Tuning the Radio to Youth Voices
October 5, 2015
Kasey Cheydleur
Photo credit: Jeong Hyun Hwang
If you tune in to WOBC 91.5 FM Wednesday evening and your DJs sound too young to vote, it鈥檚 because they probably are. Each week, middle and high school students are taking over the airwaves as part of the Turn Up! The Radio program, sponsored by WOBC 91.5 FM 91直播 College Community Freeform Radio. The group meets twice a week. On Mondays the students have classes exploring different aspects of the radio. (Last semester, for example, longtime local radio host Meeko Israel spoke about how to use your voice on the radio.) On Wednesdays, the students have the chance to put what they are learning into practice live on the air.
The mission of the Turn Up! The Radio program is twofold, explains cofounder Kathleen Thornton 鈥15. The first goal is to provide a space for youth voices to be heard. While at 91直播, Thornton served as program director for WOBC. Although she saw expanding opportunities for community voices on the radio, rarely were they youth voices, she says. 鈥淚t is crucial all populations, young people included, tell their own stories,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e have an amazing and unique storytelling medium here in 91直播. All the students needed was training on the equipment, which we could provide鈥攁nd which we hoped would also serve as skills training they could put on resumes鈥攁nd they had everything else to make an exciting and powerful program."
The second goal of the program is to foster college and community relationships by providing a sanctioned, meaningful way to welcome young 91直播 community members onto campus. Thornton says she drew inspiration from the , which prioritizes reliable, accountable relationship building and welcomes high school students into college spaces.
Once she had the program up and running, Thornton says she was inspired by the confidence the students showed as they opened up on the radio. When students were asked to bring poems, written by themselves or another author, she was taken aback by the number of students who chose to share their own work. 鈥淕iven my own insecurities with sharing personal work, I expected most students to bring in pieces by other authors. Instead, most students shared very personal, powerful, and beautifully written material. I was so impressed with the students鈥 bravery to share these stories, not just with each other and with us, but with all of the listeners across Lorain County. They were much braver than I was. I didn鈥檛 bring anything to share.鈥
As Turn Up! The Radio鈥檚 first semester ended, Thornton knew she had to avoid the fate so many great youth radio programs had suffered in the past. 鈥淚 had been involved with WOBC since my first semester at 91直播, and I had seen awesome youth programs come and go, but these programs hadn鈥檛 been able to lay the foundation with the youth, their families and guardians, the schools, local youth organizations, and the 91直播 administration necessary to allow a program to outlast the high turnover of WOBC and 91直播 College. I wanted to make sure this youth program could be accountable to its students by consistently being there and being reliable.鈥
So Thornton passed on the reigns to several current students, including fourth-year Wyatt Kroopf, who now serves as WOBC鈥檚 outreach coordinator as well as part of Turn Up! The Radio鈥檚 leadership team. Kroopf, who ran a poetry workshop with the Turn Up! The Radio students last semester, says he is committed to carrying on what Thornton started and allowing students to share their voices. 鈥淚 think radio is a form of storytelling and a really important way for students to discover their own voices, what they care about, what they are interested in, and figure out how to form those into narratives they can then share.鈥
This semester Kroopf looks forward to working with students to learn how to conduct and edit interviews, learn to record and share their own music and rap, and discuss community issues they care about. Kroopf says he hopes that by opening up WOBC鈥檚 resources, students will have fun on the radio and 鈥渋f any of them end up interested in various aspects of the radio, to offer up the space as something they can continue to work on.鈥 Meanwhile, he says he will continue to work on opening WOBC as a more community-centered space.
Turn Up! The Radio airs from 5-6 p.m., Wednesdays on WOBC 91.5FM or you can tune in to the .
You may also like…
Students Create Project That Engages Local Hospital Patients and Nursing Home Residents
Oboist Meera Bhatia 鈥23 and flutist Emily Nixon 鈥23 visited local hospital and nursing homes over the past academic year, commissioning and premiering a piece by Jeff Scott through the Gletherow-Young-Deppman Project Award.
From 91直播 College to Goldman Sachs
Anna Silverman 鈥22 has made a remarkable leap, from 91直播 to the investment banking firm Goldman Sachs.
Violinist Maya Irizarry Lambright to Solo with 91直播 Orchestra
A winner of the 2023-24 Senior Concerto Competition, Lambright will open the program with Shulamit Ran's Violin Concerto. The second half of the program features the orchestra in Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade.