Archive for the ‘VPA’ Category

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Arts Ed Partnership

May 4, 2018

Share your work

Interested in sharing your work with arts in education leaders and stakeholders?
The Arts Education Partnership is accepting concurrent session proposals for the 2018 AEP Annual Convening: “The Arts Leading the Way to Student Success,” taking place Sept. 12-13 in Indianapolis.

This annual event will explore arts-centered solutions aimed at ensuring America’s youth have access to a high-quality education in and through the arts by addressing the priority areas outlined in AEP’s 2020 Action Agenda for Advancing the Arts in Education. (Proposals must address one of the four priority areas.)

AEP invites partner organizations and leaders in the field to share their exemplary work supporting the role and contribution of the arts in preparing all students for success in school, work and life.

For more details about concurrent sessions at the 2018 AEP Annual Convening and to submit a proposal, please click here. AEP will accept concurrent session proposals until 5 p.m. PST Friday, June 1.

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Call for Teaching Artists

April 30, 2018

Arts Are Elementary

Since 1980 Arts Are Elementary has partnered with local schools to provide every public K-5 classroom in Brunswick with professional artist residencies. Each residency is developed carefully with the teachers to match interests and art form with lesson plans and overarching curricula. They work in many forms of  media – including movement and performance. Whenever possible, they bring the work forward to share with the community at large!

CALL FOR TEACHING ARTISTS

Arts Are Elementary is calling teaching artists to submit ideas that coincide with the curriculum topics/subject matter at each grade level. The call lists each grade, subject matter, media, timeframe, and stipend. You are welcome to submit for as many as you like.

Submissions are due by June 1, 2018, 11:59 p.m. and should be sent to Heather Martin, Executive Director at director@artsareelementary.org. If you have any questions contact Heather by email or call 460.1587.

Submissions should be no longer than 2 pages in total, additional images may be supplied. Artists are encouraged to visit the Arts Are Elementary website. Check the“For Artists” at the drop down menu for full details and submission suggestions. See the district curriculum links below for more information.

GRADES AND TOPICS

Kindergarten

Subject Matter: individually or combined

Media:

  • Paint
  • Movement/Dance
  • Illustrator
  • Timeframe: ideally, 1 session 3 x year
    • October
    • January
    • April/May
  • Stipend: up to $3,000

Grade 1

Subject Matter: individually or combined

  • Movement
  • Story

Media:

  • Movement/Dance
  • Theatre
  • Storytelling
  • Song
  • Timeframe: open
  • Stipend: up to $3,000

Grade 2

Subject Matter: individually or combined

Media:

  • Paint
  • Movement/Dance
  • Timeframe:
    • January
    • March
  • Stipend: up to $3,000

Grade 3

Subject Matter: individually or combined

Media: Artist’s Choice

  • Timeframe:
    • January (space)
    • May (pond life)
    • April (Brunswick history)
  • Stipend: up to $3,000

Grade 4

Subject Matter:

Media: Artist’s Choice

  • Timeframe: Open
  • Stipend: up to $3,000

Grade 5

Subject Matter:

Media:

  • Illustrator/Scientific illustrator
  • Paint
  • Song
  • Sculpture
  • Poetry

● Timeframe:

  • January
  • March
  • May

● Stipend: up to $3,000

Wild Card

Surprise us with your great idea. Be sure to include what grade and how it ties into that grade’s curriculum.

● Stipend: up to $3,000

Arts Are Elementary is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization, funded through donations.

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Excellence Celebration

April 29, 2018

Come celebrate with us on Monday, April 30

First Lady to Host Excellence in Maine’s Visual and Performing Arts Celebration

Portrait by Taylor Small, Bangor High School

AUGUSTA, MAINE- The Maine Arts Commission, along with the Department of Education, and First Lady Ann LePage will host the Excellence in Maine Visual and Performing Arts Education Celebration on Monday, April 30 at 2 p.m. in the Hall of Flags at the Maine State House.Midd

The biannual event honors student art from Bangor School Department and Lewiston Public Schools to be displayed at the State Capitol Complex as part of a state-wide student exhibit running through May. The event features original student artworks on display, as well as live performances from student musicians.

Following the opening address from Maine Arts Commission Executive Director Julie Richard, each student will be presented with a certificate from First Lady Ann LePage and a letter from Governor Paul LePage.

