Archive for October, 2011

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Almost 300 Maine Arts Educators

October 12, 2011

Professional Development Opportunities

During the last week amost 300 arts educators have participated in opportunities to learn more about assessment in arts education. That is about one fourth of all the arts teachers in Maine.

On Wednesday, October 5th teacher leader Audrey Grumbling presented to her colleagues in RSU 21. At the statewide arts education conference Arts Teachers Leading the Way… Back to the Future: Arts Assessment For Learning at USM, Portland on October 7th, 225 teachers participated in 27 workshops and large group sessions. The workshops were facilitated by the 18 Maine teacher leaders.

Rob converses with colleagues in Presque Isle

Yesterday, October 6th, Lisa Marin, teacher leader from Jonesport presented all day in Machias at the Harvest of Ideas workshop to 10 Washington county teachers. And, I traveled to Presque Isle with teacher leader Rebecca Wright from Ellsworth High School, and leadership team members, York High School music teacher Rob Westerberg, and Catherine Ring. We facilitated an all day workshop with 40 arts teachers who had traveled from all over Aroostook county.

During the next 8 months there will be 21 more workshops available facilitated by the 18 teacher leaders and 4 webinars on arts assessment. The webinar information is located at http://www.maine.gov/education/lres/vpa/assessment.html

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Success!

October 11, 2011

All indications point to the conference being a success!

  • Teacher Leaders did a fabulous job leading workshops.
  • USM staff, facility, and food were marvelous.
  • The overall program was outstanding!

It was another successful conference and the arts assessment initiative is seriously underway. To those who attended, THANKS FOR ATTENDING! For those who missed it, please join the teacher leaders at a regional workshop (schedule below) and join us on the 4 upcoming assessment webinars. The details can be found at http://www.maine.gov/education/lres/vpa/assessment.html. The next one is scheduled for November 2nd.

The day started with a greeting from USM President Selma Botman followed by a special performance by the Windham High School Chamber Singers. I’ve stood with music educators singing the Stars Spangled Banner but to add the visual art, dance, and theater teachers to the audience made it especially moving for me. I presented an overview of the initiative and our recent history that has led us to our present work in Maine arts education. USM professor Jeff Beaudry and arts educators Shalimar Poulin and Rob Westerberg provided a keynote that focused on our attitudes, assessment, and the impact of assessment. All day participants were engaged in workshops that provided best practices in curriculum, teaching, and assessment. Our lunch time large group session was presented by MLTIs Steve Garton who wowed the audience with his talents on the guitar which suggested ways to utilize technology in assessing. The day culminated with Karen Montanaro lighting up our boides in movement. Particpants left with smiles, thinking deeply about assessment ready to return to the classroom trying new ideas, and some with wonderful door prizes!

Look for more posts on the conference and information about the regional workshops as they unfold. Regional arts education workshops will be occurring throughout Maine during the 2011-12 school year. Please watch the blog at https://meartsed.wordpress.com for more information and details.

WORKSHOP LEADER(S) DATE LOCATION/AUDIENCE
Alice Sullivan 5 Nov 201231 March 2012

 

Elementary Music Teachers Festival: OrringtonWashington County Music Festival: Woodland
Allysa Anderson 24 March 2012 District 3, Elementary Honors Festival: Farrington School, Augusta
Audrey Grumbling 5 Oct 2011 Unified arts teachers: RSU 21
Bill Buzza 27 or 28 Jan 20124 Feb 2012

 

