"The Most Southern Place on Earth" workshop begins seventh year with June session

NEH "Most Southern" workshop participants enjoy a Sunday evening welcome reception before starting an intensive week of Mississippi Delta experiential learning on Monday morning

NEH "Most Southern" workshop participants enjoy a Sunday evening welcome reception before starting an intensive week of Mississippi Delta experiential learning on Monday morning

The Delta Center’s "Most Southern Place on Earth" workshop kicked off its seventh year with an opening reception at the Martin and Sue King Railroad Museum in downtown Cleveland on Sunday evening. The workshop is a week-long educational and cultural immersion experience for thirty-six participants from over twenty states. The workshop is funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Joshuah Totten-Greenwood teaches high school history in New Hampshire. He was particularly drawn to the workshop because of the hands-on learning environment it provides. 

"I like to learn by doing. I needed to see the actual places. Talk about them with the people that are from here," he said. "Otherwise forget it. It's just not the same learning from books as it is actually being there."

For the next five days participants will travel around the Delta interacting directly with historically and culturally significant people and places in the region. 

"I've always loved jazz and the blues, I'm classically trained, but I've never really been in the South before. I've always just listened to the music," said Melody Nishinaga, a New York elementary school music teacher. "I'm really excited to be able to explore the history and the culture this week." 

The NEH workshop has created a national network of over 500 educational and cultural ambassadors for the MDNHA. Participants take what they have learned from the workshop back to their schools and communities, sharing stories and lessons from the Delta with students, colleagues, family, and friends nationally and globally.

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