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A conversation about using clay as a teaching tool

1-Florida Endagered Species Lesson Plan – Air Dry Tile Relief Project

October 12th, 2010

Lesson Purpose: With the rapid rate of development in Florida, protecting endangered species and their habitat is becoming more critical. Some of the animals in the State of Florida have become extinct or are near extinction. This list of endangered species will help to promote and ensure the just and kind treatment of animals. Through artistic expression such as clay, students will be able to share and display their knowledge about Florida’s Endangered Species so that they can help improve the quality of the lives of these animals.

Note: This lesson plan can be applied to any state!  Here is a link to find out more information about endangered species in your local state.

This lesson plan was written by: Rosanne Sloane, Sales Associate for Axner Pottery and Ceramic Supply Co.

Lesson Grade: 5

Lesson Plan Worksheets

<Air Dry Tile Relief Lesson Plan>

<Florida Endangered Species List for the Lesson Plan>

Sample photos of the step-by-step process of the tile relief project

Laguna Mexo White Clay Featured

Figurative Sculptural Lesson Plan

October 11th, 2010

This lesson plan will be demonstrated at the Florida Art Education Association 2010 Conference by Rosanne Sloane and Joyce Go on October 14, 2010 at 4:45pm located in Forum East 2.

2010 FAEA CONFERENCE INFORMATION
October 14 – 16
The Florida Hotel
Orlando, Florida

NOTE: This figurative sculptural lesson plan includes three worksheets and several wonderful pictures to help you follow along.  To view the worksheets, click on the links provided below.  To view the photographs in full size, simply click on the individual photograph.  The clay used in this lesson plan is Laguna Mexo White clay (click on this link for details).  Enjoy!

LESSON PLAN INFORMATION

Figurative sculpting in Laguna Mexo Clay requires no kiln as it’s self-hardening!
Use a twist tie or pipe cleaner armature to teach about animals, emotion, skeletons (wow, spooky), figurative proportion, or basic 3-D design. When the armature is refined, use Laguna Mexo Clay to flesh out the sculpture. The pieces then air dry. Construct your own masterpiece to see how special non-toxic additives in the clay make it dry into a durable object that your kids can display with pride!

LESSON PLAN WORKSHEETS

1) Evaluation rubric for the figure sculpture

2) Keep your Eye on the Work worksheet-1

3) The figure sculpture art style worksheet

Children and Clay – Karen Merchant-Yates

August 25th, 2010

This is Karen Merchant-Yates’ second contribution to our “Clay in Class” blog. View her first posting from May 2101: Visiting Teaching Artists Model Strategies for Building Emotional Competency.

The pictures are wonderful, enjoy!

Karen Merchant-Yates, describes the experience she had when working with children and clay…

Children play with clay – and give teachers a rare opportunity to observe the creation of stories or the reflections of dreams.  This play-with-clay is enigmatic and absorbing; clay is rare to find in classrooms in early childhood education.  Yet where could an instructor find a better example of creative problem solving than these windows into their thinking, where children are balancing and embellishing the clay structure as it gets taller and taller?

Helping Hungry Children in Arizona through the Empty Bowls Project

August 1st, 2010

By Special “Clay in Class” Blog Contributor: Keith Y. Preston, D.M.A., Fine Arts Coordinator, Paradise Valley Unified School District, Phoenix, AZ

Empty Bowls is an international project which brings, artists, community members, organizations and merchants together in events which produce funds for local food banks.  Empty Bowls events empower the whole community to see that many small actions, cooperatively made, can significantly improve lives and that (ceramic) art can be a powerful catalyst for change.  Read on to find out how the Paradise Valley School District, Laguna Clay Company and the local Laguna distributor, Marjon Ceramics helped a community find a way to help…

This is a true story…

A fourth grader sits at his desk while the teacher engages the class in a lesson about the Hopi Indians, but he has trouble staying tuned in because his stomach is growling loudly. He didn’t have breakfast that morning…or the morning before…or most mornings. That’s why he looked forward to lunchtime. Everyday, just before noon, the class would go to the cafeteria for lunch. This boy would receive a backpack filled with nutritious food. He liked the backpack because it quieted his tummy and having the backpack allowed him to blend in with his classmates. The backpack provided food in a way that did not call attention to the fact that his family did not have enough to eat.

This backpack, and hundreds more just like it, are provided by the Paradise Valley Emergency Food Bank — a small operation staffed by volunteers and completely dependent upon donations. Their only overhead cost is the storefront rent and the utilities. It is a bare-bones operation. The PVFEB serves over 8,000 families every week in north Phoenix. Some of these families fall far below the poverty line. The food bank estimates that they serve over 4,000 children — all of whom attend Paradise Valley Schools.

In 2008, I had a conversation with the director of the food bank.  She told me that during the fall semester, with the run-up to the holidays, the food bank usually receives enough donations to meet their demand. But in the spring semester, in most years they are barely able to pay their rent, let alone provide food for needy families. I asked the her what she needed most and her answer was immediate: cash.

