Archive for June, 2011

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In Today’s News

June 15, 2011

Bucksport students to present work generated by yearlong senior citizen project

Bucksport Middle School students have been involved in a year long thematic, project-based approach to learning called  “Generational Snapshots of the Past: A Focus on Community Unity”. Senior citizens from the community were invited to the school this week to be part of the culmination. Read about the music, art, and research students did in the Bangor Daily News article June 15th, by clicking here.

Students rehearsing "Mr. Sandman". Photo by Rich Hewitt, BDN

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DaPonte String Quartet

June 15, 2011

Great opportunity

The DaPonte String Quartet has a FREE music education program available to all schools, all age groups, aligned with the Maine Learning Results. The programs can be a half hour to one hour long, for a classroom or a larger auditorium with multiple grades. The four musicians introduce the instruments of a classical string quartet, play a variety of composers from different centuries and countries, and tie the music into interdisciplinary aspects, such as history, geography, and cultural movements.  We are available to schools in the proximity of Portland  to Waldoboro, and inland to Lewiston-Auburn, and are taking first requests for the weeks of Jan. 23-26 and Jan. 30 -Feb. 2, 2012.  Contact: Kirsten Monke, kirviola@yahoo.com or 841-3160.

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National Coalition for Core Arts Standards

June 14, 2011

New coalition will lead the revision of the National Standards for Arts Education

A newly formed partnership of organizations and states will lead the revision the 1994 National Standards for Arts Education.

The National Coalition for Core Arts Standards (NCCAS) plans to complete its work and release new, national voluntary arts education standards in fall, 2012. The standards will describe what students should know and be able to do as a result of a quality curricular arts education program.

The current National Standards for Arts Education have been adopted or adapted by forty-nine state departments of education, and have become the benchmark document by which K-12 arts learning is measured in dance, music, theatre, and visual arts. Curriculum designers, teacher training programs, funders, and federal and state policy makers have relied on the 1994 national arts standards to help guide their decision- making.

NCCAS is committed to developing a next generation of voluntary arts education standards that will build on the foundation created by the 1994 document, support the 21st-century needs of students and teachers, help ensure that all students are college and career ready, and affirm the place of arts education in a balanced core curriculum.

Membership in the coalition was formalized and a strategy framework developed following a February meeting at the New York City headquarters of the College Board. NCCAS governing organizations are:

  • American Alliance for Theatre and Education (AATE)
  • Arts Education Partnership (AEP) Educational Theatre Association (EdTA) The College Board
  • MENC: The National Association for Music Education (MENC)
  • National Art Education Association (NAEA) National Dance Education Organization (NDEO)
  • State Education Agency for Directors of Arts Education (SEADAE)

The College Board gathering of the coalition was the culmination of a state-led organizing process that began in May, 2010, at a meeting convened by SEADAE in Washington, D.C. and attended by the above groups, eighteen state departments of education, and eight other national arts and education organizations. In the past year, state directors of arts education and the NCCAS partners have held a series of web-based meetings designed to help refine the needs, expectations, and timeline in the arts standards rewrite process.

A recent SEADAE survey of arts education directors in forty-three state departments of education indicated that nineteen of the states planning revision of their arts standards in the next two years are willing to postpone that process until the new national arts education standards are complete so as to inform their efforts.

NCCAS will make the creation of the new arts standards an inclusive process, with input from a broad range of arts educators and decision-makers. The revised standards will be grounded in arts education best practice drawn from the United States and abroad, as well as a comprehensive review of developmental research.

The College Board is currently gathering and organizing childhood and higher education data—including international standards research, a child development and the arts literature review, a 21st-century skills gap analysis, and a review of college-level arts standards—with the expectation that this process will be completed by mid summer.

In creating the next generation of core arts standards, the primary goal of NCCAS is to help classroom educators better implement and assess standards-based arts instruction in their schools. Toward that goal, the revised arts standards will address 21st-century skills, guide the preparation of next-generation of arts educators, and embrace new technology, pedagogy, and changing modes of learning.

To take full advantage of today’s digital information tools, the new arts standards will exist in an online “evergreen” format, allowing for periodic, scheduled reviews and updates, and wiki-environments where student work, lesson plans, and new research can be posted to support standards-based teaching and learning.

An NCCAS committee has begun work on a report that will summarize the current status of arts education in America; the status of arts education standards in the states; the context of arts education in a well-rounded education; and an analysis of the needs for the
next generation of arts standards. The report will be made public in late summer or early fall.
NCCAS’s current timeline includes the creation of discipline writing teams in November, 2011, which will be followed by a six-month period of writing, review, and revision draft work.

