Archive for March, 2011

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“Spring” Conference Postponed

March 31, 2011

A note from Kelly Hrenko about tomorrow’s spring conference…

Dear MAEA + USM conference participants,
Due to weather concerns USM administration has advised we reschedule our art education conference. USM has not been able to officially cancel classes, as of yet, but I have been in contact with President Botman- and her assumption is that USM will cancel by this evening. But more importantly she stressed the concern, we all have, which is we don’t want anybody in an unsafe situation en-route to our campus.

We will reschedule! I will be in touch very soon with an alternative date and at that point we will also be better able to answer questions and concerns regarding reimbursements or additional conflicts a new date may cause for you or your districts.

We appreciate your support, your energy and your interest in our event, and especially your willingness to be flexible in this unforeseen situation!

Please contact me with any questions or concerns.
We will see you very soon-
Kelly Hrenko

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Commissioner’s Listening Tour Continues

March 31, 2011

Opportunity to meet the new Commissioner of Education

Commissioner Bowen will continue traveling throughout Maine. This is an opportunity for you to meet him in your region of the state. The dates and most of the locations are listed below. This information is subject to change so I suggest you check the Department website for updates at http://www.maine.gov/education/commissioner/listening-tour/index.shtml

April 6-7 – Aroostook County
April 6: Visit to Houlton Elementary School | Meeting with area superintendents | Evening forum at Caribou Middle School, 6-8 p.m. | April 7: Visit to Maine School of Science and Mathematics in Limestone | Lunch with teachers and administrators

April 11 – York County
Meeting with area superintendents | Visits to Massabesic Middle School in East Waterboro and Sanford High School | Evening forum at Mousam View Place in Sanford, 6-8 p.m.

April 25 – Cumberland County*
Visit to Freeport Middle School | Evening forum at Gorham Middle School, 6-8 p.m.

May 17 – Midcoast Region* (Knox, Sagadahoc and Waldo counties)
Visit to Searsport District High School | Evening forum at Camden-Rockport Elementary School in Rockport, 6-8 p.m.

May 24-25 – Washington County
May 24: Evening forum in Machias, 6-8 p.m. | May 25: Meeting with area superintendents | Visits to Rose Gaffney School in Machias and Beatrice Rafferty School in Pleasant Point Plantation | Evening forum at Downeast Heritage Museum in Calais, 6-8 p.m.

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Imagination Conversation POSTPONED

March 30, 2011

April 5th Imagination Conversation has been postponed

The event planned for Tuesday, April 5th at US, has been postponed. When a new date is established I will be sure and let you know right here on the meartsed blog! If you were looking forward to hearing Eric Hopkins speak once again, you will need to be patient!

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MAEA+USM Art Education Conference

March 30, 2011

Predicted snow!

This is a note from Kelly Hrenko for those planning on attending the art education conference on Friday, April 1st:

Last Snowstorm

Dear conference presenters, and participants,
As I am sure you are aware, there is the possibility of snow this Friday April 1st.  We are hoping this does not interfere with our MAEA+USM Art Education Conference. We do intend to hold the conference as planned, unless USM- Gorham campus closes due to the weather. We will not know this until Late Thursday evening- or at the very latest Friday morning 5:30am.

Please call : 780-4800 in order to find out whether campus is closed. Again, if campus is closed- the conference is cancelled with a rescheduling TBA. If campus is not closed then the conference will continue as planned. Lets hope for the best!

Thank you for your support and interest in the spring conference.
Kelly Hrenko

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Funding Available

March 30, 2011

Four opportunities…

Armand Beaulieu

Calumet Education & Literary Foundation: Deadline is April 15th Armand Beaulieu was a respected Augusta businessman and musician. In his honor each year a $500.00 memorial scholarship is presented to a student from the Augusta area who plans to major in a Fine Arts curriculum. Applications are available at http://www.calumeteducationfoundation.org/scholarships/armandbeaulieumemorial.html

ING Unsung Heroes: Deadline is April 30th
Are you an educator with a class project that is short on funding but long on potential? Do you know a teacher looking for grant dollars? ING Unsung Heroes® could help you turn great ideas into reality for students. For more than 10 years, and with $3.0 million in awarded grants, ING Unsung Heroes has proven to be an A+ program with educators. The program’s “alumni” have inspired success in the classroom and impacted countless numbers of students. Each year, 100 educators are selected to receive $2,000 to help fund their innovative class projects. Three of those are chosen to receive the top awards of an additional $5,000, $10,000 and $25,000. Applications for the 2011 awards are now available at http://bit.ly/eSC2sv

Ticket to Ride Grant Program
The Maine Arts Commission wishes to remind you of the Ticket to Ride Grant program that provides funding to defray the cost of travel for Maine K-12 schools wishing to visit Maine arts venues and events as part of a well rounded curriculum. Any K-12 school in Maine will be eligible to apply for one (1) grant of up to $300 each school year and any K-12 school in Maine with a documented free and reduced student population of 50% or greater will be eligible to apply for one (1) grant of up to $500 each school year. More information is available at http://mainearts.maine.gov/program_artsineducation_ticket.aspx.

