Archive for June, 2012

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Happy Retirement!

June 11, 2012

CONGRATULATIONS and BEST WISHES!

Best Wishes to the following for a wonderful – happy and healthy retirement. Combined they have contributed over 350 years of teaching art or music to students across the state of Maine. Their expertise and commitment to education is appreciated and I am certain their students will miss them! Never to be taken away from them, or the districts they have served, is the impact they have made on students education in the arts. THANK YOU all! I hope you will continue to be involved in arts education in Maine by providing me (argy.nestor@maine.gov) with an email address to continue to be on the Maine arts education list-serv.

  • Debi Lynn Baker – Greenville Schools, K-12 Visual Arts, 27 years
  • Sheila Bohlin – Mt. Ararat High School, Visual Arts, 39 years
  • Carolyn Brasslett – Glenburn, Music, 40 years
  • M. Stanley Buchanan –  Nokomis Regional High, Newport, Music, 47 years
  • Carol Deetjen – Boothbay Region Elementary School, Visual Arts, 32 years
  • Jane Frost – Richmond, Visual Arts, 25 years
  • Randy Menninghaus – Brewer High School, Visual Arts, 35 years
  • Richard Morin – MSAD #40, Music 39 years
  • Dwight Tibbetts – Cony, Augusta 32 years
  • Althea Woolf- Village Elementary School, York, Visual Arts, 37 years
  • Gerald York – Jonesport-Beals High School (Union #103) Jonesport & Beals Elementary Schools, Music, more than 25 years
  • Mary Zane- Coastal Ridge Elementary School, York, Visual Arts, 13 years
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K-12 Celebration of the Arts Festival – Lake Region

June 9, 2012

Days of exhibits and performances

The arts educators of Lake Region School District, MSAD #61 (Bridgton, Casco, Naples, Sebago) go all out each year to provide the opportunity for students to exhibit art work, perform musical and dance selections. A real showcase of student accomplishments of the standards. I had the chance to visit for a small part and I am glad I did!

District Fine Arts Coordinator Jenni Null shared some of her photos of the event that was held on May 30 and 31st. The two day Festival, held at Lake Region High School includes

  • precorder players
  • a Dance Showcase (LRHS)
  • LRHS Pops Concert
  • LRMS Gr. 6 Band
  • tours of the exhibit for all Gr. 3 students during the day led by LRHS art docents
  • demonstrating artists: potter, spinner, quilt maker, rug hooker, painter, and
  • a spectacular array of art from students in K-12!

There were opportunities for students to engage in hands on activities: hat making, t-shirt screening (the 2012 Arts Festival Logo), face painting, & card/book mark making with stamps. One highlight of the event was the life like recreations of Grant Wood’s American Gothic & Edvard Munch’s The Scream. In both works, the faces were cut out, so people could stand behind the works and literally become a part of the paintings. The event was a huge success, judging by the number of students who were still talking about it the next day and still donning their face paintings and silk screened shirts.

Dance teacher Carmel Collins invited me to the two day event and I attended on the night of the student dance performance. Below is Carmel’s description including a photo of the event.

The opening number, “Party Rock Anthem,” echoed the spirit of the festivals words, “Celebration of the Arts.” Students ranging from grades 6 through 12 entertained their audience with dance styles ranging from hip-hop to theatrical to modern dance. Each performance bringing with it a new story, a new energy, a new thought and may be a question or two.

Interspersed between the performances, slam poets engaged the audience with their artistic, rhythmic verses of pain, love, anguish and joy, in true slam style fashion. Their words ringing circles of questions and retrospection. Slam poetry has grown rapidly over the recent years since its introduction from language arts teacher, Lucinda Stein.

Her vision and energy has enthused and inspired students to write deeply, honestly and passionately about life, love and loss. This new addition to the show highlights how important and integral the literary arts are to the field of the arts as a creative and expressive art form.

A show of course would not be complete without the lights and sound from our talented and creative Mr. Eugene Long and his assistant for the evening, student Ethan Strain. From a solitary spotlight to subtle hues of greens and blues, to the dazzling oranges and yellows, the lights and music brought the show to life and to the audience.

The evening concluded with student Kelsey Wilcox wishing everyone to leave with the message of the finale, “ A Good Feeling” by Flo Rida. In costumes that sparkled and dazzled under the lights echoing the word “Showtime!” students and teacher, Carmel Collins gave the last performance of the evening to a very appreciative and receptive audience.

