| 101. Introducing Arts Education -
This program includes three segments: What Is Arts Education? (14 minutes) shows
a montage of insights from teachers and administrators, plus examples of successful
arts instruction in classrooms across America. What Are the Arts? (5 minutes)
presents teachers, administrators, students, and parents who offer thoughtful
and sometimes humorous comments on what the arts mean to them. In How Do You Know
They're Learning? (4 minutes), educators from several schools tell how they know
if their students are "getting it." 102. Expanding the
Role of the Arts Specialist - Three arts teachers work with colleagues around
their schools, using collaborative techniques that go beyond the traditional work
of arts specialists. Kathy DeJean is a dance artist at Lusher Alternative Elementary
School in New Orleans; Mary Perkerson is the visual art teacher at Harmony Leland
Elementary School in Mableton, Georgia; and Amanda Newberry is the theatre specialist
at Lusher. 103. Teaching Dance - Two teachers with contrasting
training and approaches to teaching bring rich dance experiences to students at
their arts-based schools. Kathy DeJean, the dance specialist at Lusher Alternative
Elementary School in New Orleans, promotes inquiry and self-expression in a multi-grade
dance class. Scott Pivnik, a former physical education teacher at P.S. 156 (The
Waverly School of the Arts) in Brooklyn, New York, uses African dance as a gateway
to geography, writing, and personal growth for a class of second-graders. 104.
Teaching Music - Two music specialists from arts-based schools demonstrate different
approaches to serving diverse student populations. At Harmony Leland Elementary
School in Mableton, Georgia, all 500 students study the violin. Their classes
with Barrett Jackson become lessons in character and discipline. At Smith Renaissance
School of the Arts in Denver, Sylvia Bookhardt and a class of fifth-graders explore
the Renaissance through choral singing. 105. Teaching
Theatre - Two specialists work on basic theatre skills with children of various
ages, and use theatre education as a gateway to other kinds of learning. At Lusher
Alternative Elementary School in New Orleans, Amanda Newberry's lesson in improvisation
with a third-grade class stimulates students' imagination, heightens language
and listening skills, and encourages critical thinking. At Barney Ford Elementary
School in Denver, George Jackson teaches basic movement skills to a first-grade
class, invites fourth-graders to take center stage as they explore a script, and
works with fifth-graders to create masks that reveal inner feelings. 106.
Teaching Visual Art - Two visual art specialist teachers use contrasting interpretations
of the human face to explore inquiry-based instruction and various techniques
in visual art. Pamela Mancini, the visual art teacher at Helen Street School in
Hamden, Connecticut, uses portraits to foster inquiry and self-expression with
a class of fifth-graders. At Ridgeway Elementary School in White Plains, New York,
MaryFrances Perkins introduces mask-making to a second-grade art class. In making
their own masks, students examine the concept of symmetry, study the vocabulary
word for the day, and learn that masks are found in cultures throughout the world.
107. Developing an Arts-Based Unit - A team of first-
and second-grade teachers at Lusher Alternative Elementary School in New Orleans
plans a year-end project that will let students show what they have learned in
science, math, and English. The students write and perform an original play, using
a painting by Breughel and an opera by Stravinsky as their starting points. 108.
Working With Local Artists - Students and teachers at P.S. 156 (The Waverly School
of the Arts) in Brooklyn, New York, benefit from the school's established relationships
with artists from local organizations. This program focuses on a first-grade class
creating original works with visiting artists - a dancer and a writer. 109.
Collaborating With a Cultural Resource - A fourth-grade teacher and a museum educator
in New Orleans collaborate to develop a unit of study with ties to language arts,
social studies, and visual art. Students explore the work of a well-known artist,
visit an exhibition of his work, meet for a drawing lesson alongside the Mississippi
River, and create poems and pictures that they proudly display to their parents.
110. Bringing Artists to Your Community - Successful
collaborations between classroom teachers and artists who come for a residency
enrich the curriculum of this rural school in Idalia, Colorado. A visiting actor
brings story-telling and vocabulary to life for kindergarten and fourth-grade
students and their teachers, while a musician engages first- and third-grade students
in writing songs that relate to subjects they are studying. 111.
Students Create a Multi-Arts Performance - A team of arts specialists and classroom
teachers at Lusher Alternative Elementary School in New Orleans guides kindergarten
and fourth-grade students in creating an original work based on Cirque du Soleil's
Quidam. The program presents highlights of the creative process, including brainstorming
about characters' emotions, creating speech and movement for the characters, constructing
costumes, and performing. 112. Borrowing From the Arts
To Enhance Learning -To add vitality and context to day-to-day learning experiences,
three teachers use techniques drawn from the arts that engage their students'
minds, bodies, and emotions. In Denver, a teacher uses rhythm, color, movement,
and hands-on projects to engage her class of fourth- and fifth-grade boys. In
White Plains, New York, third-grade students create short skits that help them
understand the concept of cause and effect. In Lithonia, Georgia, a fifth-grade
social studies unit on family history culminates with students using favorite
objects to make visual representations of their lives. 113.
Three Leaders at Arts-Based Schools - Three administrators provide instructional
leadership and solve day-to-day challenges at arts-based schools serving diverse
student populations. In Brooklyn, principal Martha Rodriguez-Torres describes
her role as "politician, social worker, parent, and police officer," and says
that her primary responsibility is to "provide teachers the resources they need
to fulfill the program." In Georgia, principal Sandra McGary-Ervin encourages
use of the arts to achieve the school's priority goal of literacy. And in Denver,
assistant principal Rory Pullens uses his own arts background to ensure that the
arts play a prominent role in day-to-day learning. 114.
Leadership Team - At Lusher Elementary School in New Orleans, principal Kathleen
Hurstell Riedlinger works closely with a Leadership Team of classroom and arts
teachers. The team's central role in management is part of a long-term strategy
to protect the school's commitment to arts-based learning. We meet individual
members of the team and see them work together on a diverse agenda, including
the school's annual Arts Celebration, the increased demand for enrollment from
outside the school's neighborhood, and orientation of new teachers to the school's
arts-based curriculum. |
Air Dates Mon, Jan 21, 2008 02:00:00
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