Target: Deadline April 30th Target Arts and Culture grants information reads: “Music, art, dance, drama and visual arts are all part of the well-rounded education our kids deserve”. These $2,000 grants for schools or 501c3 organizations. For more information please click here http://sites.target.com/site/en/company/page.jsp?contentId=WCMP04-031819


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State One Acts Finals

March 29, 2011

2011 Festival

The finals were held this past weekend with Class A being held at Camden Hills Regional High School and Class B at Rockland District High School. I was fortunate to see performances on Saturday evening in Rockland. I can not help but think how amazing the Festival is for providing the opportunity for students to come together to perform or to support the performance. Anyone who has participated knows the skills that students develop. The knowledge is used over and over throughout their lives. Students who participate in the One-Acts can’t get enough and find themselves taking part all four years of their high school careers.

Sitting in the theatre which is filled with high school students who are passionate about the experience sent chills up my spine. Congratulations to all the students and teachers who participate. And thank you to the parents for their support!

 

Class A-Runner-up: Lincoln Academy Runtime, photo by Marti Stone

Results: Class A

  • Winner: Gorham High School for Elephant’s Graveyard
  • Runner-up: Lincoln Academy for Runtime

Results: Class B

  • Winner: Yarmouth High School for The Elephant Man
  • Runner-up: Rockland District High School for Sideways Stories from Wayside High School

 

Class B-Runner-up: Rockland District High School, Sideways Stories from Wayside High School, photo by Rusty Adams

The Maine Drama Council collaborates with the Maine Principal’s Association to sponsor the event.

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Maine Leaders to Explore the Critical Connection Between Imagination, Creativity and Economic Development

March 29, 2011

Tuesday, April 5th – Imagination Conversation

Eric Hopkins

A collaboration of public and private organizations has come together to host a community-wide event so that Maine can lend its collective voice to a national conversation on how to foster the innovation and creativity needed to compete in the 21st-century global marketplace.

“From Imagination to Innovation: Maine Participates in the Lincoln Center Institute’s Imag’nation Conversation” will be held from 4 to 8 p.m., Tuesday, April 5, in USM’s Hannaford Lecture Hall, Bedford Street, Portland.
To register, go to http://bit.ly/aAdRV4 Tickets are $20 for the public and $5 for students.

The Maine Center for Creativity and the University of Southern Maine are presenting the event. Collaborators include the Maine Writers and Publishers Alliance, the Maine Arts Commission, the Creative Portland Corporation, the Farnsworth Art Museum, the Maine Department of Education, Wright Express, the Maine Alliance for Arts Education, the Maine Humanities Council and Maine Public Broadcasting.

Through a keynote address and a series of discussions in concurrent workshops, the “Conversation” will provide opportunities for people from diverse sectors to consider how we can integrate imagination into our
schools, workplaces and communities in such a way that it advances creation of a vibrant economy and quality of life.  “We hope to bring people together from different walks of life to discover that imagination is essential not
only in the arts,” said Jean Maginnis, executive director of the Maine Center for Creativity, “but also in the success of all of us in the state of Maine.”

To help focus the discussions, participants will be asked to respond to the following three questions:

  • How does imagination function in your field/work/sector?
  • How do you cultivate and sustain imagination in your work?
  • What will it take for us to foster these practices in Maine?

Conversations from each of the 50 states are being documented and compiled for presentation at a national “Imagination Summit” in New York scheduled for July of this year. It’s expected that an action agenda will be developed to make the cultivation of imagination a key element in our schools and part of a national public policy agenda.

The Portland event will feature nationally known artist Eric Hopkins of North Haven, who will offer the keynote address. Other speakers include University of Maine Professor of Civil and Structural Engineering Habib
Dagher; mimedancer Karen Montanaro;  Aaron Frederick, entrepreneur and a founder of Rippleffect, the non-profit that exposes teens to the coastal Maine experience; and Carol Farrell, co-director of Figures of Speech
Theatre. Veteran Maine journalist and public affairs consultant Patsy Wiggins will serve as moderator.

