Spy Hop
Spy Hop is an after-school, youth media non-profit in Salt Lake City, Utah. It aims to provide opportunities for young people to get involved in the digital media arts and learn skills needed to begin working towards careers in the digital arts. It was founded in 1999 by Rick Wray and Eric Dodd as an after school film class and has grown over the years to include game design, documentary, music and audio production.
Spy Hop has been twice recognized by the White House as a leading arts and humanities organization.[1] Spy Hop was profiled as one of the eight outstanding non-profit arts programs in the nation in a two year research report commissioned by the Wallace Foundation titled Something to Say.[2] Vinny Cavalcanti and Nick Miller from Spy Hop's year-long after school music program won first place in the 2013 Grammy Foundation's "Teens! Make Music Contest" for their work highlighting the dangers of drug and alcohol use.[3] On December 29, 2013 Dixon Lee, a long term student of Spy Hop, received one of the nation's 34 Marshall Scholarships to study in the UK.[4]
On November 17th 2015 Kitzia Rodriguez and Kasandra VerBrugghen accepted an award presented by first lady Michelle Obama as one of the nations 12 best after-school mentoring programs. The award honors the nation's best after-school programs and Spy Hop Productions was chosen by the National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Awards from a pool of 285 nominees. [5]
References
- ↑ "Spy Hop one of 50 finalists for National Arts & Humanities Youth Programs Award". The Salt Lake Tribune. 2013-04-30.
- ↑ "Live Applause and Working Artists: New Market Research Reveals What Urban, Low-Income Tweens Want in Afterschool Arts Programs". The Wallace Foundation.
- ↑ "Two teenagers from Spy Hop win first place in Grammy contest". The Salt Lake Tribune. 2013-01-29.
- ↑ "Utahn wins prestigious scholarship to study in the U.K.". The Salt Lake Tribune.
- ↑ "First lady honors SLC's Spy Hop after-school program". The Salt Lake Tribune. 2015-11-17.