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Getting There

December 9, 2020

Maine College of Art – Student Journeys

Maine College of Art (MECA) Masters in Arts and Teaching (MAT) students presented their work in an exhibit called “Getting There”, November 28 – December 7. Due to the pandemic it was only accessible by MECA. Thanks to the efforts of many this blog post provides background information, an overview and photographs of the work displayed. The content was coordinated by the efforts of students Philippa Grace and includes contributions from 10 students presently enrolled in the program.

During past work of the Maine Arts Leadership Initiative (MALI-now MAEPL), ‘Teacher as Artist’, ‘Artist as Teacher’ has been researched and explored so I’m pleased to see attention being given to this topic at MECA. You will read the thoughts of some of the MAT students below on the topic.

After reading their Artists’ Statements and responses to a group of questions I am confident that the future of visual art education in Maine is in good hands. Thank you to everyone who contributed to this blog post.

BACKGROUND

The exhibit “Getting There” is a reflection of our individual and collective experiences as students learning to be teachers, while also nurturing our creative practice. In addition to our coursework, observations, and field work, all ten of us have been auditing BFA classes at Maine College of Art this fall. Due to limited class sizes because of the pandemic, we weren’t all able to be in our top choice – but we all learned so much. Although our initial prompt was to tie our experience of learning to teach while being an artist to our BFA class, we all expressed ourselves in different ways – from portraits of each other, to new skills we learned, to creating artifacts for future lesson plans. The show is a time stamp of our cohort on the cusp of student teaching this winter. Though this is an unusual year, we are all eager to join the field of art education! 

COURSE DESCRIPTION

Throughout the summer and fall, candidates explore the tools they will need to keep their artistry alive. They also learn how to digitize evidence of artistic and teaching performance. During the summer, candidates explore key personal dispositions of the artist-educator and learn how these qualities shape their lives as artists and future educators. Candidates reflect on their identity and articulate how their personal qualities contribute to their development as creative educators. During the fall, candidates register for an art studio course and continue to explore the artist/educator theme. By examining personal learning goals, they select an art form to study that either supplements or expands their existing repertoire. Candidates create a group art exhibition and prepare a final reflection that examines the strengths and challenges of maintaining high-quality teaching while continuing to work as practicing artists.

EXHIBIT STATEMENT 

Getting There 

November 28 – December 6, 2020

Masters of Art in Teaching Exhibition

Getting There encapsulates our Master of Arts in Teaching program experience. As we develop into artist-educators, we wish to share our individual reflections on various art education theories meaningful to the ten of us as we balance our creative and teaching practices.

Throughout the summer and fall, we have been developing the tools we need to keep our artistry alive in this emerging hybrid and remote learning culture. In between fieldwork assignments and coursework, we explored key personal dispositions of the artist-educator role, and learned how these qualities shape our lives as future teachers. We respond to the prompt of how we are individually ‘getting there’ within our own paths. We reflect on our identity and articulate how our personal qualities contribute to our development as creative educators, which culminates in our exhibit, Getting There

ARTISTS STATEMENTS  

LAUREN ANDERSON

Getting There: While Embracing Being a Novice

Metal, fabric, casted aluminum, wood

As my brain is reaching information overload, I am excited by all the new tools I am adding to my personal tool box. While I am learning how to be a teacher, I am also learning how to work with wood and metal in my Sculptural Imagination class. I have had the opportunity to learn how to cut wood on various saws; bandsaw, miter saw, and the table saw. I also learned how to weld and bend metal, as well as pour aluminum into sand casted resin molds. I am learning to be a teacher, but I am also learning how to continue being a diverse maker. I will soon be an expert teacher, but I will never stop enjoying  learning new mediums and embracing being a novice.

Lauren Anderson

In this exhibition I have shared a piece of each of my sculpture adventures. I created necklace wearables for my body extension project based on the idea of huge chunky necklaces. These necklaces were created from textile materials as well as metal. I also included my aluminum casting composed of intuitive shapes, and my final project titled “I miss you”, a piece created with metal, wood, and crocheted yarn. In this piece I depicted my mom, my sister and I as circles and focused on displaying our personalities through different materials. My mom, the metal circle, is tough as metal and never fails to make me feel safe. My sister, the wood circle, is older than me and very tough to get through to which is why she is depicted as solid wood. I, the crocheted yarn circle, am very soft, gentle, and easy to open up to. In this study of materials I stepped out of my comfort zone and gained many new tools to add to my personal tool box. 

