The CITL works with area K12 schools as well as other academic and community partners in the creation of unique learning opportunities. See below for examples ...
1. Hebocon robotics competition: the CITL, along with academic partners across campus, partners with Radford City Schools to facilitate a STEAM-driven initiative (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, Mathematics) in which students build simple robots out of old toys, electronic gadgets, ducktape, etc., and bring them together to face off in a sumo-style match put on for the community at large. 澳门老奇人论坛 undergraduate and graduate students mentor K12 students alongside their teachers as they build their robots and learn basic engineering and electronics.
2. Spring Film Challenge: a collaboration with the historic and , CITL reaches out to students and courses with an interest in filmmaking (including Communications, Art, Media Studies, Cinematic Arts) at both the university and high school level by putting on an event in which participants are issued a 'challenge' (series of conditions) from which to produce a short film in just over a week. The films are judged by a faculty panel, and films are screened and awarded at the Radford Theatre in downtown Radford.
3. : a multi-point collaboration with the department of Anthropology and Sociology, The Old Church Gallery and Floyd County High School. CITL interns mentor RU sociology students in video editing so that the students can then pass those skills along by mentoring the high schools students, who then go out and document historic people and places in their community. The students' work is then archived in the Old Church Gallery, run by 澳门老奇人论坛 alumna Kathleen Ingoldsby.
4. The Word Festival: a unique film festival in which students make a 20-second film expressing the meaning of a word. Participating classes on campus range English, Marketing, Music, Design, Occupational Therapy, Core and Communications. In addition, K12 community participation includes Beth Heth Elementary, Dalton Intermediate School and Radford High School, as well as .
5. : CITL Associate Director John Hildreth collaborated with the SCS in Floyd, VA, in spring 2018 in a course entitled Courageous Conversations. Funded via a grant by the Southern Poverty Law Center, the course used music as a primary expressive and communicative means in discussions
about race, color and privilege. Course activities included the students' participation
in writing lyrics for an original song entitled 'Stronger.' John Hildreth worked with
renown chamber soul artist in mediating discussion and music activities during class, and also collaborated
to write the music for the song. magazine will be publishing a feature article on the class in fall 2018.
In addition, CITL personnel participated in SCS's community project with founder Jonathon Stalls in late spring 2018.
6. Eat That Question: a collaboration between CITL, McConnell Library, WVRU and the in which the film 'Eat That Question: Frank Zappa In His Own Words' was screened alongside a live Zappa music set as well as an interdisciplinary panel discussion comprised of legal, musicological and political science experts in which First Amendment issues were discussed in an audience question and answer period. The film's director Thorsten Schutte joined the panel discussion live on the phone from Germany.
7. CITL Films: an educational film initiative founded in 2012, CITL Films ranges from short narrative film to documentary to long-form miniseries. Ongoing community collaborations include the Banjo Masters Series with McConnell Library Archives and Special Collections as well as the Radford Veterans Oral History Project with the and McConnell Library Archives and Special Collections.