The Dance Showcase initially began as a solitary event during the school day for grades 9-12. However, over the past nine years since its conception the Dance Showcase has grown to become an evening event, has expanded to include grades 6-12, and has become an integral part of the districts K-12 Arts Festival. The new dance/multipurpose studio will be completed in the fall of 2012 offering students the continued opportunity to explore and experience the challenging, creative, and expressive art form of dance.

The dance program has brought joyful, challenging, new and familiar experiences to our students, as one of our newest and youngest additions to the program commented,
“Iʼve had fun with the dance showcase. Itʼs given me a chance to expand my skills in dancing, as well as allowing me to step outside my comfort zone and do things I never thought I could. The most amazing thing, though, is the friends Iʼve made through the showcase. Iʼm normally a shy person, so getting to know the other dancers was awesome.”    Talya Bartlett, freshman

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Dance at George Stevens Academy

June 8, 2012

GSA Arts Festival 2012

Each year at George Stevens Academy during the annual Arts Festival the students in dance classes have a chance to show others their accomplishments.

I received this email recently with a link to the video footage from the festival.

“We had fun and worked hard and enjoyed sharing with our friends and school. Special thanks to our guest artists Alison Chase, Kenneth Neil, & Jessica Bendig from Alison Chase Performance Group, and Nathaniel Dombek, & Maiki Saito from Maine State Ballet; we loved the energy they brought to our stage.

Throughout the year GSA Introduction to Dance class enthusiastically taught and performed Beyoncé’s Move Your Body with the goal of sharing our love and support for GSA alumnus, US Marine Jake Fox, and his healing journey after a roadside bomb in Afghanistan wounded him.”

Not only were these students engaged in their learning but doing it thoughtfully in support of a marine makes the learning that much more meaningful.

To view all the video footage please click here.

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In Today’s News

June 7, 2012

Opportunity for 7,000 Portland students

Four of Portlands institutes: Portland Stage Company, Portland Ovations, Portland Symphony Orchestra, and the Portland Museum of Art and an anonymous Portland donor are collaborating to provide arts education opportunities for Portland students. You can read more in the newspaper article from the Portland Press Herald written by Tom Bell by clicking here.

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Summer Opportunity in the County

June 7, 2012

Arts Assessment course

The New England Institute for Teacher Education will be bringing graduate level courses to Aroostook County this summer, including Arts Assessment courses in Music and Visual Art.

Bill Buzza will be teaching the music course and Catherine Ring will be teaching the visual art course. Both are on the Leadership Team with the Maine Arts Assessment Initiative.

Please register with the New England Institute if you are interested in taking your assessment practices to a deeper level.

Working with a cohort of colleagues who share best practices and resources is stimulating and fun. Deep discussions around how to assess, benchmark, and align to standards are helping to improve learning in the arts classroom.  Graduate courses made available in other parts of the state have met with great success.  Join Bill and Catherine in Presque Isle this summer!

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Maine Alliance for Arts Education Update

June 6, 2012

Strategic plan and executive director search

Augusta, ME, June 2012 –The Maine Alliance for Arts Education announces a new strategic focus for the organization.

Now in its 34th year of serving the arts education community in Maine, the Maine Alliance for Arts Education (MAAE) has just completed an organizational assessment to determine how to best meet its mission to encourage and strengthen educational excellence in visual art, music, theater, and dance in all Maine schools and communities.

With the retirement of long-time Executive Director, Carol Trimble last December, the MAAE Board of Directors has used the transition time before hiring a replacement as an opportunity to assess the needs of the arts education community in Maine and MAAE’s core strengths as an organization. Going forward, MAAE will focus its strategic efforts in two key areas: Advocacy and Professional Development. MAAE acknowledges its many partners throughout Maine for providing invaluable assistance and support during this planning process.

Going forward, MAAE will work in collaboration with established and new partners and networks of educators, parents, arts organizations, communities, and supporters to advance arts education in Maine guided by these two priorities:

1.     Advocacy

Proactively influence arts education policy at the state and national level through monitoring and lobbying legislation that affects arts education, and, over time, developing and supporting advocacy strategies at the local level among schools, parents, community partners, arts organizations, and cultural institutions to sustain and improve arts education.

2.     Professional Development

Support arts educators, classroom teachers, school administrators, and parents to improve and promote arts education in all Maine schools by planning and implementing professional development activities through workshops, conferences, training, distribution of resource information, and other innovative programming.