“Colorful Tiles” by Paige Pomerleau, Lewiston Middle School, art teacher: Kay Allison

Middle School music students will be recognized as well from Lewiston Middle School and James F. Doughty School in Bangor. Their choruses will be performing at the celebration.

The event is free and open to the public, and will be attended by state legislators, members of the State Board of Education, the Maine Arts Commission and the Maine Department of Education.

For more information on arts education programs in Maine, visit www.MaineArts.com or contact Maine Arts Education Director Argy Nestor: argy.nestor@maine.gov | 207-287-2713

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In Today’s News

April 21, 2018

Allan Monga going to D.C. for POL

Allan Monga, a Deering High School student from Zambia, will be representing Maine next week at the National Poetry Out Loud competition. READ the entire article from the Portland Press Herald (April 20) written by Ray Routhier.

Bangor Daily News article (April 21) written by Judy Harrison. READ the article.

 

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Scholastic Art Awards

April 19, 2018

Congratulations students!

The 2018 Scholastic Art & Writing Awards are the largest, longest-running scholarship and recognition program for creative teens, and are presented annually by the nonprofit Alliance for Young Artist & Writers with generous support from Scholastic Inc.

From an initial pool of nearly 350,000 submissions 3,300 works of art and writing earned a National Medal. Students and their educators will be honored at a National ceremony at Carnegie Hall in New York City, on June 7, 2018.

Award winners from Maine include the following:

  • Haha Albadri, grade 12, Biddeford, Awarded: Gold Medal in Personal Essay & Memoir for “Red Dishdasha”
  • Christopher Barlow, grade 10, South Portland High School, Awarded: Gold Medal in Poetry for “Ryan, White Lighters, Fur Trading, Juvenile, Death And Dignity (for Patroclus)”
  • Rex DeMuro, grade 7 Conners/Emerson Elementary School, Bar Harbor, Awarded: Silver Medal in Short Story for “Writing ‘The Spaniard'”
  • Makena Déveraux, grade 11, Cape Elizabeth High School, Awarded: Silver Medal in Poetry for “Love from I”
  • Lizzie Dunn, grade 11, Houlton Jr Senior High School, Awarded: Silver Medal in Drawing & Illustration for “Sense of Chaos”
  • Benjamin Folsom, grade 12, Falmouth High School, Awarded: Gold Medal, American Visions Medal in Digital Art for “Disperse”
  • Galen Gaze, grade 12, Falmouth High School, Awarded: Gold Medal in Editorial Cartoon sponsored by The Herb Block Foundation for “Innocence is Bliss”
  • Mary Hammond, grade 12, Narraguagus High School, Harrington, Awarded: Silver Medal in Poetry for “I Never Disturbed the Moss — A Midnight Solace”
  • An Ho, grade 12, Thornton Academy, Saco, Awarded: Gold Medal in Design for “The Burger Workshop”
  • Anna Kelly, grade 8, Center for Teaching & Learning, Edgecomb, Awarded: Gold Medal in Personal Essay & Memoir for “Rebels with a Cause”
  • Addison Lanoue, grade 8, Scarborough Middle School, Awarded: Silver Medal in Poetry for “Frozen in Time”
  • Rya Morrill, grade 12, Bangor High School, Awarded: Silver Medal in Digital Art for “Artificial Intelligence
  • Rose Rasor, grade 10, Yarmouth High School, Awarded: Gold Medal in Poetry for “An Open Letter to Ophelia and Other Poems”
  • Grace Roberts, grade 12, Cape Elizabeth High School, Awarded: Silver Medal in Personal Essay & Memoir for “Jaw” AND Gold Medal in Personal Essay & Memoir for “A Letter”
  • Luna Soley, grade 12, Waynflete School, Portland, Awarded: Silver Medal in Personal Essay & Memoir for “Monarch” AND Silver Medal in Poetry for “A Thank You Note to the World”
  • Raina Sparks, grade 9, Cape Elizabeth High School, Awarded: Silver Medal in Poetry for “Little Lady, Hurricane in the Shade of Purple”
  • Conner Theriault, grade 10, Baxter Academy Tech & Science, Portland, Awarded: Silver Medal in Sculpture for “Veteran”
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MALI Mega Oxford Hills

April 13, 2018

Fabulous learning opportunity

Over 70 PK-12 arts educators and Teaching Artists traveled to Oxford Hills High School in late March to attend the Maine Arts Leadership Initiative conference. The workshops varied greatly and participants had the opportunity to attend three during the day.