“As part of our mission as a public university we provide a forum where people of diverse perspectives can come together and think creatively and provocatively about how to better understand and advance the important
issues of the day,” said USM President Selma Botman.

For more information on the Lincoln Center Institute (LCI) and the “Imag’nation Conversations,” visit
http://lciweb.lincolncenter.org/imaginationconversation/

Editor’s Note: For More information, including contacts at the collaborating organizations, contact Jean Maginnis, executive director, Maine Center for Creativity, (207) 730-0694 jmaginnis@mainecenterforcreativity.org

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RSU 25 Arts Educators Workshop Day

March 28, 2011

Worthwhile day

On Friday Catherine Ring and I facilitated a workshop called The Power of the Arts in Education at Bucksport Middle School. In order to prepare for the workshop day we invited the eight RSU 25 music and visual arts teachers to complete a survey monkey that helped us determine what the agenda would be. The topics that came out on top were Integration, Assessment, Technology, and Promoting the Arts. We created a wiki that contains many many resources that are available for the arts teachers to use. There are links to websites, .pdfs, word documents, and videos. The workshop morning was spent providing information, answering questions, and exchanging ideas. Each teacher has a page on the wiki where they can plan and further develop their ideas individually and collaboratively. The ‘take-aways’ clearly showed the importance of the opportunity to get together with colleagues. Thank you to art teacher Leah Olson for being a wonderful host! And thanks to curriculum director Ellen Almquist and her staff for the attention to detail and superintendent Jim Boothbay for the professional development opportunity for the arts teachers.  It was a wonderful day in Bucksport!

Arts Educators: Music Beth Zdrojowy, Catherine, Art Leah Olson, Art Linda Baab, Music Mark Neslusan, Music Sue Birmingham, Art Holly Bertrand, Art Margaret Jones, Music Willy Kelly

 

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Bates College Approves Dance Major

March 27, 2011

Interview with Carol Dilley, Associate Professor of Dance and Director of Dance, Bates College

Carol Dilley with Barcelona choreographer Carles Sales, photo by Manel Socias

I learned recently from my friend and long time dance educator and arts education advocate Nancy Salmon that Bates College had approved their dance major. I could hear the excitement in her email! Nancy has worked with the Bates Dance Festival among many other projects to further dance education for Maine students so I called to speak with her. She let me know that Carol Dilley had worked for several years on obtaining the major and passed on her contact information. I had a delightful conversation with Carol who was in New York at the time and on sabbatical this year. I learned more about the dance program at Bates and below is some of the information.

CONGRATULATIONS to all those who worked on this and now we have one more reason to encourage young people to go into the dance field.

How long have you been working on obtaining a Dance major at Bates College and what has it entailed? I understand this is (might be) a first for Maine.

I have been working on this major since I was hired in 2003. Before my position was created, Marcy Plavin, who was the heart and soul of Dance at Bates since 1965, officially had a ¾ time position. The first step was to stabilize the full time position and the curriculum and then we had to sit and wait for three years until the College was ready to step up and support a new major. This is the first new major at Bates since 1998. It also required a commitment to a second faculty position in dance and in this current environment that is a big commitment.

Why do you suppose in a state so rich with the arts that there hasn’t been a dance program before now?

Bates is the first in the state to have a freestanding major specifically in dance to my knowledge. Colby College has had a major in Theater and Dance on the books for years but it tilts towards theater and there are dance programs of some kind at most of the colleges and universities. With even a presence of dance education in the K-12 schools, Maine is by no means at the back of the line as far as dance in its educational institutions. In addition to Bates initiating its major and a second full time faculty position, Colby and Bowdoin have both recently also hired new tenure track dance faculty, which is a definite sign of commitment from all three schools. Both University of Maine at Oreno and University of Southern Maine have had active dance programs as well.

In the case of Bates, the lack of a major has frankly been baffling given the presence of the Bates Dance Festival. Most people in the profession simply have assumed that it does and I regularly get puzzled emails from parents and prospective students looking for the major on the website. Each institution, however, has its own story that has to do both with the arts in general and with theater and dance more specifically. Given the national crisis in arts education and funding for the arts, however, the fact that Maine actually does appreciate its arts is a great starting place.

