Tag Archives: Poets

Oakland Local: Martin Luther King Jr. Oratorical Fest presents 1st place winning poetry

Castlemont Orators
MLK Oratorical Fest award winning poet D’Angelo Crosby, far right with blue ribbon, and his Castlemont High School classmates

March 18, 2013By

D’Angelo Crosby

Oakland’s Castlemont High School student D’Angelo Crosby won first place for original poetry with this poem about his life during the Martin Luther King Jr. Oratorical Fest Regional competition 2013.

 

 

 

 

The Struggle

Mommy and daddy died

When I was young

Felt a lot like losing one of your two lungs

And sister was all I had growing up

She gave me things

But to some people that was a bit much

But I can’t complain

Because things happen for a reason

All the pain and struggle was the best part of my season

And even though sometimes I felt like leaving

It was their love and support that was keeping

Me away from the edge

And leaping

Into darkness

Seeking something that I couldn’t find that was leading

Me down the wrong path

Un-succeeding

Pleading for healing

But only getting a worse beating

Inside it was like not knowing the plays while in the huddle

Or a drug dealer

That couldn’t find their bundle

I tried so hard to understand why

But I guess it’s just the way it is in the struggle
~Copyright 2013 D’Angelo Crosby

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YouTube Offers All Schools Education-Only Link, Beefs Up K-12 Content

MindShift Blog
December 12, 2011
Written By

All schools can now use the YouTube educational video site, youtube.com/education, without having to jump over Internet filtering hurdles.
For schools that choose to opt in to the YouTube for Schools Program, YouTube will redirect Web users who go to the site straight over to youtube.com/education. On this portion of the site, all comments are disabled and the only related videos are those that can be found in the Education portal of the site. The option has been created for parents, teachers, and administrators who fear children will be exposed to inappropriate materials on the site.
Continue reading the article on YouTube/education on the MindShift blog.