penn students and experience, first-hand, what it takes to be successful at college. Over and above the films themselves, the collaborative process creates important opportunities for interaction and exchange.  This is a year-long collaboration, over both the Fall and Spring semesters of the academic year from August to May. PSTV provides crucial support, coordination, and guidance, enabling the program to exist and function. Over the years, a collegial and supportive cooperation has evolved between us. This enables a well-organized program that is subtle and flexible enough to successfully navigate the complex needs of multiple institutions. These include the School District of Philadelphia, Philadelphia Schools, teachers, students, and the University of Pennsylvania. On a personal note,  from the Penn side of things, as a film professor, course instructor and the creator of this program,  working with Shelley Wolfe and her team at PSTV, is a joy. We simply could not do it without them. I am frequently dumbfounded at what she is able to accomplish. She is a great partner, and we are, in turn,  very proud of what our students have been able to create with very limited resources, given what we are trying to do. The quality of the student films is available for all to see as their hard work is uploaded and viewable on YouTube. Our partnership with PSTV has successfully created something special for students that we could not do on our own. I urge those who can support PSTV to expand their support so we can continue to provide unique opportunities for creative collaboration to students.

 

Amitanshu Das

Scholar, Penn Annenberg School for Communication (Penn ASC)

Director and Senior Fellow, Penn Graduate School of Education (Penn)