Jonathan Katz, CEO of the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies (NASAA), expressed strong enthusiasm for NCCAS’s arts standards revision plan: “Designing standards takes broad and deep knowledge of subject matter, an informed understanding of the kind of guidance educators need, and creative imagining of which competencies will best prepare students for the future challenges they will face. All students learn using some combination of the arts, numeracy and literacy. The resource for learning that this group, representing teachers of the arts and arts education policy makers, is in a position to provide is tremendously important.”

Virginia M. Barry, New Hampshire Commissioner of Education, also stated her support for revision of the art standards. “I’m very encouraged that NCCAS has taken the first steps towards re-imagining the arts standards for our students and teachers,” she said. “When you have rich and clearly defined standards, you create expectations and can begin the process of articulating measurable learning in arts education. The arts are truly special—dance, music, visual art, and theatre give students a voice they might not otherwise have and integrate new technology in ways that truly engages and energizes learners. New Hampshire believes that all students should have access to a well-balanced curriculum that supports whole-person development—arts are critical to a sense of competence, through discipline, dedication, diligence and commitment.”

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In Today’s News

June 13, 2011

After 37 years of teaching Thomas Block says farewell

I have known Tom for many years beginning with his days teaching at Georges Valley High School. During the last 19 years Tom has taught art at Wiscasset High School. Bob Keyes wrote a wonderful article on Tom and his retirement in the Maine Sunday Telegram. It includes the art exhibit planned for this week with 3 dozen of Tom’s formal students. A wonderful celebration!

You can read the entire article by clicking here http://www.pressherald.com/life/audience/after-37-years-of-teaching-moments-a-fond-farewell_2011-06-12.html

Tom at the Department this past week for the Celebration of Arts Education

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Commissioner’s Update

June 13, 2011

Keeping informed

I am happy about the changes that I see taking place on the Department website and the form of communication taking place. I recommend you subscribe to receive an email once a week with the Commissioner’s Update.

The following is from the MDOE news/reporting staff.

To streamline the many communications from the Maine Department of Education, we have developed a new weekly Commissioner’s Update that includes official correspondence, reporting requirements, news and information designed for superintendents, business managers, and other administrators, but available by subscription to anyone.

(Please note the Commissioner’s Update takes the place of the Administrative Letters and Informational Letters of past practice. This is the only way to receive updates on requirements, policy changes, and forms and other reporting requirements that are due.)

We encourage you to share this invitation to subscribe with all district personnel, including administrators, school board members, teachers, as well as parents, taxpayers, and anyone interested in education in Maine.

Subscribe to the Commissioner’s Update at http://eepurl.com/cTM8w

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Shetterly Visits Brewer High School

June 12, 2011

Social activism and art

Brewer Art Teacher, Lori Spruce shared information with me about artist Robert Shetterly’s recent visit to Brewer High School. While there he visited with art and other content classes. We know the arts connect with other content and topics in our schools and throughout the world today and historically, culturally, aesthetically. If you’ve ever seen Shetterly’s portraits you know how monumental they are. If you’ve never seen his work my advice is: GO SEE SHETTERLY’S PAINTINGS! Lori describes the opportunity that Robert Shetterly’s visit provided in her own words:

Robert Shetterly addressed Brewer High school Art, English, Journalism classes and others on the role of social activism and art. He discussed his own reasons for starting the “Americans Who Tell the Truth” project as well as engaged students in discussions about important social movements in the past and current issues that affect them today. His presentation challenged the attention media gives to celebrities and encouraged students to speak their own truths about social issues and how much it can make a difference in changing perspectives and sometimes even the course of our history. Honors art classes are taking the challenge themselves and discovering people who have made a difference in the issues that are are personally important to them and doing their own portraits based on the research they have done.

You can see in the photos embedded the power of his portraits. You can learn more about Shetterly and his book ‘Americans Who Tell the Truth’ about the first fifty portraits he painted at http://www.americanswhotellthetruth.org/

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Advanced Studies Seminar Offered

June 11, 2011

Opportunity designed for faculty and advanced graduate students from colleges and universities

The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) is sponsoring a three-day advanced studies seminar on the use of the NAEP database for education research and policy analysis. The seminar will take place in Washington, DC, August 3-5. The deadline for applications is June 27.

The main NAEP database contains nationally representative achievement scores on 4th, 8th, and 12th graders from public and non-public schools in a variety of academic subjects. The database also contains background information on the students who were assessed and their learning environments.

This seminar is designed for faculty and advanced graduate students from colleges and universities. Education researchers and policy analysts with strong statistical skills from state and local education agencies and professional associations are also welcome.

There is no fee to attend the seminar. NCES will provide training materials as well as computers for hands-on practice. NCES will also pay for transportation, hotel accommodations, and a fixed per diem for meals and incidental expenses during the training seminar.