Thank you to the Oxford Hills visual and performing arts staff and administrators for providing the space for the conference. One week before the conference we learned that their workshop day turned into a teaching and learning day due to the many snow days. We are grateful that they were still able to make it happen.

Kris Bisson, Kate Smith, Brian Evans-Jones

A huge THANK YOU to visual arts teachers Cindi Kugell and Samantha Armstrong for all of their attention to detail.

Thank you to the following who offered workshops:

  • Cindi Kugell – Bookmaking 101: summative assessment never looked so good!
  • Lindsay Pinchbeck – The Arts and Emotional Intelligence
  • Dorie Tripp – Flexible Grouping Strategies for the General Music Classroom
  • Catherine Anderson – Tableaus of Courage: How to Help Students Engage with Complex Content through Theater
  • Samantha Armstrong – Stars and Stairs
  • Phil Hammett – Creativity
  • Tom Luther – Improvisation Crusader: Improvisation as an Essential Musical Skill
  • Nancy Harris Frohlich – Inspiring Environmental Stewardship Through Visual Arts
  • Lori Spruce and Tim Christensen – Integrating Curriculum: Making it Happen at the High School Level
  • Mandi Mitchell – Looking in the Mirror: The Importance of Student Self-Reflection
  • Brian Evans-Jones and Kris Bisson – Bridging Adolescence: A River Runs Through Us – Composing our Story
  • Jenni Null and Linda McVety – All Aboard for Arts Travel, Full STEAM Ahead!
  • Bronwyn Sale – Teaching Aesthetics and Criticism: Approaches to Standard D
  • Andrew Harris – Creativity and Taking Back the Classroom

Amanda Huotari

In the middle of the day we had the fabulous opportunity to work with and learn from Teaching Artist Amanda Houteri from Celebration Barn Theater.

Participants during Amanda’s session

In June there will be an opportunity for teaching artists. PK-12 arts teachers and teaching artists will have an opportunity to apply to be a leader. Watch the blog and weekly email to learn more.

Dr. Katie Rybakova and Thomas College pre-service teachers

Jan Gill and Jenni Null

Kris Bisson and Brian Evans-Jones presenting

Tom Luther presenting

Mandi Mitchell

Samantha Armstrong and Linda McVety

Teaching artists Tim Christensen, Tom Luther, and Brian Evans-Jones

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Who Are They? Oxford Hills Region Part 6

April 5, 2018

Learning Opportunities for Our Kids (LOOK) Program

This blog post is the last one in a series on the Oxford Hills region. The series aims to bring awareness to the Maine Arts Ed blog readers about the many visual and performing arts venues and educational opportunities in the Oxford Hills. The Oxford Hills Region of Maine is a perfect setting for the arts as it is centrally located where the rolling foothills of the White Mountains and beautiful lakes regions intersect. Located 45 miles north of Portland, 35 miles east of New Hampshire, and 20 miles west of Lewiston-Auburn, the region hosts multiple year-round opportunities for learners of all ages and a thriving arts community. The Oxford Hills School District (SAD17) is Maine’s largest school district in geographic area, with nine community schools, a regional middle school, a comprehensive high school and the Streaked Mountain School, an alternative school for high school students. The Oxford Hills include the towns of Buckfield, Harrison, Hartford, Hebron, Mechanic Falls, Norway, Otisfield, Oxford, Paris, Poland, Sumner, Waterford and West Paris. A great big THANKS to Diana Arcadipone for writing this series of posts.

Learning Opportunities for Our Kids (LOOK) is a joint community-schools (SAD#17) effort that provides quality, affordable learning enrichment opportunities for children. “This is a wonderful opportunity for students to realize that they love to learn, and explore and discover new subject areas” says Cyndy Tinsley, general administrator. The LOOK program started in 1991 when Alice Gruba, owner of a South Paris toy store, approached Mark Otterson and ask him to offer courses in town so she didn’t have to drive her kids to Portland for summer enrichment opportunities.