In order to strengthen its statewide mission, the Board has also decided to phase out, over the next few months, two regional programs: Building Community Through the Arts in the greater Bangor and Penquis areas, under the leadership of Susan Potters, Education Director, and Learning (Arts) in Community (LINC) in Hancock County—as well as the Imagination Intensive Communities (IIC) program.

To meet its new goals MAAE is seeking a new Executive Director to lead the organization into the future. For more information about Maine Alliance for Arts Education or the search for a new Executive Director please visit our website www.maineartsed.org

Executive Director Job Description

Background

The Maine Alliance for Arts Education (MAAE) is a statewide organization affiliated nationally with Kennedy Center Alliance for Arts Education Network. Its mission is to encourage and strengthen educational excellence in visual art, music, theater, and dance in all Maine schools and communities.  In May 2012, the MAAE Board decided that the future work of the organization will focus on a statewide level through Advocacy and Professional Development.

Executive Director Position Description

MAAE is seeking an Executive Director to work with the Board of Directors to carry out its new strategic plan. Initially (the first three months at two days a week) the ED will focus primarily on fundraising for financial sustainability and basic organizational management. With the expectation of an expanded work schedule, the ED will then lead the organization in implementation of its two new priorities: Advocacy and Professional Development.

Job Responsibilities

Initial three-month period:

  • Work with the Board to secure funding for MAAE, including but not limited to writing grants and pursuing public and private sector funding
  • Manage the organization, including
    • Communicate with Board of Directors, Alliance members, staff, and the public
    • MAAE’s database, finances, and website

Qualifications

Position requires:

  • Experience and demonstrated success in fundraising and grant writing
  • Ability to work collaboratively with such partners as the Maine Department of Education, Maine Arts Commission, schools, parents, and community and professional arts organizations

Computer skills, including word-processing, database management, and

  • spreadsheets for fiscal reporting
  • Experience in using social media, electronic newsletters, etc. in innovative ways to connect with the public and arts education constituencies
  • Understanding and ability to oversee fiscal responsibilities (monthly balance sheet reports, preparing annual budgets, and budget forecasting)
  • Ability to work independently (office-in-home) on a regular schedule, with Executive Committee

The initial three month contract will be a two-day per week position, at the completion of which the Board expects to expand the ED position to a permanent, long term contract at three to four days per week. The position reports directly to the MAAE Board of Directors.

Interested applicants should submit a cover letter, résumé, and two letters of recommendation to the following email address MAAEDIRSEARCH@roadrunner.com by June 30, 2012. The position will remain open until filled.

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Another Arts Teachers’ Story: Audrey Grumbling

June 5, 2012

Featuring one teacher’s journey as an educator

This is the 12th in a series of blog posts telling arts teachers’ stories. This series contains a set of questions to provide the opportunity for you to read educators stories and to learn from others.

Audrey Grumbling currently teaches K-5 Visual Arts to 460 students at two elementary schools: Kennebunkport Consolidated School and Mildred L. Day School, Arundel. She originally taught K-8 Art in Arundel beginning in 2001. In 2006 the school became a K-5 school and later consolidated with RSU 21. Her work includes teaching two Talented Artist Program classes each week. Audrey has been with the Maine Arts Assessment Initiative as a Teacher Leader in the first phase.

What do you like best about being a music/art/drama/dance educator?

I revel when I see the children’s joy as they work with materials and express themselves visually. Seeing them tap into their own creativity and get into their “flow” zone – that’s the best. While my discipline is visual, I am passionate about ideas, and I teach for that spark, that “aha” moment, when a child makes a discovery and grasps a concept.

Tell me what you think are three keys to ANY successful arts ed program?

As arts educators, we are entrusted with the important work of providing children opportunities to directly experience the language of human expression and understanding.

  1. A successful arts education program needs passionate educators who find joy in their own work.
  2. A good arts program helps students practice close observation and build skills that lead to creative problem solving and critical thinking.
  3. It’s no accident that the highest level of the new Bloom’s Taxonomy is “to create.” It’s the quality that businesses, think tanks, and the world most need to nurture for our future. It’s what the arts are all about!  Getting this message out beyond the “choir,” that’s essential to a solid program, as well.

What specific way(s) do your assessment practices tie into the success of your program?

