ME MN MO NO MN III Sue Marx's latest documentary is a story of success by the numbers S ue Marx has met a lot of interesting people in her work as an oscar- winning filmmaker. She and co-producer Allyson Fink Rockwell have created award-winning programs for a variety of clients on topics from health to history, politics to animal welfare. They've done projects for the City of Detroit, the DIA, DSO, Cranbrook, the Detroit Zoo, the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. They recently produced The Relaxation Station, a video for children and their families that is shown daily throughout Children's Hospital of Michigan and many other hospitals in the country. And, oh yeah, Marx won an Academy Award in 1987 for Best Documentary Short Subject for the film Young at Heart, about her widowed father who found love again in his 80s. board," she recalls. "I heard what they were saying and asked how long the program had been going on, and turns out it had been around since 1992." So she made it a point to learn about Math Corps. Marx found that the free summer academic enrichment and mentoring program was created by math faculty members Leonard Boehm — also a WSU alum — and Professor Steve Kahn. They wanted to .put middle and high school students from Detroit with college students to learn mathematics from one another and interact with faculty in a university setting. The middle school students are taught by high school kids in the program. Students in the Math Corps High School Bridge Program are taught by the university students. It is a self-perpetuating group of students and teachers. To get into the program, students must complete an application and write a short essay. What he looks for, Kahn says, is kids who are willing to work hard. It doesn't matter what kinds of grades students have received in math before entering Math Corps. The program is very strict: homework every day, no fighting and if you're late, you're out. Kahn says Most Math Corps students remain with the there is fun and craziness in the program through high school graduation. program — but above all, there She knows a good story when it comes is an expectation of greatness. along. And she found a great subject at It All Adds Up includes interviews with Wayne State University — Math Corps, students who admit that they weren't a six-week summer camp for inner- really interested when approached with city Detroit kids. The resulting short the idea of spending six weeks of their documentary film, It All Adds Up, debuted summer vacation — plus Saturdays — in November on WTVS, Detroit's public studying math. Yet, after meeting other television station. The film will be seen students and being inspired and supported nationally on other PBS stations in 2009. by Boehm and Kahn, they are totally Marx first heard about Math Corps a few hooked. Most stick with the program years ago when she attended a dinner through high school graduation. In the and was seated with Robert Thomas, dean film, Boehm recounts the story of one of of the WSU College of Liberal Arts and his first students, a young man who would Sciences. Thomas was talking about Math call him nightly from a pay phone because Corps with other dinner guests and Marx's his family didn't have a telephone. That ears pricked up. young man received a full scholarship to Yale and majored in math. "Thomas was talking to a guy to my left, George Hill, who was on the Math Corps While Detroit Public Schools has one of the nation's most dismal graduation rates, since 1995 more than 90 percent of Math Corps students have graduated from high school, about 10 percent have entered the Math Corps: Some fun, some craziness, but above all an expectation of greatness. military or completed technical training and more than 80 percent have gone on to college. After raising funds for the film, co- producers Rockwell and Bob Berg went to work. "People connect with this kind of story," says Rockwell. "It's a win-win situation. We're hopeful that after the national broadcast, this kind of program will expand to other communities throughout the country." After Marx won the Oscar she could have taken her business anywhere, but she chose to stay in Detroit. "I didn't leave Detroit because I was married, I have friends here and I will always be here," she says. Marx received her graduate degree at Wayne State University. Her late husband, Hank, received both his bachelor's and master's degrees from Wayne, and her oldest daughter, Terry, graduated from the School of Medicine. Marx and Rockwell have several projects in development, including a documentary for public television about the history of Jews in Detroit and Michigan. To learn more about Math Corps or financially support a student in the program, visit www.mathcorps.org . To learn more about Sue Marx's films, visit suemarxfilms.com . 1•111•1111••111111111•11