The LOOK summer program delivers a fun and safe learning environment. Classes take place the last two full weeks of July at the Oxford Hills Comprehensive High School. The focus is for children ages 4-7 (small fry) and ages 7- 15. Two sessions of week-long courses are scheduled each summer and each student can sign up for one or two classes per week. Free breakfast and lunch meals are also available for kids and teens in the OHCHS cafeteria through the Summer Food Program. This way, students can eat before and after their class and parents can enjoy the convenience of this program.

Some examples of courses are Lego Technics, Game Design, Fun Food Recipes from around the World, Greek Mythology, Animals all Around, Lines and Shapes, Dots in Art, Japan Journey, Embroidery, Washi Paper Craft, Wrap it Up Baskets, Paint, Paint, Paint and many more! The program serves as many as 175 students in 45 classes. Class size is generally 8 – 12 students, depending on teacher requests. With so many classes running, as you can imagine, teachers need volunteers to help out. High School students can earn their community service credit hours needed for graduation by volunteering. Parents and community members volunteer as well.

For teachers, its a great chance to teach children who are eager, attentive, relaxed and excited. Young teachers, or those wishing to test out a single lesson or a career choice, are welcome to propose an idea for Summer 2018. Educators of all disciplines, sometimes former volunteers, are hired from the local community and have an opportunity to have a short block of experimental time, or a chance to teach something that they have been researching. The LOOK program is always looking for proposals for interesting workshops in a variety of subjects. Teachers can request a proposal form or learn more by contacting Cyndy Tinsley at 890-4968 or the SAD 17 office at 743-8972.

Students pay $35 per class per week including materials. Scholarships from the Mark Otterson Scholarship Fund are available to lower the course fee. There are no restrictions other than financial need, for scholarships, however requests should be made by June 26. LOOK Brochures and registration forms are available for distribution in early June. Look for one in your child’s papers, or pick one up at a local library and several other locations around the Oxford Hills.

2018 Sessions: July 16 – 20 and July 23 – 27

LEARN MORE

Check out LOOK on FACEBOOK

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MALI Teacher Leader Story: Kris Bisson

March 20, 2018

Music educator: Kris Bisson

This is one of several blog posts in 2018 that include stories of the Maine Arts Leadership Initiative (MALI) Phase 7 Teacher Leaders and Teaching Artist Leaders. This series of blog posts includes a set of questions so you can learn a little bit about each leader. CLICK HERE  for more information on MALI. CLICK HERE  for more information on the 93 Teacher Leaders and 8 Teaching Artist Leaders.  CLICK HERE  for Arts education resources. CLICK HERE  for the MALI Resource Bank. Search in the “search archives” box on the bottom right side of this post for past teacher leader stories.  Thank you Kris for sharing your story!

Kristine (Kris) Bisson, Music Teacher and Chorus Director for Marshwood Middle School, grades 6, 7, and 8, in Eliot, Maine. She has been teaching a total of 16 years, all of them at Marshwood Middle School. Kris teaches 350 students throughout the school year in six classes: guitar/ukulele, piano, Composing Music, and three grade level Chorus classes (Grade Eight Chorus, Grade Seven Chorus, Grade Six Chorus)In addition, Kris offers several music classes as extra-curricular groups after school. These are always offered as multi-age ensembles open to all students and we have had students participate from grades four through twelve join us for Select Chorus Ensemble, Rock Band, Guitar/Ukulele Ensemble, Piano Class, and Songwriters Workshop.

A unique fact is that I taught here ten years, then had my maternity leave and decided to stay at home to raise my children. After nine years I returned to my position at Marshwood Middle and have been here since. I consider myself very fortunate to be able to return to the teaching position I have always loved. She also is very fortunate to teach my own two children in my music classes.

What do you like best about being a music educator?

I absolutely love my profession. I love music and am reminded every day of why I love it. I have the amazing opportunity to share what I love with young people and help them embrace what they love about music, too. We do a lot of reflection in class: “Why did the composer choose this note? this rhythm? how would you sing this if you were really feeling these lyrics? how would you sing this differently?”

I love to personalize music making and music creating. Everyone can respond and it can be different to each and every person, and that is acceptable. This is personalization.

Every day we laugh, learn, make music, and work together to discover new things about ourselves. My favorite phrase in the classroom is, “Who else is having this much fun?”