As we found repeatedly throughout our Arts Assessment Initiative, we need to focus on “formative” assessment – immediate feedback that students can apply to their work and teachers can utilize to adjust and differentiate instruction. It opens up a trust, a dialogue, a conversation that helps students grow while they create. Ideally, they learn to reflect, revise, and create (and reflect again). Teaching students the process of metacognition provides a lifelong skill for any discipline. Learning how to revise and change and modify is a key skill, whether one is planning a mural, writing an essay, designing an app for a smart phone, or developing a fuel-efficient engine. The arts do it!

What have been the benefits in becoming involved in the arts assessment initiative?

Through the MAAI, I met some amazing, talented, and passionate arts educators. We experienced a journey of discovery and sharing as we studied and reflected on our own practice together. At our state Assessment conference, we established a dialog with our colleagues, both presenters and attendees, and shared in ways we rarely have a chance to do. I especially enjoyed collaborating with Laura Devin of Bath to present two sessions at the conference.

What are you most proud of in your career?

I treasure those undocumented moments of joy, pride, and “aha” sparks I’ve witnessed over the years.  It is gratifying to see children realize they can make a difference in the world with their art (whether through exhibitions, gifts, collaborative works, or service learning).

What gets in the way of being a better teacher or doing a better job as a teacher?

I am frustrated that I don’t do enough to educate the self-named “non-artists” in our school community about the importance of the arts to build adults who can think independently, solve problems, collaborate, and communicate within our world. The current single-minded emphasis on test scores is a narrow view of what children need to succeed. In 2007 I spoke with university educators in Japan who said they were long “past” that way of thinking, and the schools I visited were, indeed, intensely invested in the whole child. Despite ample confirming research, somehow we get stuck on the test scores.  Of course, there is always the big issue, TIME, or lack thereof. Lack of TIME with children, lack of TIME for research and teaming with other educators, for coordinating that collaboration across disciplines that really cements learning.

Apple or PC?

Both, but with MLTI, more Mac these days.

What have you accomplished through hard work and determination that might otherwise appear at first glance to be due to “luck” or circumstances?

I have found community partners to host whole-school art exhibits in their museums and galleries. For each of my students to see themselves viewed by their community as “artists” in a “real” gallery is priceless. I am also really proud that Arundel was named one of six “Imagination Intensive Communities” in the state during the first year of that program. This recognition represented amazing whole-school collaborations and integrated learning that involved our entire staff, something that suffers when test scores become the prime measure of a successful education and planning time for collaboration is squeezed. When I created integrated units of study for the Portland Museum of Art, the Farnsworth Art Museum, and the Lincoln Center International Institute for Creative Learning I was able to bring world-class professional development back to my students, and when published, to the reach the wider education community. Finding funding to bring in working artists from down the road and across the world has also been an exciting part of my work over the years.

Look into your crystal ball: what advice would you give to teachers?

Hang on to your ideals, find outside experiences that stimulate and support your work, and find some supportive colleagues with whom to collaborate.  Also, educate your administrators, school board and community about the essential relevance of the arts in the life of a developing young person who can solve problems creatively, think critically, communicate within our rapidly changing world, and, by golly, be a happy, contributing member of society. It’s the world I want to live in.

If you were given a $500,000.00 to do with whatever you please, what would it be?

Wow! A financial bonanza would help me bolster my own children’s creative endeavors out in the world (a filmmaker, a poet, and a molecular physicist). I’ve always wanted to fund an artists’ colony, where young artists can live and work and inspire each other. I’d like to work on ways to educate communities, administrators and school boards about the both essential and vast benefits of a solid arts education.

Thank you Audrey for telling your story!

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Steve Orlofsky Honored

June 4, 2012

Maine Music Educators Association

I know that some of you attended the Thursday night banquet at the Maine Music Educators Conference this past month at UMaine when Steve Orlofsky was surprised. No, I would say Steve was more than surprised, shocked is a better word to describe it! Head of School from George Stevens Academy, Paul Perkinson, presented the MMEA award to Steve before a room of his peers on May 17th.

The presentation included the following sentiments from a student of Steve’s:

“Never have I seen a man so infused with energy, so passionate about music, and so in tune with his students as Steve Orlofsky, the music director at George Stevens Academy. The man is a veritable force of nature, fueled by a vat of coffee, constantly moving. I am fairly certain he could win a trophy at a speed walking competition.