This advanced seminar is sponsored by NCES at the Institute of Education Sciences, part of the U.S. Department of Education.

To submit your application for the seminar, please go to: http://ies.ed.gov/whatsnew/conferences/?id=836&cid=2.

If you are new to NAEP research, you may want to explore NAEP technical documentation and the restricted-use data currently available to licensed researchers.

If you have any questions regarding the training, please contact Nicole Schray at
(202) 296-2528.

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Unified Arts Night at Bucksport Middle School

June 11, 2011

Unified Arts and Curriculum Night

Thank you to Bucksport Middle School art teacher Leah Olson who sent the following information about their recent Unified Arts and Curriculum Night.

At Bucksport Middle School there are students in grades 5-8. This night provides parents with an opportunity to view the work of students from their Art, Spanish, Physical Education and Health classes.

Art students demonstrated art techniques while friends and family toured the school to see various curriculum projects displayed around the school. In addition some grade level teams posted work on integrated units.

During the last part of the evening the performing arts students, band and chorus, have their Spring Concert.

It was a fantastic evening!

Mother and son with Monet Impressions

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Two Articles

June 10, 2011

Ideas for using digital cameras in classroom lessons

This article suggests 10 ways that educators can use visual media in classroom lessons. Using a digital camera, students can take photos and video as part of original public-service announcements, create multimedia book reports on Glogster or organize a fictional crime-scene investigation. Tech & Learning (6/2011) Read more at:
http://www.techlearning.com/article/39404

NYC schools see decline in certified arts teachers

YC schools see decline in certified arts teachers
The number of certified arts teachers in New York City schools declined 5% in the 2009-10 school year, compared with figures for the previous year, according to a report released Thursday. The report, by the Center for Arts Education, supports the theory that art, dance, music and theater are subjects that often suffer most under budget cuts. Others predict a new round of layoffs will lead to an additional 15% decline in teachers who specialize in the arts. The New York Times (tiered subscription model)/City Room blog (6/9) Reach more at…
http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/06/09/even-before-layoffs-schools-lost-135-arts-teachers/

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Congratulations Monica Kantor-Churchill

June 10, 2011

MMEA Music Educator of the Year

At the Maine Music Educators conference in May at USM Moncia Kantor-Churchill was named the music educator of the year. Falmouth Middle School Band Director, Jerry Barry nominated her and introduced her that evening. The description he wrote summarizing Monica’s commitment and dedication to music education over the years is wonderful so I am including it below. Thank you Monica for your contributions to education and to Jerry for nominating her.

It is with great pleasure and pride that I write to nominate Monica Kantor-Churchill, of Plummer-Motz Elementary School in Falmouth Maine, for 2011 MMEA Music Educator of the Year. 

I first had the privilege of meeting Monica in September of 1989, as she was teaching general music and chorus at Plummer-Motz Elementary School in Falmouth.  I was immediately struck by her enthusiasm for music and her passion for teaching.  She jumped right into conversation describing her days lessons and how excited the kids were to be actively involved in her various classroom activities – and oh how proud she was of their accomplishments!  As a new hire in the district, this first interaction had a lasting effect on me.

The first time I saw her elementary school chorus perform in concert, I was completely blown away.  Monica’s chorus had over 75% of the fourth and fifth graders enrolled, filling the gymnasium.  They performed a wide variety of absolutely wonderful pieces, often with solo voices, raps, colored flashlights, and exciting choreography.  How she manages to coerce all of those youngsters to sing so beautifully is nothing short of a miracle.  Her performances showcase student achievement on recorders and ethnic dancing, while also integrating Orff instruments, African drums and hand percussion seamlessly into the fabric of the choral concert. Due to her diligence, the one of the coolest things to do at Plummer-Motz School is to sing in the chorus.

Monica is an active member of MMEA District II, often accompanying the District II choruses.  In her constant effort to improve professionally, Mrs. Kantor-Churchill never misses an MMEA In-Service Conference.  She is always willing to share her skill and knowledge with others, and has presented workshops at the In-Service Conference with her choral groups on numerous occasions.  She is the consummate educator, never missing an opportunity to talk shop and share ideas with our states finest music teachers.

Monica is revered by her music-teaching peers, her elementary school colleagues and principal, Falmouth parents, and most importantly, her students – all of which currently are enjoying either being in her classroom, or having fond memories of their elementary school music time spent with Mrs. Kantor-Churchill.

In reading the enclosed additional letters of support, I am confident the committee will be sufficiently impressed and strongly consider Monica Kantor-Churchill this year’s choice for “MMEA Music Educator of the Year”