What do you believe are three keys to ANY successful visual and performing arts education?

  1. Personal expression is unique to the performing arts. Every day and every item of study should carry an aspect of how there is a human response. I try to establish an environment of trust and respect between teacher and students and foster this every day. We work together as a team and support each other. I remind my choruses that this is what an ensemble does: we work together.
  2. Passion is an important element in the classroom. Being able to explore music as an art means being able to share first-hand experiences and giving students that opportunity as well. When you create music you have a story to tell. Tell it!
  3. Taking time to process what we are learning has been a key part of reflection in learning. Taking time to listen and hear my students respond to what they are learning is important learning. Why are we learning this? How does this moment in our learning affect other areas of our lives? I strive to help students continue to think about music beyond our classroom walls.

How have you found assessment to be helpful to you in your classroom?

Teaching performance-based classes (Choruses, creating compositions in Guitar, Piano, and Composing Music classes) can sometimes create some confusion around the subjective and objective qualities present. Authentic assessment has created a more objective and transparent method of demonstrating learning. Students can compare the rubrics we use with those similar in every class at our school. It validates the arts. It also provides measurement that can be effectively reached by various means. There are multiple pathways to learning, thus creating a broader spectrum of learning. This has been extremely rewarding to me as an educator and likewise, to my students.

What have been the benefits in becoming involved in the Maine Arts Leadership initiative?

MALI has provided a generous amount of support and enrichment to my teaching career. Being able to collaborate and learn from highly motivated and skilled teaching artists and teacher leaders has awakened a new area of growth for me. It has reminded me of the risk I ask my students to make daily to try something new and take a leap of faith into the unknown. MALI has brought that desire to succeed closer to me and I carry this with me in my classroom.

What are you most proud of in your career?

Kate Smith and Kris at the summer institute, summer 2017

With the help of my extremely supportive husband and two amazingly awesome children I earned my Masters in Music Education at the University of Southern Maine last year. It was an incredibly busy four years, but everything I studied and researched and learned I have used directly in my teaching classroom. The best lesson from this has to be that while I was working on my Masters, my husband was working on his MBA and our children witnessed first-hand how dedicated we both were to our goals in our careers, in our studies, and with our family. From our example both of our children have expressed how valuable education is and I know they will always remember this.

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

Time

  • I always make time for a student who wants to keep improving or delving deeper during lunch breaks or after school.
  • Researching new material or reading up about improving learning or my own teaching takes time.
  • Getting the word out to the newspapers or parents about the goings on of our trips, activities, and concerts takes time.
  • Sending out “I got caught being awesome!” emails to students and their families takes time.
  • Needing the sleep for the energy my job demands sometimes gets in the way, but is absolutely necessary time! 🙂

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

When I returned to classroom teaching after a nine year hiatus I hadn’t touched my resume, my certification had expired, and I hadn’t interviewed in nineteen years. I put my full effort into the entire process and committed myself fully. This took a great amount of work and I knew it was the absolute thing to do.

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

Love what you do. Love giving that thirst for knowledge to others. Love being with the age group you work with. There is no greater satisfaction than loving what you do and sharing and seeing that grow in others.

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

I would love to start a music school that extends our learning for Marshwood students – and our surrounding community – giving scholarships to children and adults who want to learn beyond their classroom music experience and grow more music in their lives. Choruses, rock bands, jazz bands, and private lessons on instruments they love or haven’t even explored yet would be definite possibilities to so many people. Having intergenerational ensembles where the people you sit beside are sharing the same love of learning is an amazing experience for any human being. I attended small schools that did not have any band experiences and now I conduct four choruses and a Rock Band. The experience one learns in an ensemble is unique. Every person should experience being a member of a music ensemble.

Imagine you are 94 years old. You’re looking back. Do you have any regrets?

Kaitlin Young and Kris at the MALI summer institute, August 2017

I really hope I do not have any regrets. One of my favorite rewards of teaching is the surprise meeting with former students and their family members. I sincerely love finding out who they have become, where they are, and what they are doing. It means so much to know that they look back fondly on their learning in my classroom and have taken some of our learning with them in their pursuits. I can honestly say that I have made music, laughed, and learned every day and hope my students do, too. For this, I have no regrets.