And I am totally certain that he could win a trophy at a music competition. He has done it before. Multiple times, actually. In my three years at GSA, I can not remember one in which a GSA musical group did not win first place at the District or State Jazz Fest, and the trophies and banners speak for the years before me. If it were possible to win trophies fro playing at basketball games, those would be won as well. I have head referees who claim to have heard dozens of school bands while refereeing across the state, and they all say that the GSA Band are the best. And we are the best, thanks to Mr. O.

We all know the iconic image of him counting off, and then becoming distracted by somethinghe wants to tell us and forgetting his conducting hand, so that he will be telling us something, and his baton will still be unconsciously counting out a steady beat. We always have a good laugh when it happens. We learn many things in band besides music, such as how to avoid a moose on the side of the road, how to find the best dog at a kennel (Mr. O keeps us up to date with the cutest dogs at the local animal shelter), what to buy your wife on Valentine’s Day, and much more. And he always tells us stories. When he was 10 years old, his teacher asked him what he wanted to do when he grew up, and he said, “I want to be a high school band teacher.” The teacher had looked at him as if he were crazy, but he stuck to his dream, and here it is, years later, doing the thing he has wanted to do since he was a kid.

I have improved in my skills on the drum set, the piano, and in my general undersatnding of music and its flow while with Mr. O, and I’ve had fun the entire time. I’ve played stuff from the Rolling Stones to Duke Ellington and everything in between. I think it was best put into words a while by Aaron, my fellow percussionist in the school band. The subjet of classes came up, and I asked him which one he liked the most. He said, “Dude! Band!”.

CONGRATULATIONS STEVE!

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Bangor Elementary and Middle Schools Artwork

June 3, 2012

Artwork at Maine Department of Education

During April, May, and June there are 39 pieces of artwork are on display from elementary and middle school students from Bangor. Congratulations to the students for a JOB WELL DONE! The student artwork can be seen online by clicking here or it can be found on the right side of the front page of this blog.

The artwork may be viewed in person during office hours at the Maine Department of Education, 5th floor of the Cross Building, in Augusta. On Wednesday, June 6th, the Celebration of Arts Education is scheduled at the Blaine House and the Department where students will be recognized for their artwork. Students will be recognized by Maine’s First Lady Ann LePage, Chair of the State Board of Education James Banks, and the Commissioner of Education Steve Bowen.

During the ceremony three kindergarten students from the Fruit Street School will perform a song they have created, writing the music and lyrics with the guidance of their music teacher Anne Chamberlain-Small. A great big THANK YOU to Anne and the following art teachers for their contributions:

  • William S. Cohen School – Art Teacher Katrina Lajoie
  • Fourteenth Street School and Downeast School  – Art Teacher Julie Hayes
  • Fruit Street School – Art Teacher Wendy Libby
  • James F. Doughty School – Art Teacher Marta Robbins
  • Mary Snow School – Art Teacher Deborah Jellison
  • Vine Street School – Art Teacher Heidi Crahan

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Carol Deetjen Retiring

June 2, 2012

Art teacher from Boothbay Region Elementary School

I have know Carol Deetjen since she started teaching art in Boothbay 32 years ago. I remember when I was a young child my mother introducing me to her friends and saying she had known them for about the same amount of time. I remember thinking WOW, how can that be?! The idea of being friends with someone for that many years astounded me. Now, here I am all these years later, having many friends for more than 30 years.

Last winter while at the Hancock County Technical Center I met Carol’s son, Bobby, who is on staff there. He was creating a bulletin board in the hallway and I just couldn’t walk past without remarking on the outstanding letters he was using to title it. I could tell they were handmade and remarked to him that he must have had a really good art teacher while growing up. His response: “my mother is an art teacher”. Of course we went on from there making the connection. I had heard stories of Carol’s son Bobby over the years and was glad to finally meet him.

Carol emailed recently to tell me about the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens first student art exhibit for the Boothbay area schools reflecting a “birds and blossom” view of the gardens. Carol was responsible for creating artwork for the exhibit with her grade 5 students and it was, in Carol’s words: “very cool”.

Under Carol’s guidance the students created multi-level watercolor collage pieces and put them together into a wallhanging. The Botanical Gardens asked to use the artwork in their new Education Center for the summer.

As Carol winds down her last year of teaching she is reminiscing about all the wonderful memories she has from her years of teaching art! CONGRATULATIONS CAROL and THANKS  A BUNCH for all you’ve done for Maine children and their art education!