Last summer, Charm City cleaned house at Brave New Voices, an international poetry slam competition, placing first in the adult and youth team poetry slams, in addition to taking home the individual grand slam championship title. While Baltimore has consistently competed at the national slam level for more than two decades, the city only recently gained the reputation as a mecca for poets.
What changed? The voices of this city’s talented youth went from amplified to louder than a bomb.
A shout-out to the 1988 Public Enemy song by the same name, Louder Than A Bomb (LTAB) is a national youth poetry program that was founded in Chicago in 2001 and has since expanded into several American cities, promoting collaboration between poets and educators. Baltimore is one of those cities.
For the past three years ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ has partnered with Dew More Baltimore to bring LTAB programming to middle and high schools across Baltimore City and County. Dew More is a community-based organization that was founded in 2012 with the mission of using poetry and art to promote civic engagement. The nonprofit manages LTAB-Baltimore programming and supplies teaching artists to work with the school poetry teams and collaborate with a coach on staff at each school.
“Poetry becomes a vehicle for these students to process trauma or life-changing experiences,” Shyla Rao ’96 ’98 (Sculpture B.F.A and M.A.T.), former director of ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ’s Master of Art in Teaching program explained. Rao was the face of ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ’s partnership with Dew More. She co-taught a Developing Critical Literacies class with Kenneth Morrison, founder of Dew More.
In the class, ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ students are equipped with Morrison’s own teaching philosophy and can learn from his years as an accomplished poet. (He happens to be the holder of that 2016 Brave New Voices individual grand slam championship title.) A variation of the national LTAB curriculum, Morrison’s approach consists of shoring up the youth’s emotional, cognitive and social development, using poetry as a tool to guide youth through these critical phases of learning.
“These young people have experience with institutional racism, know firsthand incarceration’s impact on their families and struggle to understand their relationship with the world,” Morrison explained. “They are staying after school and doing poetry by choice to learn to navigate their worlds through poetry and make sense of their lives.”
The Baltimore youth’s mastery of literary devices is apparent in their ability to take weighty subjects — racism, systematic oppression, depression, bullying, death, government corruption — and process them through poetic stratagems to create transfixing messages that move audiences to tears, laughter and, most importantly, action.
Two years ago, in April 2015, students participating in LTAB-Baltimore walked to a local police station and performed an impromptu set of their newly-authored poems. Days before, Derick Ebert, who was also a participant in LTAB-Baltimore, became the city’s first youth poet laureate and promptly announced his intent to use his position toexamine social issues and youth struggles with identity. At a time when the city was consumed with vigils and protests in the wake of Freddie Gray’s death, Baltimore youth were using their lyrical tools to contribute to a national dialogue.
“In this program, there are no red capes, or any Superman’s saving the day,” Morrison said. “This is collaboration. This is a dialogue and a partnership. The learning goes both ways in a true partnership.”
Rao echoes Morrison’s sentiments.
“My mission in bringing ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ students to these particular schools is to give ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ students an opportunity to see young people who attend a poetry club three days a week after school, by choice, so that it breaks the single story of what the ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ students have of young people in Baltimore City,” Rao said. “It also helps break the single story that the young people have of ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ students.”
Each April, during National Poetry Month, ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ hosts an LTAB-Baltimore poetry slam competition between the middle- and high-school students, in addition to a college slam. The night before the competition, ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ students from Rao’s Developing Critical Literacies class teach community-building workshops for the middle-and high-school poetry teams.
Winners of the high-school slam earn bragging rights and seats on the Baltimore Citywide Youth Poetry Team, which competes at the Brave New Voices international competition. On April 22, for the fourth year in a row, Woodlawn High School took first place at the LTAB-Baltimore festival.
Also for the second year in a row, ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ’s sophomore graphic design students were engaged in conjunction with LTAB-Baltimore to create the Baltimore Art Rising exhibition, book and posters of student poems, using only the words as typographic expressions. As with last year, the book of poems and illustrations will be published and shared with the young people, teaching artists, principals and community members. Supported by the Samson Feldman Fund, the project adds one more layer to the web of LTAB-Baltimore and ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ partnerships.
“For any collaboration to work, you must learn to listen,” Maureen Weiss, faculty member in ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ’s Graphic Design Department, said. “Our ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓƵ students must learn to create in someone else’s voice, and be able to honor that voice and their words.”