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Dance Education Funding

March 19, 2018

Grant deadline: Wednesday, May 2

AUGUSTA-April 12, 2017—Dance education changes lives, yet only 5 percent of all schools in Maine offer it. The Maine Arts Commission is offering a grant program for schools and teaching artists that seek to bridge this gap and bring the power of dance to more schools. Applicants may apply for awards up to $2,250. The deadline for this new program is Wednesday, May 2, 2018.

John Morris leading a session at the MALI Mega conference, spring 2017

This program was launched in 2016 and has successfully funded 4 dance education residency’s. Each will have a story included on this blog during this school year.

The first teaching artist to provide the residency with the assistance of these funds was veteran dance educator John Morris. “Creative movement is meant to allow students the ownership of their own uniqueness,” Morris said. “I give students the foundational movement to invent and explore their own movement, and I guide them through the process of making their own dances.”

John is also a member of the Maine Arts Leadership Initiative (MALI) Design Team and works with the teaching artist leaders.

Funding for the dance education grant was made possible this year by several dance studios and two high schools who came together for a benefit performance in November, 2017.

Karen Montanaro leading a session at Hampden Academy, December 2017

The Maine Arts Commission is pairing eligible PK-12 school districts with teaching artists from the Arts Commission roster. The roster includes 16 dancers.

“We are extremely appreciative of these contributions and the impact they will have on dance education in Maine,” said Julie Richard the Executive Director of the Maine Arts Commission. “There are so few dance education programs in our state and this is one important way we can make a difference to the students that we serve.”

If you’re a PK-12 educator or teaching artist looking to introduce students to the power of dance education, the Arts Commission encourages reviewing the grant guidelines and application criteria before applying for the May 2 deadline. The top qualifying schools selected will be eligible for the next funding cycle from September 1, 2018 through March 30, 2019.

For information visit the the grants and the teaching artist roster webpages at www.MaineArts.com

For questions regarding the grants or current teaching roster, contact Argy Nestor, Director of Arts Education, argy.nestor@maine.gov.

 

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New England Institute Courses

March 18, 2018

Encountering the Arts, Music assessment, G/T 

  • Encountering the Arts: Choice, Voice and Creativity, (hybrid) taught by Lindsay Pinchbeck – April 7 to June 9, 4.5 CEUs
  • Assessment in the Music Classroom, (online) taught by music educator, Jake Sturtevant – April 2 to June 11, 4.5 CEUs
  • Educating Gifted & Talented Learners, (online) taught by Grace Jacobs – April 2 to June 18, 4.5 CEUs

Encountering the Arts: Choice, Voice and Creativity – April 7 to June 9

You can join Lindsay Pinchbeck, MALI Design Team member, in her very own school, Sweetland School in Hope, and learn some wonderful strategies to incorporate into your classroom right away. Sweetland School is s a project based elementary program inspired by the Reggio Emilia approach. Drama, Movement, Music, Poetry, Storytelling, and Visual Arts will be integrated across content areas: Math, Science, Social Studies, Reading and Writing.

Work with colleagues, build relationships, and ask questions of the professor, in person, for two Saturdays and have the convenience of doing the rest of the coursework online. Encountering the Arts: Choice, Voice and Creativity is one such hybrid course.

Assessment in the Music Classroom – April 2 to June 11

This online course taught by music educator and MALI Design Team member Jake Sturtevant provides looking closely at assessment practices through a collaborative and fine-tuned lens. It can provide unique opportunities for growth. Connecting new assessment practices to instruction can bring exciting changes to how we approach our students and their learning.

Participants will discuss how best to apply recent music assessment work to their own unique situations in their own school music programs. This will lead them to create a personalized plan for implementing new strategies. Assessment in the Music Classroom will provide a great opportunity to look closely at assessment practices.

Educating Gifted & Talented Learners

This introductory course provides foundational information relating to the field of gifted and talented education (i.e. history, laws, etc.), details characteristics of gifted students from various populations, describes how such students are identified and assessed, and presents up-to-date, research-based pedagogy relating to curriculum design and instruction.

It may be applied toward the 690 (Gifted & Talented) endorsement for the State of Maine teachers. Join Grace Jacobs for this Educating Gifted & Talented Learners online course.

If you have questions contact Catherine Ring, Executive Director, New England Institute for Teacher Education.