SETH BARON

The Courage To Teach

Digital painting

Studying best practices in teaching is the most important thing to me at this point in my life. Best practice pedagogy has been formally defined as a program’s procedure that continuously and regularly produces superior results when compared with other strategies. With the right intentions, teachers can be some of the most valuable people in this society. This painting is my visual interpretation of the book The Courage To Teach by Parker Palmer. In this book Palmer writes “To correct our excessive regard for the powers of intellect, I stress the power of emotions to freeze, or free, the mind.” Now more than ever, we as educators need to better focus our efforts towards getting students excited about learning. 

Teachers are doing this. By working overtime every week to make sure that remote learning is successful, whether the gym teacher is doing backflips to start a zoom meeting or the English teacher starts class by playing piano. Teachers show up to class with the positive energy that the students need to feel safe in an environment that feels so dangerous. This is important as schools can very well be safer than home for many students. With the face of the school being the teachers it is vital that they are cool, calm and collected. 

Seth Baron

As an art educator, students should be able to come to my classroom knowing that their voices are heard and respected. Whether their voice is in the form of talking or visual communication. When going outside feels dangerous, art can comfort and make one feel as if they are safe even if they are a mouse riding on the back of a wolf. 

In this painting animals symbolize how I perceive educators are reacting to the CoronaVirus epidemic. As the epidemic is making schools a terrifying place to be, Teachers continue to show up everyday for their students with a big smile on their face. Educators show up to school cool, calm and collected. 

SEAN DILLON

Getting There: The Traveling Shrine 

Storyteller, tomb of travelers, driftwood, cotton sheets, stones, glass vials, story books, assorted found objects

Behind every art piece in Getting There, is an artist, and behind every artist, there is a story.  The Traveling Shrine is a sacred place, a crossroad where my path as an artist intersects with those of my fellow art teachers in training. Together, we are travelers navigating the path from artist to art educator by way of MECA’s Masters of Art in Teaching program (MAT).  The Shrine also serves as a place of rest, and a vantage point for those passing through to observe the present.  Cherish these small moments, for who knows if or when we’ll cross paths again.  It is this feeling of nostalgia and reflection that inspired me to build this shrine that embodies my journey up until now.  Comprised of and adorned with relics, artwork, and trinkets from my past and present, the Traveling Shrine is a reminder to myself and my cohort that we are all indeed getting there.

Sean Dillon

My entry for Getting There is unlike anything I’ve drawn or crafted previously.  In the spirit of using innovation and divergent processes to make art, which is one of our seven MAT dispositions, I chose to bring my spiritual space into the tangible world in full life-size form.  The Traveling Shrine is fully immersive and welcomes visitors on all paths of life.

Visitors of the Shrine are encouraged to sit, observe, and reflect on the surrounding artwork and their own journey that brought them here. They may also inscribe their own story into the Tome of Travelers, a living book that remembers all who visit the shrine and grants them good luck on their own journey.  Time and again, the spirit of the shrine will appear to tell tales, share fortunes, and barter strange magic for the stories of others. 

PHILIPPA GRACE

Failing Fearlessly

Porcelain clay

“How do you calculate upon the unforeseen? It seems to be an art of recognizing the role of the unforeseen, of keeping your balance amid surprises, of collaborating with chance, of recognizing that there are some essential mysteries in the world and thereby a limit to calculation, to plan, to control.

Rebecca Solnit, A Field Guide to Getting Lost

Philippa Grace

I never wanted to be a teacher. No matter how many friends and mentors encouraged me to teach, I always dismissed the possibility; my stubborn adolescent self was keen to be different from my professor parents. But in my efforts to avoid teaching, I became an artist; and as an artist, I was fascinated by how the built world is put together. That curiosity led me to become a woodworker and sculptor, and then an apprentice at a wooden boat-building shop. Covered in cedar shavings and epoxy, I was happily entranced with the knowledge that there are “100 ways to skin a cat” when it comes to woodworking: every maker has their own methods; everyone will try it differently and end up with an incredible result. I became a tinkerer, an explorer in the woodshop. And then, I did so as a grassroots labor organizer, as a soup kitchen cook, and then as I built my portfolio to become a teacher candidate. I have found the joy in never knowing the answer, of embracing failure as a means to understanding the questions. These pieces are the embodiment of my acceptance of learning to fail – so that I can teach my future students that making mistakes is how we grow. 