District 2 Instrumental Festival: Oxford Hills C.H.S.District 2 Choral Festival: Windham H.S.
Charlie Johnson TBD hARTrocks – Hancock County Visual Arts
Deb Large 27 Jan 2012 District 3 HS Honors Festival: Cony HS
Jake Sturtevant 27 Jan 201230 Mar 2012 District 1 Music Festival- Noble High School/SAD/RSU6- Bonny Eagle
Jeff Orth TBD Greater Augusta area Visual art teachers: Harlow Gallery, Gardiner
Jen Nash 7 May 2012 Spring District V Music Meeting
Jennie DriscollLaura Devin 7 Dec 2011TBD Bates College, Auburn -Visual art teachers/ ed students .Mid-coast Visual art teachers: Brunswick High School
Leah Olson 5 April 2012 Art in the Heart
Lisa Marin 11 Oct 2011 Harvest of Ideas workshop, Visual art: Machias
MaryEllen Schaper 30 Mar 2012 All teachers: SAD/RSU6-Bonny Eagle
Matt Doiron 27 January 2012 District 1 Music Festival: Noble High School
Rebecca Wright 10 March 2012 Regional One- Act Play Festival: MDI HIgh School
Shannon Campbell 6 Feb 2012 Regional Visual art teachers: Waterville HS
Shari Tarleton 27 April 2012 7th and 8th grade Honors Festival music teachers:  Cony HS, Augusta
Rebecca Wright, Rob Westerberg, Catherine Ring, Argy Nestor 11 Oct 2011 CACE workshop, Visual and Performing Arts Educators, Aroostook County: Presque Isle HS
Allysa AndersonShannon Campbell 28 Oct 2012  Mid-coast/Augusta area Arts teachers: Jefferson School
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Carol Trimble Award

October 9, 2011

In her honor!

What do you give someone who has given us so much? In an earlier post I included the information about Carol Trimble’s departure at the end of December as Executive Director of Maine Alliance for Arts Education. At the statewide arts education conference on October 7 Arts Teachers Leading the Way… Back to the Future: Arts Assessment For Learning we honored Carol and her contributions to Maine arts education programs. Her certificate read:

The community of Maine Arts Educators proclaims that Carol Trimble has encouraged and strenghthened educational excellence thus exceeding the standard of dedication to, All of the Arts for All Maine Students.

So, when I thought about a gift I wanted it to be lasting, like so much of her work has been. Planting seeds to bring out the best for Maine arts education. In her honor an award has been created called the:

Carol Trimble Award for Exemplary Service to Arts Education

Carol receiving her certificate for her dedication to arts education, October 7, 2011

At the conference the first two honorees were named. They are Rob Westerberg and Catherine Ring for their for commitment, collaborative spirit, and contributions to the Maine Arts Assessment Initiative.

Catherine Ring and Rob Westerberg

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Steve Jobs

October 8, 2011

My thoughts

While catching up on reading this morning I got to thinking about how Steve Jobs has impacted arts education. In many ways he lived his life in the best way possible – day to day, being as creative and imaginative as possible. And taking that a step farther and sharing that innovation with others.

I so enjoyed watching a youtube where he was speaking at a graduation about the importance of following your heart and dreams.

“You’ve got to find what you love. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking and don’t settle. As with all matters of the heart you’ll know when you find it. And like any great relationship it just gets better and better as the years roll on.”

I hear arts teachers say “I have the best job in the world, I love what I do”. During many of my years teaching I felt the same way and now in my job at the Maine Department of Education I feel that same way. What helps us to love what we do?  Is it the creativity, finding innovative ways to do the “work”, developing relationships with young people who are excited about creating and motivating others to be excited about creating? Perhaps!

Steve Jobs created cool stuff that have changed the way we think, communicate, and the items have the potential to enable us all to be more creative.

In a statement from the chair of Google Inc., and former Apple board member, in an interview this week Eric Schmidt said about Steve Jobs:

“He’s clearly the most effective and successful American CEO in the last 50 years. He didn’t just found Apple, and he didn’t actually just make it successful in the first decade, he also took it after a bad period, and rebuilt it. Which has essentially never been done in an American corporations, to be the extraordinary company it is today. To me, Steve proves that nerds don’t win. Artists do. And that Steve who is both a technologist, but really an artist, shows that art matters and the rest of us missed the fact that beautiful simple products are what people want.”

