Item
Interview by Juilee Decker and Dr. Fayth Vaughn-Shavuo of the PEACE Program
Media
Title (Dublin Core)
Interview by Juilee Decker and Dr. Fayth Vaughn-Shavuo of the PEACE Program
Dr. Fayth Vaughn-Shavuo Oral History, 2020/09/24
Description (Dublin Core)
P.E.A.C.E. is an acronym for Partnerships in Education to Avoid Criminal Justice System Entry. The P.E.A.C.E. Afterschool Program, Inc., operates a year-round program consisting of an after school program where children are provided with free homework assistance, social/character development, academic enrichment and community service projects. Ongoing workshops engage cognitive skills that enable the students to say no to gangs.
The program is spearheaded by Dr. Fayth Vaughn-Shavuo who sat down with us, and invited 5—which grew to 8!---children to tell their stories. Of particular interest is the words that the children used to talk about COVID. Warren felt it has been boring; Kaymauri was sad that she had to social distance while Fatamata was sad in the beginning of COVID, but is now kind of happy; Jahcai didn’t like that in school there is no more sharing of items/materials; Daniel mentioned being worried and also spending time watching YouTube and eating marshmallows. Jayvien mentioned having to survive and to be careful but not being able to feel anything. Ivrhim felt scared at the beginning of COVID but feels safe now, while Joshua feels annoyed and angry about COVID. Some bright spots: Kaymauri learned how to beat box!
In the final interview, Dr. V mentioned the ways in which differences and inequities have been exacerbated by COVID, particularly the dependency upon internet and need to have access for children and everyone in a household. This is particularly a challenge in government housing and situations where there is only 1 device with a parent.
Anyone interested in learning more about PEACE, can visit their website: https://www.peaceafterschoolprogram.org/
The program is spearheaded by Dr. Fayth Vaughn-Shavuo who sat down with us, and invited 5—which grew to 8!---children to tell their stories. Of particular interest is the words that the children used to talk about COVID. Warren felt it has been boring; Kaymauri was sad that she had to social distance while Fatamata was sad in the beginning of COVID, but is now kind of happy; Jahcai didn’t like that in school there is no more sharing of items/materials; Daniel mentioned being worried and also spending time watching YouTube and eating marshmallows. Jayvien mentioned having to survive and to be careful but not being able to feel anything. Ivrhim felt scared at the beginning of COVID but feels safe now, while Joshua feels annoyed and angry about COVID. Some bright spots: Kaymauri learned how to beat box!
In the final interview, Dr. V mentioned the ways in which differences and inequities have been exacerbated by COVID, particularly the dependency upon internet and need to have access for children and everyone in a household. This is particularly a challenge in government housing and situations where there is only 1 device with a parent.
Anyone interested in learning more about PEACE, can visit their website: https://www.peaceafterschoolprogram.org/
Date (Dublin Core)
September 24, 2020
Creator (Dublin Core)
Fayth Vaughn-Shavuo
Juilee Decker
Contributor (Dublin Core)
Juilee Decker
Event Identifier (Dublin Core)
LongIslandCommunity
Partner (Dublin Core)
African American Museum of Nassau County
Type (Dublin Core)
oral history
Link (Bibliographic Ontology)
Controlled Vocabulary (Dublin Core)
English
Biography
English
Education--K12
English
Community & Community Organizations
English
Emotion
English
Technology
Curator's Tags (Omeka Classic)
children
New York
Hempstead
school
bored
worried
gang
access
Collection (Dublin Core)
Survivor Stories
Date Submitted (Dublin Core)
11/06/2020
Date Modified (Dublin Core)
11/06/2020
06/15/2021
09/25/2022
11/12/2023
Date Created (Dublin Core)
09/24/2020
interviewer (Bibliographic Ontology)
Juilee Decker
interviewee (Bibliographic Ontology)
Fayth Vaughn-Shavuo
Location (Omeka Classic)
New York
Duration (Omeka Classic)
40 minutes
Linked resources
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