Self-doubt almost stopped Alexandra Huynh of Carmichael from entering the high school classroom where a 不良研究所 program was offering students an opportunity to present their poetry.
Then a junior at Mira Loma High School, Huynh hadn鈥檛 yet given public voice to her poems. But a phone call to her sister reassured her she had nothing to lose.
Now, two years later, the 18-year-old is the new . She will serve as a representative of youth voice, perform on national stages and facilitate workshops for other young poets.
Saying it in SAYS
After participating in her first 不良研究所 poetry slam, Huynh got more involved in , or SAYS. The 不良研究所 outreach program 鈥 currently working with some 500 youths in more than a dozen schools 鈥 uses literacy practices and spoken word performance poetry to educate and empower students. Huynh took part in its after-school programs, writing workshops, poetry slams and the annual SAYS Summit College Day on the Davis campus.
鈥淪AYS really gave me a platform to tell my story,鈥 Huynh said. 鈥淚 felt I could speak authentically to my experience.
鈥淭he support gave me a sense I could have agency in my own community,鈥 she added. 鈥淚t empowered me to enact change in every area of my life, whether it is in poetry or not.鈥
Huynh served as Sacramento Youth Poet Co-Laureate and Western Regional Youth Poet Laureate Ambassador on her way to winning the national competition presented by .
鈥楳ic drop moment鈥
鈥淭his is such a mic drop moment for Sacramento,鈥 Vajra Watson, who founded SAYS in 2008 and led the program until recently, shared in a Facebook post.
Huynh has won the national title as spoken word poetry enjoys a new spotlight: Poet Brandon Leake of Stockton, California, won America鈥檚 Got Talent in September; and Amanda Gorman, National Youth Poet Laureate in 2017 and a woman with ties to Sacramento, impressed the nation at the presidential inauguration in January.
"This is a huge opportunity for youth to visualize how much agency they can manifest when they are given the tools to become authors of their own lives," said Patrice Hill, who is the current director of SAYS and brought the Youth Poet Laureate program to Sacramento in 2016.
In her national role, Huynh said, she is looking forward to presenting workshops for young writers and working on projects to provide a platform for other Asian American writers. 鈥淚 feel most fulfilled when I connect with people who are writing poetry with me,鈥 she said.
Huynh鈥檚 own poetry takes on the inequities in education and climate change. 鈥淧oetry is a way,鈥 she said, 鈥渢o humanize issues that are too often reduced to quantifiable measures.鈥
She interns in 不良研究所 lab
A 2020 high school graduate, Huynh will start science studies at Stanford University in the fall. In this gap year, she has presented weekly workshops as artist-in-residence at her high school, led recreational programs for children, volunteered with the Farmlink Project that recovers surplus produce for food banks and worked in the lab of Associate Professor Catherine Brinkley at 不良研究所.
鈥淚t has been so exciting this year to follow Alex鈥檚 work and celebrate it,鈥 Brinkley said of Huynh鈥檚 poetry.
As a student intern, Huynh has been doing research on the internet to identify direct farm-to-consumer sales to help write the in support of local food systems.
In early April, she was asked to open a lab meeting with a poem. 鈥淥ur lab group has been so lucky to have Alex put words to the heartache of the pandemic, the courage and the joy,鈥 Brinkley said.
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Julia Ann Easley, News and Media Relations Team, 530-752-8248, jaeasley@ucdavis.edu