Even though I am not in the classroom every day teaching, , after 30 years in the classroom, I still think of myself as a teacher. And… I think the aboive statement is a strong reason of why we can’t think “separate subjects” but have to think integratively. We can’t think one or two subjects are more important than others, we have to teach the whole child and approach teaching mindful of that. We have to be more “intentional” in what we do as educators. We are role models, and our messages are strong and have an impact.

This is my signature for my personal email:

“Steve Jobs has done more Cool Stuff than anybody else in Silicon Valley. . . . one of his success secrets is loading every development team with artist and historians and poets and musicians and
dramatists. He says he wants to bring to bear, on each project, the best of human cultural accomplishment. So how come schools don’t get it? Budget crunch? First programs to be cut? Art and Music. I say the hell with the math budget [I really don’t mean that.] Let’s enhance the art budget and inflate the music budget. Training in Creativity is important, in general. But it is absolutely essential in this Age of Intangibles and Intellectual Capital.”
Source: Tom Peters, Re-imagine

And from Steve Jobs commencement speech at Stanford in June 2005 this story speaking about what he did while not quite “officially” dropping out of school:

“Reed College at that time offered perhaps the best calligraphy instruction in the country. Throughout the campus every poster, every label on every drawer, was beautifully hand calligraphed. Because I had dropped out and didn’t have to take the normal classes, I decided to take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this. I learned about serif and san serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great. It was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can’t capture, and I found it fascinating.

None of this had even a hope of any practical application in my life. But ten years later, when we were designing the first Macintosh computer, it all came back to me. And we designed it all into the Mac. It was the first computer with beautiful typography. If I had never dropped in on that single course in college, the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts.

And since Windows just copied the Mac, its likely that no personal computer would have them. If I had never dropped out, I would have never dropped in on this calligraphy class, and personal computers might not have the wonderful typography that they do. Of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when I was in college. But it was very, very clear looking backwards ten years later.

Again, you can’t connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.”

I hope that the death of Steve Jobs will cause you to pause and reflect on your teaching approach how to bring out the best in each of your students. We never know which one will be the next innovator and visionary who can make an impact on the community, no matter how large.

“Steve Jobs was our da Vinci” Guy Endore Kaiser

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My Other Hat

October 6, 2011

Maine Art Teachers Exhibit

Yellowstone Burn-Specimen Creek by Suzanne Goulet

An exhibition of work by Maine Art Teachers is now on display at Maine College of Art in the Zand Head and Hall Galleries through October 21st.

An opening reception will be held on Friday, October 7th from 5- 8 pm during First Friday Artwalk and is courtesy of the MECA Advancement Office.

This exhibition brings together the creative work of 45 Art educators from around the state and celebrates the studio practice and exploration that takes place beyond the classroom.  This show features a variety of media including: drawing, painting, printmaking, photography, collage, mixed media, ceramics and sculpture.  Artists represented in this show teach in Maine’s public and private schools and universities and are members of the Maine Art Education Association, an arts advocacy organization that encourages innovation and research in art education, the exchange of ideas and practices among teachers, and promotes the artistic learning of children.

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A Young Animator

October 5, 2011

Fascinating work

Last weekend I attended the wedding of my nephew in Vermont. I had a wonderful time visiting family and friends but what I found most interesting was to talk with friends of the bride and groom. My nephew graduated from Bennington College in Vermont where they have a outstanding arts program. Many of these young people have gone on to jobs in the arts or jobs that are very creative. Several are in NYC following their passions. One young woman is an animator, I learned that she grew up in Bath and went to Mt. Ararat High School where she was in classes with our colleagues in the art room. Never was interested in using the computer to make art but took a course at Bennington that sparked the interest. Today Michelle Enemar is an animator and below you can see a vimeo she created called How Music Works; Book Trailer. It is wonderful to “see” how creativity is used and influences the life of young people.

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4,021

October 4, 2011

Maine Arts Conference – Arts Teachers Lead the Way… Back to the Future: Arts Assessment For Learning

Yup, since the Maine Arts Assessment Conference website went live on September 2nd it has had 4,002 visitors. WOW! I am very surprised and every time I go to the site I am more surprised. I am guessing that many people visited several times. And, as of yesterday afternoon we had 191 registered for the conference coming up this Friday. The only things left to do are several little details.