SHELBY PYRZYK

My Teacher’s Journey

Getting There: Continuing to Learn 

Illustration – ink and watercolor

Throughout my compulsory education I looked forward to art class and looked up to my art teachers. They always encouraged me to strive big and pursue my passion for art. These teachers led me to further my art education through college. 

My prior experiences with children, from babysitting in my early teens to working as summer camp counselor during college, allowed me to realize I enjoyed working with children. The biggest contributor to my decision to become an art teacher was when I volunteered at my local art museum for their summer art camp. This opportunity opened my eyes to children’s learning capabilities and excitement for art. The Master’s of Art in Teaching program at MECA was a perfect path for me to travel on and has expanded my understanding of pedagogy and problem solving any challenges that a teacher may face in these uncertain times. I feel I have found my true calling and I aspire to be like the teachers that encouraged me and to spread my passion for art to children as an art educator. 

Shelby Pyrzyk

My art practice revolves around my playful, childlike personality so creating children’s book illustrations is a perfect way to depict snippets of my past experiences that have led up to the MAT program. The smaller panels depict experiences that inspired me to work with children. The medium panels depict major factors that played a key role in planting the seed of going in art education. And lastly the largest panel is of the MAT program, focusing around teaching with small snapshots of different moments, from online observation and working with students from Waynflete and Portland Rec Center. I’m continuing to learn and I’m getting there.

MADISON MAHONEY

Back to Basics

Collection of handbuilt glazed porcelain vessels

I started my journey with porcelain as a complete novice. As a painter, I had never wheel thrown before and had only distant memories of working with any sort of clay. Walking into a room of skilled wheel throwers was intimidating to say the least. Handbuilding felt like the natural first step in tackling this new medium. In creating my first ever porcelain cylinder I discovered so much about how the medium responded to my handbuilding techniques. After forming my block of porcelain into a wonky cylinder I felt an intense frustration that I just couldn’t get it to look the way I wanted it to. That’s when I realized … this is how my students feel!

Madison Mahoney

After that, I felt a new sense of clarity and direction in my making. As an emerging teacher, it is imperative that I understand what my students are going through and support them in the frustrations and triumphs of the making process: those times when you think you’ll never be able to make a smooth pot on the wheel and those times when you finally figure out exactly what colors mix to create the perfect mauve. Students are experiencing these feelings every day when they walk into the art room. I want to create a supportive learning environment for my students where experimentation is encouraged and failure is embraced as just another way of learning. 

This exhibit highlights my embrace of noviceness and experimentation. I did not try to make the most beautiful, polished or perfect porcelain vessels. But rather, sought to explore this new medium with enthusiasm and curiosity.

SOPHIE OLMSTED

Getting There

Glazed Porcelain 

I crave connection. I revel in feeling connection to myself and to others. I notice connection in my visual world, especially in nature. In the Masters of Art in Teaching program at the Maine College of Art, I connected theory to practice, in both fieldwork placements and in my Introduction to Porcelain class with Cathy Hammond.

The bases and lids of these jars used to be connected; they were originally thrown in one piece, a cylinder connected at the top. Each time you use the jar, you lift and replace the lid, disconnecting the form and then leaving it reconnected. To me, the theme of “Getting There” celebrates the connections I’ve made in the learning process. Each jar is an example of my progress and reflection, a step on my way to becoming a teacher. 

Sophie Olmsted

This porcelain class also reminded me of how special it is to be a student. I’ve missed being in a class and so I relished in the demonstrations and assignments, successes and failures, redundancy and discovery. It was inspiring to be surrounded by creative and enthusiastic artists. I hadn’t worked with clay since college and I didn’t use the wheel at all for my senior thesis, so this class was a time of personal and artistic reconnection. The class ended just as I was getting comfortable with the clay body and glazes, which was a timely reminder of the iterative nature of the learning process. Making these jars fuels my excitement to teach students how to see connection. I am in the early stages of getting there; I’m observing and collecting ways teachers can facilitate opportunities of learning and connection for their students. 

