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Los 30: Thirty Years of Salvadoran Migration to Washington, D.C.

Collaborative community-based research/performance project between Quique Avilés, Professor Ana Patricia Rodríguez, and SPAN 408 and USLT 202 Students at the University of Maryland, College Park (UMD) in the Spring 2010. Documentary produced by Marissa Lang as final project in USLT 202.

Vigil in Support of Child Migrants (Washington, D.C., September 29, 2014)

University of Maryland Student-led vigil in support of child migrants in the Americas(Video produced by Ana Patricia Rodríguez)

Digital Stories of Transnationalism and Transmigration: El Salvador to DC

Collaborative digital story produced in SPAN 408i (UMD) by Ryan Amstrong, Leandra Bitterfeld, Elise Marengo & Ana Ventura. May 2, 2014.

I'm a title. Click me and tell your visitors what's in your gallery.

DC Latino Tour 2011

Tour of Latino Landmarks in Washington, D.C. produced by students in USLT 202 (Fall 2011, Professor Ana Patricia Rodríguez)

Lejos de la comunidad by Nataly Cruz-Castillo

Digital story produced in Span 408i (Dr. Ana Patricia Rodríguez), University of Maryland, College Park, Spring 2014

IDEAS THAT SERVE

 

 

 

Ana Patricia Rodriguez, associate professor, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, was recently awarded a Foxworth Creative Enterprise Initiative grant to support a Spanish class where she will teach students about the multifaceted American Salvadorian community. Using a wide historical and transnational context, she will start with the 19th century migration and the reasons people left El Savador to the modern day political and economic conditions facing the Salvadorian community. She will also connect the topic to the larger American Latino community locally in Washington, D.C. and nationally in the United States. Students will form teams and engage one-on-one with community partner organizations and members to collect stories for a digital storytelling project to be displayed at the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C.

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