 Hi, my name is Trish Denton. I'm the Education Co-Coordinator for the Vermont Folklife Center. The Vermont Folklife Center is a statewide organization that's dedicated to documenting, presenting, and sustaining the diverse cultures of Vermont. As part of our Cultural Sustainability Institute series, we're going to be offering two workshops in the Burlington area that we'd like to invite community members to join. Both of these workshops will be at the generator in the south end, a partner that we have on a current project called the Green Record Project, which we encourage you to look into. It's also a great opportunity for Burlingtonians. The first workshop that I'd like to mention is happening on Saturday, May 11th, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. This is entitled, Recording Our Place, Telling Stories With Sound, and it'll be instructed by Mary Wesley, who is the audio producer of our podcast series, Vermont Untapped. Recording Our Place, Telling Stories With Sound is for students, graduate students, media makers, anyone that's interested in using audio to capture something about the culture of place. It's a hands-on workshop to learn the ins and outs of audio production and storytelling with a focus on documenting culture, community, and place. We also have a workshop that we're offering at the generator on May 25th from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. entitled, Storytelling for Community-Based Projects. I will be the instructor of this workshop. It'll be a collaborative incubator that's offering tools and methods for developing projects that are centered in community-based research, documentary, or storytelling mediums. Both of these workshops are open to all members of the community. We encourage anyone that's interested to reach out to us regardless of financial ability. We have two different tiers of pricing, $95 for community members or $55 for students. If you have an interest in attending either of the workshops, you can visit our website at www.vermontfolklifecenter.org, or you can email us at educationatvermontfolklifecenter.org. Both of these workshops are going to be helpful for folks who are on a spectrum of all different skill levels. We'll be talking about the theoretical kind of foundation of doing community-based research, which for our organization is rooted in collaborative ethnography, which is a practice that regards anyone who is telling their story as the expert of their own experience. We're going to look at the theoretical approach as well as some hands-on nitty-gritty of how to orchestrate these projects in your community. We encourage you to come. Again, it's www.vermontfolklifecenter.org, or reach out to us at educationatvermontfolklifecenter.org. Thanks. Hope to see you there.