Posts Tagged ‘National Art Education Association’

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New Visual Arts Standards

October 16, 2014

Opportunity for professional development from National Art Education Association

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Implementing the New Visual Arts Standards: A Resource to Support Instruction Aligned with State Standards
Tuesday, October 21, 2014 | 7pm ET
Complimentary to NAEA members; $49/non-members
Presenters: Dennis Inhulsen, NAEA President and Chair of the Visual Arts Writing Team; Scott Russell, Elementary Art Teacher and Writing Team Member; Cory Wilkerson, Communications Chair, National Coalition of Core Arts Standards

The new standards provide opportunities for art educators to look at instruction and student growth through an aspirational lens.   Learn how art educators are connecting the new voluntary standards with their own state and district standards. See how the new standards framework can be aligned with state standards to support student learning by embedding Enduring Understandings for instruction.

To register, please click here.

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Arts in Education Week

September 5, 2013
September 8 - 14, 2013
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Back From Texas

March 11, 2013

National Art Education Association

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Yes, that is hats

The trip to the National Art Education Association conference in Texas was a fabulous opportunity to join 5000 art educators in Fort Worth, Texas. I was surprised about Fort Worth, population about 750,000. The streets are wide, it was easy walking from downtown to the conference center, and the people are friendly. And, yes the temperature did get to 70 degrees one day.

It was a little touch and go leaving Maine in questionable weather. Our flying plan was to go to Fort Worth via LaGuardia which was changed. We left Portland 2 hours late and went through Detroit and landed in Texas an hour earlier. Go figure!

It was great to see the Maine art teachers in Texas and have a chance to get together with all of them in between sessions.

IMG_2755One of the highlights of the conference was attending a session with Jay McTighe whose work along with Grant Wiggins, Understanding by Design has been used as the basis for the National Core Arts Standards work. Jay went over the components of the Framework that provides a clearer picture of the work that is underway.

I also attended a session with Lois Hetland the author of Studio Thinking. During the conference the latest edition of the book was released.

It was great having the opportunity to share the Maine Arts Assessment Initiative  with Catherine Ring and Bronwyn Sale during a session at the conference.

If you’ve attended a large conference you know what it is like to go through the exhibition hall and have the opportunity to speak to the 100’s of vendors and learn about their products and programs. I met Jessica Balsley from The Art of Education. If you aren’t familiar with AOE I recommend you go to the site.

And, as you can see here we also had a lot of fun at the conference, even getting to a genuine rodeo!

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Off to Texas!

March 6, 2013

Catherine, Bronwyn, Argy and others

Screen shot 2013-03-05 at 7.18.29 PMFort Worth, Texas is the location of the National Art Education conference this year and starts on Thursday morning. There are several Maine art teachers traveling west to attend the conference that offers over 1000 workshops during a four day period.

On Friday I will be joining Maine Arts Assessment Initiative leadership team members Bronwyn Sale and Catherine Ring to present a session Friday morning on the MAAI. The session is called Maine Arts Teachers Lead the Way: Toward Exemplary Teaching and Learning in the Arts. The description: Explore a grass-roots, collaborative professional development model that has led to exciting growth in teaching and learning, fosters reflection, and bridges the gap between theory and practice in arts classrooms.

We’re all looking forward to sharing the outstanding work that Maine arts teachers have been involved with during the last 2 years.

You can follow the events and happenings a the conference on Twitter at NAEAartmatters. If I can get online while in Fort Worth I will post information on the meartsed blog. If not, I will certainly provide an update when we return.

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Thoughtful Question

May 7, 2012

All this talk about proficiency based education

With all these conversations at the local level, state level, and national level about competency based, standards based, and/or students centered learning I turn to you… the experts on arts education in the classroom. And, I have one single question that I hope you will take a few minutes to answer. Answer it for yourselves or perhaps pose the question at a teachers meeting in your school or district. Or take a few minutes and answer it at the bottom of this blog post….

What do you want ALL students to know about arts education when they complete their PK-High School learning?

And while you are thinking about that go one step further… I saw this one on a blog post written by Marilyn Stewart on the National Art Education Association Monthly Mentor blog. Marilyn calls it the “20 year test”. This is how it goes (feel free to change ‘art’ to arts’)….

Imagine that you are in the produce section of your local market, twenty years from now.  Another shopper sees you and comes over to speak, saying, “I remember you!  You were my art teacher twenty years ago.”

Marilyn goes on… I want you think about what you want to know—when you smile back at this student of yours from long ago—what you want to know that this now-adult-person understands as a result of her or his time with you and your art program. 

This adult shopper—your ex-student—is not likely to be working as an artist when you meet.  However, regardless of what your student from the past is doing with her or his life, think about what you would want this person to understand—deeply—about art and our experiences with art.  

If you have a minute to do this, write it down: Twenty years from now, I want my students to understand _____________________.

This happens to me almost every time I go to the grocery store or in almost any other store near my home. I am guessing if you’ve taught a while that it happens to you if you live in the town where you teach/taught. It’s a wonderful feeling to bump into these students, as I fumble around for their name. After leaving the store I get into my car and wonder what do they remember from being in my class?! Take a few minutes and write down what you want them to know and integrate that into your teaching. It could be one way to insure that it is taught and a better chance of them knowing it in 20 years!


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ARTS Articles, Articles, Articles

April 21, 2012

The news is peppered lately with articles about the Arts

This post provides you with links to articles that I found interesting and think you will as well! Some of the articles below are on the newly released, April 2012, report: Arts Education in Public Elementary and Secondary Schools: 1999-2000 and 2009-10 from a congressionally mandated study on arts education in public K–12 schools. You might wonder why I would include all of the articles on the same topic?! It provides you with the perspectives of different writers. Of course, I urge you to go to the report itself which is linked above.

Article written by Erik Robelen, April 2, 2012, Education Week. Thank you to colleague Paula Hutton for sharing it.

March 30, 2012, Art Works, National Endowment for the Arts

ASCD Capital Connection, April 10, 2012.

Written by Erik Robelen April 3, 2012, for Curriculum Matters blog, published in Education Week, April 16, 2012. Thank you to my Washington state colleague AnnRené Joseph for sharing this link.

Written by Roberta Smith, April 11, 2012, Art & Design from the New York Times. Thank you to colleague World Language Specialist Don Reutershan for sharing it.

Article by staff and wire services reports, February 15, 2012 from eSchool News Thank you visual art teacher Lisa Marin for sharing it.

Written by Erik W. Robelen, Education Week, April 16, 2012.

Written by Andrew Miller, Edutopia, March 5, 2012. 

Featured Company from the Directory of Teacher PD Sourcebook.

This isn’t exactly an article however, it is from National Art Education Association from Linkedin. The question was asked by an art teacher from New York and many teachers answered the question. It provides many ideas and resources that you might find useful. Thank you to Leah Olson, art teacher from Hampden Academy, for sharing this link.

The Portland Press Herald, by Mark Schwartz, April 11, 2012. Thank you to Maine Arts Assessment Leadership Team member, Bates College teacher, Bronwyn Sale for providing this link.

Written by Leslie Postal for the Orlando Sentinel, April 7, 2012. Thank you to colleague Mike Muir for sending me this information.

Written by Sarah Clune, American Graduate Education Health, March 22, 2012, PBS News Hour.