AUDREY ROBIDOUX

Finding My Way

Handcrafted book ~ Watercolor, collage, graphite, pen, colored pencil

I’m getting there…

The journey from artist to teacher has expanded my perspective on the world. As a working artist, I often felt isolated, deeply buried in late studio nights and internal thought. I love to create but it wasn’t enough. I couldn’t invest every piece of myself into it. I felt as though it wasn’t a sustainable practice for myself or my well being. As much as I loved it, I needed something different, a different purpose. After four years of focusing on the art world, I felt the pull to come to the teaching program. Despite the pandemic, and the upheaval of the world around me, I knew that it was the right decision. 

And now I have learned why. It has brought out and amplified parts of me that hadn’t made sense to me before. My love for leadership and advocacy, my tendencies towards organization and planning. It allows me to see the grand big picture, while honing in on all the small details. But most importantly it has brought my passion for art into a new light, and given it a new meaning. As a teacher I can create, without the boundaries of being a working artist. I can play with all the different mediums, in endless ways. I can create for just me, I can create for an audience, and I can create for my students.

Audrey Robidoux

This book is an encapsulation of these ideas. It’s formatted as a sketchbook of prompts that is designed for high school students, based off a curriculum map that I dreamt up. High school education is a difficult experience in the current society, and art can teach the lifelong lessons of creative and critical thinking. Giving a young adult a sketchbook can awake a childhood passion that seemed lost and change their perspective on life. The sense of individuality that is born within a sketchbook can inspire. Art and creativity is what every student needs in this current world, where we have no idea what the next few years looks like, let alone the rest of our lives. I want to equip my students with skills that will stay with them no matter what path they take. And it takes an artist to teach these concepts. There really is an art to teaching. And I’m getting there.

TRENT REDMON and COOPER BINETTE

Gateway Triptych

Acrylic paint and oil-based paint marker on panel

Trent’s statement:

 “…it is from popular culture that most people weave their identities and establish their relationships with others and the environment. Mass media images saturate our lives, structuring much of what we know beyond personal experience. We live through visual images as much as we do language” – Paul Duncum 

To us, the phrase “getting there” refers to our journey from artists to art educators, but it also takes us back to our own childhood, before we ever considered ourselves to be artists. As children of the 90’s, the visual culture that we were exposed to via television, internet and video games had a major impact on us. Our admiration for these colorful and imaginative characters ultimately transitioned into a desire to create, thus shepherding us into our respective artistic practices. For us, this series of colorful paintings is a love letter to visual culture. It is our way of paying homage to the classic characters that inspired us, but it also represents the artistic merits of VCAE as a potential gateway into creative expression for kids. The painterly execution of these works further emphasizes the overlap between visual culture and fine art.

Collaboration was also an important concept for these pieces, as Cooper and I worked side by side to create the series in a single day. As future art teachers, we realize the importance of fostering collaboration among students in the classroom, as it requires students to think flexibly and to cooperate with others. With these works, we wanted to highlight the importance of working with people who have different aesthetics and ideas, while ultimately being able to reach the same goal. Cooper’s vibrant underpainting provided a great backdrop for my bold, line-based character renderings, as we successfully harmonized our two distinct artistic voices into one unified series. Cooper was one of the first friends I made at MECA, and to be able to work with him on this project was a joy. Making art with friends can be incredibly fun and rewarding, and we want to encourage our students to experience that.

COOPER BINETTE

Team Awesome 

Ten 6 x 8in Oil on Panel 

Cooper’s statement:

I’m getting there…

The journey from artist to teacher has changed my outlook on everything I thought I knew about the subjects. Through readings, guest speakers, field work, and our amazing community of teachers and students, we are all bettering ourselves and deepening our knowledge of the practice. The education system is designed to condition students out of their creativity and to discourage mistakes. The only way to combat this is for teachers to encourage exploration while fostering a safe environment where students can not only make a mistake, but learn from it and discover something new. 