Tell me what approval of this Dance major means for Bates College

Having a major in dance is an acknowledgement of the academic value of what we teach and a validation of the form as a whole. It is not unusual for dance to be the last of the arts to be brought into a curriculum but at a time when Bates is prioritizing the arts, having a brand new major in one of its very active art forms can only be good for the institution. Most importantly, the major is a much needed curricular bridge to the internationally heralded Bates Dance Festival in the summers which I will discuss in more detail below.

And, what does this mean for the state of Maine?

This increased energy in the college dance programs can only be good for the state of Maine in general. Stronger programs bring more dancers, both through the teachers who are active in the community and the students.  At Bates at least, we have always had students who are interested in teaching and who volunteer or intern in schools and various educational dance programs either as part of their studies or on their own. We very much look forward to having the capacity to develop this aspect of our dance program now that we are over the hurdle of creating the major. On a very different level, the faculty at the colleges are all active dancers and participate locally in dance performances and with workshops in public studios.  Since I arrived in 2003 a few new initiatives have developed and there is definitely a sense that dance is blossoming in the state.

How many dance courses are offered at Bates presently? What will change due to this news?

There are currently over 30 courses offered in dance at the moment including theory, creative process, technique and courses cross listed in education and music. Most are on a rotating schedule of course with only the technique courses being offered both semesters every year. The change in the curriculum is actually minimal because in the years we were waiting we built the curriculum up to the level of a major. Students were already graduating with more credits in their dance minor than they had in their major subject.

What impact might this Dance major have on the Bates Dance Festival?

How closely do you work with them? While we have always had a vibrant dance program with dedicated dancers, without the major we did not attract enough serious contemporary dancers to be able to take full advantage of the presence of the festival. Those students majored in dance elsewhere and then came to the festival in the summers. The students are actually the most important link between the festival and the curriculum and we look forward to much active engagement through the combined summer and school year programs.

What do you think is the attitude of Bates College towards the arts and specifically towards Dance?

At the moment Bates arts are enjoying a moment in the sun largely due to a group of dedicated faculty and staff making a heroic and sustained effort over the last three years to raise the visibility of the arts at Bates. As a result the arts were named as one of three top priorities for the college along with a science building and a teaching and learning center. This has made a world of difference because since being publicly prioritized we are much harder to ignore.  Dance has always enjoyed a sense of being appreciated at the  college even if it’s potential has not been fully recognized. I never have the sense that anyone is against dance, just that they are a bit baffled by what we do. This is often the case in the arts and more so because of its general lack of cultural status. But that is a long discussion better left for another time.

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Youth Art Month

March 26, 2011

“National Youth Art Month emphasizes the value of art education and encourages support for school art programs”.  Stacy Rodenberger

This post is contributed by Manon Lewis, YAM chairperson for Maine Art Education Association.

Saturday, March 5th marked another fabulous “Youth Art Month” opening reception at the Portland Museum of Art.  Well over 700 parents, friends, art teachers, and student artists were in attendance!  It marked M.A.E.A.’s 17th year of having student artwork hanging in such a prominent and prestigious environment.  The audience at each of the two presentations were engaged by M.A.E.A.’s “Art Educator of the Year”, 37 year veteran, from Lake Region Middle School in Naples, Molly Mains.  Molly described her introduction to the art making process and it’s importance in her life as well as the life of her students.  Lauren Lessing, the Mirken Curator of Education at the Colby College Museum of Art was presented this year’s Maine Art Advocate of the Year” award by M.A.E.A.’s president Sandy Brennan. M.A.E.A. was pleased to additionally recognize, both Dana Baldwin for her NAEA Award as National Art Museum Educator of the Year and Stacy Rodenberger as the NAEA Eastern Region Art Museum Educator of the Year.

Stacy Rodenberger, Coordinator of School Programs at the museum, was happy to announce that artwork from more than 120 students was on display this year.  The artwork represents students and school art programs that are throughout the state from elementary to high school.

Students were given their opportunity for applause and congratulations, in a presentation of participatory certificates and pins in front of a dramatic slide show backdrop of student artwork from this year’s Y.A.M. show! Pins and certificates were awarded to our states student artist’s by Tory Tyler-Millar and Manon Lewis; co-coordinators of Youth Art Month.

The student artwork for the “Youth Art Month” show will be on display at the museum until April 3.

The pick up dates for the Youth Art Month Show are on Friday, April 8th from 4 to 7 p.m. and Saturday, April 9th from 10a.m. to 1 p.m.  Pick up is at the loading dock of the Portland Museum of Art, 99 Spring Street, Portland, ME.