The Teacher Leaders are ready and excited to facilitate their workshops. I know since they are teaching full-time and planning for their workshop plus all the other parts of their lives, that this week might be a bit stressful. They’ve been thinking about and planning for this day since August 4th so I am sure it is down to the wire. I had to laugh when I received an email from one of the teacher leaders yesterday saying that she was in “freak-out stage”. I am so proud of the work they’ve done since being selected to represent Maine arts educators as Teachers Leaders! I look forward to seeing all of them at the end of this week.

Maine Arts Assessment Institute - August 2011

I have been following, on a wiki, the planning happening for the keynote being given by USM professor Jeff Beaudry, and arts educators Shalimar Poulin and Rob Westerberg. We are in for a treat when they take to the stage during the Opening Session with their collaborative keynote entitled: Context and Connection in the Arts.

I am really looking forward to listening to the Windham High School Chamber Singers under the direction of Mr. Rick Nickerson, also during the Opening Session. It has been a couple of years since I’ve heard them perform so this will be very special!

The conference is fortunate to have Steve Garton joining us for a session called Rock ‘n Roll Assessment. Steve is the Coordinator of Educational Technology at the Maine Department of Education. If you’ve ever seen Steve in action you know are aware of his musical abilities. The stage will be rocking!

soccer sketch

My friend and colleague Karen Montanaro returns to our statewide conference to bring you Yahoooo time and Back to the Future. No, you won’t be sitting and watching this Performing Artist and Movement Specialist, you’ll be up on your feet. You might remember Karen from the 2007 statewide conference when she performed her soccer sketch with my son. Karen has created an interactive piece just for the closing session. You can preview Karen on this vimeo.

Thank you to Jillaine McGough who has been furiously working to gather some pretty incredible door prizes! You can see some of them listed on the conference donors page at http://maineartsconference.wordpress.com/conference-information/donations/! I promise that the day will end on a fun note!

For those of you who can not attend we will have follow-up blog posts and video available online of some sessions.

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Happening at the MDOE

October 3, 2011

Commissioner’s Updates

photo of Education Commissioner Bowen

Commissioner Bowen

Are interested in keeping up with what is happening from the Education Commissioner Steve Bowen’s office? If so, it is easy… below is information that was provided by the Commissioner’s office to help you do just that. I suggest you sign up ASAP.

To streamline the many communications from the Maine Department of Education, the Department has developed a weekly Commissioner’s Update http://eepurl.com/dVTCf that includes official correspondence, press releases, reporting requirements, news and information designed for superintendents, business managers, administrators and teachers, and available by subscription to anyone.

Some examples from recent weeks include: news from the field on standards-based classrooms, the Commissioner’s thoughts and information on NCLB flexibility, professional development opportunities and much more. (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.)

I encourage you to subscribe to this weekly update and to do so click here: http://eepurl.com/cTM8w.

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BoatLift

October 2, 2011

A 9-11 tale

I have read many articles, seen footage, looked at the photographs, and listened to the stories about 9-11. Over and over I’ve tried to make sense of the day and thought about where I was standing and who told me the news. One story I wasn’t aware of that just came across my desk this past week is amazing. The boat owners, captains,  and pilots came together in the harbor to help remove people from the island. This video tells a wonderful story of the heroes who raced to the harbor and helped out.

Click here for the link: http://forum.woodenboat.com/showthread.php?136581-BoatLift-An-Untold-tale-of-September-11-Resilience.

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Commissioner’s Update

October 1, 2011

Arts Celebration makes the front page

On the front page of this weeks Commissioner’s Update, Katy Jones, a student from Buckport High School, is seen with the First Lady Ann LePage, and Education Commissioner Steve Bowen.

If you’d like you may sign up for the weekly Commissioner’s Update on the Department of Education webiste by clicking here.