Through this MAT program, I have developed a completely new outlook on art as a whole. My art has always been inspired by a deep interest in the traditional academic style of painting. I was enveloped in the ideas of “mastery” and obsessed with learning different techniques to accomplish what I was trying to convey. These ideas and techniques work for some people, but I have found that each and every student learns differently. There are so many different tastes, styles, and students. The teacher has to have a wide variety of skills and knowledge to help foster an inclusive environment where all students can learn.    

The teacher candidates I work alongside at Maine College of Art have such diverse and creative backgrounds. To capture this I painted each teacher candidate and had them concoct a paragraph describing where each individual is at in their studies. The Masters of Art for Teaching program has introduced me to many incredible new people and ideas. It is my hope that through our study of inclusivity and best practice we can reform not only the future of teaching, but the future of all of our students.

Part II of this post will appear tomorrow. Included in the post will be the 10 photographs created by Cooper and much more! Photos are contributed by Rachel Somerville and Seth Baron.

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MALI Becomes MAEPL

December 8, 2020

Teacher Network Rebrands its Commitment to Arts Education

The Teacher Leader network known as MALI, or Maine Arts Leadership Initiative, has taken on the new mantle of MAEPL, Maine Arts Education Partners in Leadership, with the revised mission to develop and promote high quality arts education for all.” Leaders of MAEPL say the new name and mission statement better encapsulates what this community of arts educators has been and will continue to be. The process evolved as a result of bringing in new staff and expanding the organization’s leadership structure. Jake Sturtevant, music educator at Falmouth High School, longtime MALI member and Chair of the MAEPL Vision Team, said, “We are still committed to partnering with each other to be resilient, compassionate, and curious Teacher Leaders for our students and in our communities.”

2014 Summer MALI Institute

MALI, now MAEPL, a program of the Maine Arts Commission, is a unique teacher leader development program specifically for preK-12 visual and performing arts (VPA) educators from across the state, one of the very few in the country.  Led by active educators, they focus on the emerging needs of the field.  Components of the year-long program for both classroom teachers and teaching artists in all arts disciplines include community-building, an annual Individualized Professional Development Plan, structured mutual accountability, and leadership development. Over 120 Maine VPA teachers, as well as teaching artists, have participated in the last ten years.  

Even before the pandemic, teachers of the arts often felt isolated.  School district-level trainings are often geared towards general or “core” subject teachers.  “I’m only one of two in my district teaching elementary music.  We are in our little islands, far from anyone else doing what we do,” said Kate Smith, 2014 York County Teacher of the Year and MAEPL Program Team Leader.  “MALI changed all that.” 

Pamela Kinsey, Lori Spruce, Kate Smith, Pam Chernesky, Julie Richard, Winter Retreat 2020

This past year the group took a deep dive into their own organizational structure, assessing and clarifying their policies and processes. Even through the pandemic, the Leadership Teams met and solicited input from the entire membership, and determined a new name, a refined mission, and a new logo. “We chose the whirling maple seed pod as our new symbol because we felt it reflected the best of what we do – taking new ideas, learning and sharing together, then planting them throughout our school communities,” said Jennie Driscoll, visual art educator at Brunswick High School and Vision Team member. “It’s got our energy.”  

In 2020 they also delivered a virtual Summer Institute to 50 VPA educators, addressing the social and emotional resiliency needed this year. In addition, many members led efforts to support and connect with other teachers quickly adjusting to online instruction, leading virtual seminars through the Maine Department of Education and the Maine Arts Commission.

Group exercise at Winter Retreat, 2020

 “MALI grew a wealth of resources and committed members over the years,” said the current Director of Arts Education for the Maine Arts Commission, Martha Piscuskas, referring to the online Resource Bank and Arts Assessment Resources website, available free to all teachers. “We wanted to build on those strengths.” In addition to the professional development programs, next steps include creating an advisory council, streamlining their web presence, and continued advocacy for the sector. 

The group formed in 2010 to focus on student assessments, an emerging need for visual and performing arts teachers at that time. After learning from other states, a small group of educators led by Argy Nestor, the former Director of Arts Education at the Commission, Rob Westerberg, Choral Director at York High School, and Catherine Ring, former school administrator and art teacher, created the Maine Arts Assessment Initiative. They established the multi-day Summer Institute, sharing a framework and best practices for successful arts assessment in the classroom. “We quickly became the assessment experts in our schools,” said Sturtevant. 

Hope Lord and Adele Drake, MALI Summer Institute 2017

In 2015 the group added “teacher voice” and advocacy to their mission, becoming the Maine Arts Leadership Initiative (MALI), again addressing emerging needs of the sector. “I never would have thought to seek out leadership positions, continue my graduate studies, or have presented at conferences without the support and influence of MALI,” said Iva Damon, visual art teacher and Humanities Department Head at Leavitt Area High School.    

For more information about MAEPL, and to learn about how to get involved, contact Director of Arts Education for the Maine Arts Commission, Martha Piscuskas at martha.piscuskas@maine.gov. Arts education resources developed over the years are accessible through the Maine Arts Commission’s website, https://mainearts.maine.gov/pages/programs/maai.

The Maine Arts Commission is a state agency supporting artists, arts organizations, educators, policy makers, and community developers to advance the arts in Maine since 1966.  www.Mainearts.com


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Transmission Times

December 4, 2020

3 Maine artists sharing

Since mid-March Katie Semro has been making the podcast Transmission Times using audio diaries from people around the world about life during the pandemic. She’s done a special episode on Artists. There are 14 artists in all, 3 from Maine, and it’s filled with their pandemic stories as well as clips of their art. The episode is wonderful as are all of the episodes. Voices from around the world reminds me ‘we are not alone’. They share their struggles and their surprises. Many of the artists mention ‘the silver lining’ and art they’ve created that they would never have during a non-pandemic time. You can listen at THIS LINK.

You can tell your stories as well by recording on your smartphone and email them to Katie at ksemro@gmail.com, or call 847-354-4163 and leave your answers as a voicemail.

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Arts Advocacy Week

December 2, 2020

If there was ever a year for Arts Education Advocacy Day, this is it!… so mark your calendars for February 17 – 28th!  This year’s Virtual Advocacy “Day” will be a full week-and-a-half of important events and meetings. Our plenary session on Wednesday, February 17th will feature reports from the field by the leaders of each of the four professional arts educators’ associations that partner with MAAE in the Arts are Basic Coalition (ABC), representing visual art, music, theatre and dance. They’ll be sharing how the pandemic has impacted their discipline, and showing us how they’ve been responding to the challenges, including students’ voices as well.

The week and a half will also be an opportunity for Maine arts students to advocate directly with their legislators in small groups, a tradition we started in 2016 that brought students to Augusta from all around the state. This year zoom meetings will make that trip a lot easier! And the student delegations will also have other advocacy opportunities this year. Our new ABC Student Leadership Group (SLG – see below) has been hard at work on an initiative to form the teams of students who will be representing their schools on Advocacy Day first as advocacy teams at their school who can support arts education locally, as well as connect with the other school teams around the state via our student-managed Instagram account!

Organizing the teams will start this week with a message to the arts teachers from the ABC and Student Leadership Group asking the teachers to encourage one or two enthusiastic arts students at their school to attend a zoom meeting with the SLG about forming a team. The meeting will take place on December 6 at 7 pm

You can help!  If you’re a high school or middle school arts educator but not a member of your ABC arts organization, you can contact Melissa Birkhold, MAAE Advocacy Coordinator, at melissa.birkhold.maae@gmail.com to start the process. If you’re not an arts educator, please forward this email to your local arts educators so they can follow up.

Our SLG students below are looking forward to connecting with other students who share their arts enthusiasm. Their goal is creating a broad network of student arts advocacy teams for Advocacy Day and beyond!  This is the year when those teams are needed more than ever. We thank you for your help, and we’ll keep you posted as we make progress!

If you have any questions please contact Susan Potters, Executive Director
Maine Alliance for Arts Education at maaebangor@aol.com.

ABC Student Leadership Group

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I Am Grateful for Dance

December 1, 2020

Thornton Academy Dance program

The dance education program at Thornton Academy is well established and meeting the needs of all learners who are deeply engaged in their learning. Thornton Dance educator and Maine Arts Leadership Initiative Teacher Leader Emma Campbell has high expectations and understands how to connect with all students.

Every year Emma has students respond to the question – What am I grateful for? In a non-Covid year student responses write their gratitude notes on giant cut out leaves and tape them to the mirror in the dance studio.

This year the assignment was adapted to replicate while students are at home this year. They use the Google app called jam board to draft the notes. So everyone contributes a sticky note and then they get to pick from that as groups of that makes sense. Students use this format so there was no need to learn a new concept for the project.

Emma splits the group into breakout rooms to brainstorm thoughts and ideas and recorded one voice from each group and sent Emma the recording. She screen recorded them saying the phrase. Emma takes the footage and voices and does the editing and uploaded it to YouTube. The results are below. A wonderful way to incorporate dance into student thoughts and the outcome is amazing! Thank you Emma and Thornton Academy dancers for sharing your love for dancing and your gratefulness during this season.

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Falmouth High School Making Music

November 30, 2020

Recognizing Veterans Day

Across the state and country it is a tradition in many schools that the music curriculum includes a Veterans Day program. With a pandemic underway these programs have been altered and in many cases eliminated.

CONGRATULATIONS Falmouth High School students and staff for working together to make this happen. Jake Sturtevant and Wendy Northrup, Falmouth High School music educators, made some adaptions this year. The concert band and chorus played on the football field and in the bleachers two selections that have been posted online for all to appreciate.

STAR SPANGLED BANNER (CONCERT BAND)- Veterans Music Performance 2020  

MY COUNTRY TIS OF THE (CONCERT CHOIR)- Veterans Music Performance 2020 

We all know that it takes cooperation and collaboration from many to put together a virtual performance – students, parents, music teachers, administrators and maintenance staff. The reality is that in a normal year the rest of the world most likely would not see/hear this performance. Another silver lining of the pandemic world.

I understand that there will be more virtual performances in their future. You can find those at the Falmouth Music website.

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In Today’s News

November 27, 2020

Music teacher taking action about hunger in Maine

Michael Arell, the director of music for Veazie Community School, is doing something in response to something he heard on the radio during his morning commute. At least 12 percent of Maine households were food insecure in 2019, higher than the national average, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

So what is Arell doing? He has self-recorded a Christmas Album and is selling it for $10 on his website. The proceeds will go to the Good Shepherd Food Bank.

Michael Arell, the director of music for Veazie Community School, plays the piano during a graduate recital in 2019. Arell is pledging to donate profits from his self-recorded Christmas Album to the Good Shepherd Food Bank.

READ the entire article from the Bangor Daily News. Thank you Michael!

Arell’s Christmas Album is available for streaming on Youtube, Spotify, Apple Music and Amazon Music. People can purchase a digital copy of the full album for $10 on his website.

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Maine Theater Fund

November 27, 2020

Awards $76,000 in Grants

PORTLAND & ELLSWORTH—The Maine Theater Fund of the Maine Community Foundation has awarded 17 grants that total $76,829 to support professional and community theaters in the production and presentation of live theater.

Grace and Jenny of Bana Mboka lead the audience in Congolese dance during a 2019 performance at Mayo Street Arts. Photo Vanessa Marcoux, MSA

GRANT RECIPIENTS

  • Everyman Repertory TheatreRockport, to present the 2021 season of plays that celebrate the arts in Maine and the state’s history
  • Friends of St. Lawrence ChurchPortland, to supplement operating funds for maintenance of the Parish Hall Theater
  • Mayo Street ArtsPortland, to renovate the box office and concessions area to ADA standards
  • Acadia Repertory TheatreSomesville, to replace the theatre’s 40-year-old lighting system: $3,000
  • Arts & Cultural Alliance of Freeport, for the purchase of a sound system for Meetinghouse Arts:  $5,000
  • Chocolate Church Arts CenterBath, to replace ticketing and donation system: $5,000
  • Community Little TheaterAuburn, for the theatrical rights and expenses for the production of AR Gurney’s Love Letters: $4,000
  • Crowbait ClubPortland, for “King of Crows IX,” the yearly production of the winners of the monthly Theatre Deathmatch for 10-minute plays: $2,000
  • Dramatic Repertory CompanyPortland, to fund the 2020-2021 season, including two Maine premier productions: $5,000
  • Everyman Repertory TheatreRockport, to present the 2021 season of plays that celebrate the arts in Maine and the state’s history: $5,000
  • Friends of St. Lawrence ChurchPortland, to supplement operating funds for maintenance of the Parish Hall Theater: $3,000
  • Marsh River TheaterBrooks, for new lights: $5,000
  • Mayo Street ArtsPortland, to renovate the box office and concessions area to ADA standards: $5,000
  • Midcoast Actors StudioBelfast, to provide quality year-round theatre opportunities in the new performance space at the former Waldo County Courthouse    $5,000
  • Ogunquit Playhouse Foundation, to help offset the costs of COVID-19 personal protective equipment and safety upgrades for the 2021 season re-opening: $5,000
  • Portland Lyric Theater, to install an air purification system to improve indoor air quality, preparing for safe opening: $5,000
  • Saco River Theatre, to complete construction of staff/performer restrooms in the basement of the building           : $5,000
  • Terra Moto Inc.South Portland, to produce MAINEUSA: The History of Maine from the Ice Age till Now in July 2021 at Portland Players Theater followed by statewide performances: $5,000
  • Theater at Monmouth, to produce TopDog/UnderDog by Suzan Lori Parks as part of TAM’s (R)evolutionary Season Redux: $5,000
  • Waldo Theatre Inc., to purchase and install essential flame-retardant stage masking curtains and the required stage rigging: $4,829

An anonymous couple who recognized the connection between vibrant communities and support for the arts established the Maine Theater Fund in 2005 to strengthen and sustain theater performance throughout the state. 

Awards are typically between $2,500 and $5,000. The next deadline for applications is September 15, 2021. Guidelines, application and a list of recent grants are available at www.mainecf.org. The 2020 grants are also listed below.

If you have questions please contact Carl Little, Communications Manager, Maine Community Foundation.

Headquartered in Ellsworth, with additional personnel in Portland, Dover-Foxcroft, Rockport, and Mars Hill, the Maine Community Foundation works with donors and other partners to provide strong investments, personalized service, local expertise, and strategic giving to improve the quality of life for all Maine people. To learn more about the foundation, visit www.mainecf.org.

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Happpppy Thanksgiving

November 26, 2020

I know this Thanksgiving will be like no others. If you’ll be with family and/or friends that aren’t in your ‘bubble’ please be sure and practice safe distancing, wear a mask and if you’re inside try and leave some windows open. No matter what I hope the sun shines on you and that you can consider what you are grateful for, even in this challenging world-wide pandemic! I hope you take a moment and write down or make art that reflects what your gratefulness!

I’m grateful for the health care workers who are putting their lives on the line each and everyday to do the right thing.

I’m grateful for our elected officials who are making the most difficult decisions determining what to put in place to keep us all safe.

I’m so very grateful for my family and friends who continue to reach out to each other to lift spirits with a kind word and helpful hand.

Most importantly, I’m grateful for the educators who are teaching during this most difficult and challenging time. I know that you’re working around the clock doing the right thing for each learner and the best that you can for your community! Thank you for making a difference in so many students’ lives and in so many communities. 

Thanksgiving is different this year and my appreciation goes deeper than ever for all of the teachers across this globe going above and beyond and remembering that WHATEVER YOU’RE DOING IS ENOUGH AND WE’RE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER! Be sure and reach out with stories to share and asking for assistance!

My warmest wishes for a HAPPY THANKSGIVING!

Chelsea Beck for NPR
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Morse High School Theater

November 25, 2020

On the lawn performance

Our Town was performed by Morse High School students in October outside on the school lawn. Kevin O’Leary teaches drama teacher, 9th grade English and is responsible for the drama program at Morse High School.

Kevin explained the situation for performing this fall.

We had five platforms, distanced 14 feet apart (think of the black dots on dice). When an actor was on the platform, he/she/they removed the mask. When the actors were on the periphery, they kept their mask on. In a word, all masks stayed on until the actors stepped onto the platform. No actor was ever closer than 14 feet from platform to platform. We allowed only 25 audience members per show. All audience members (4 or 5 per side of the squared acting area) were masked and were at least 14 feet away from the unmasked actor on the platform. It’s a good thing we did the show prior to the new guidelines. We would not be able to do this now. Here’s to better days ahead.

I couldn’t agree more with Kevin – better days ahead! If you have questions for Kevin please email him at koleary@rsu1.org