We talked further and came to the conclusion that the best way our school district could help the food bank was to find a way to infuse cash during a time when donations are at their lowest point. So . . . how could a school district help this organization when the school district was also strapped for cash? The school district didn’t even have enough money to buy supplies for themselves. The answer was clear: begin with one Empty Bowl:

The Legacy of a Master- Remembering Joe Koons

July 6th, 2010

Mysterious & Unique Clay

Shoji Hamada once said, “It took me twenty years to learn how to work in clay and ten to forget about it,” and he was right. Clay is one of the most mysterious and unique materials in the world of the arts, and if we ask why, the answer is a very simple one – it has the four basic elements from which our own planet is made: earth, water, air and fire. I believe that it is because of this fact that this material is such an intense experience for anyone who touches it for the first time.

I have worked in clay for thirty years and have experienced the power of clay many times in my life in different situations and in many countries all over the world. I have learned that clay is a material that endless and brings you from one discovery to the next. Clay is not only about techniques and glazes, but also about the wonderful and giving people one meets while making this unique journey of making ceramic art. Of all the people I have met, I have to say that meeting Joe Koons was for me one of the biggest pleasures and honors I have had as a ceramic artist.

Joe Koons – Inspirational Mentor

Joe was not only a mentor but an inspiration to me. He had an incredible amount of energy and was always a free spirit working with clay. There are many memories I treasure from all the years we shared together and all the conversations we had from Egyptian paste to crystal glazes, tile making techniques and unique glazes, walking with him admiring the incredible tiles he made for the Mission Inn in Riverside, CA or how to obtain impossible effects with glazes: Joe knew it all. He made me discover the glazes from the Laguna Clay Company, and my life changed forever as he taught me what was possible to be made with them. Sharing so many years of experiences together and countless stories have made my pathway in the clay world so special.

As a tile maker, I cannot tell you how many projects I consulted with him, and he always had the right advice, but beyond that Joe he had a grade of enthusiasm and inspiration that I have found in very few artists. He showed me his own cuerda seca technique, raised glaze application, surface treatments, and his passion for clay.

Goodbye from Joe

We shared the last NCECA conference together in Philadelphia, PA where I was demonstrating for Laguna Clay Company and soon afterward worked with him at the NAEA Conference in Baltimore, MD in April this year. I had such a wonderful time with him and Morgan O’Brien from Laguna Clay Company touring the Washington DC metropolitan area showing them various sites where I have my large scale pieces. We also visited Glebe Elementary School in Arlington VA, where I showed him a mural I made years ago covering an entire wall over twenty-six feet high, and we talked about my next project with him at this school that I am starting this summer that involves four walls covered in mosaics created by the students and glazed with Laguna Versa 5 glazes. He was thrilled and glowing the day we were at the school… that was his goodbye.

Joe passed away peacefully at home on May 4th 2010, and it was a very sad moment for all of us in the clay community. He left us with the most incredible legacy a human being can leave: the energy and desire to keep working and creating, rediscovering the world of clay over and over again every day, yet knowing that we all miss Joe very much. I have to say that I was privileged to share a friendship with him, and beyond all the most intricate clay and glaze techniques he showed me through the years, he taught me the most valuable lesson in clay I ever had: to be free, to enjoy every moment with clay and to treasure in a humbled way this wonderful material that brings happiness to us every day into our lives.

I want to dedicate my first entry to the “Clay in Class” blog to my friend Joe Koons, to celebrate his life, and for all of us to remember what Joe’s art philosophy was: to enjoy, laugh, and to keep creating and loving what we do to make every day a special one.

To the memory of Joe Koons, friend, artist, master, and clay alchemist forever….

~Alfredo Ratinoff

Arts Alive 2010 Community Mural using Cuerda Seca Technique

June 14th, 2010

Reflection by Jennifer Koons

The City of Mission Viejo’s event, Arts Alive, elevated arts education to a new level while creating a sense of community on April 24, 2010.  Janet C. Panozzo, Cha-Rie Tang, Melanie Yarak and I collaborated on a community mural that represents the annual intergenerational Spring Arts Festival. This is the third community mural to be posted along the creek trail, representing another amazing event held at the Oso Viejo Community Park on the Village Green.  Everyone was welcome to use Laguna Clay Company’s Creatable Colors to glaze the cuerda seca tiles and bring them to life.

Focus on Art Technique and Art History

A key aspect at this event is to educate the community members on art technique and art history.  Education boards, cuerda seca cards and architectural style color guides were important parts of enhancing the experience at our booth in the Ceramic Studio.  Participants were invited to explore photos and explanations of the process we go through to create a mural in a day with the education boards.  Beginning with a theme, research, and composition to the method of cuerda seca and silk screening the image, the community learned different aspects of design and production.  The cuerda seca cards were a user friendly educational tool with the technique and vocabulary for glaze application on cuerda seca tiles.  The color guides and plentiful supply of bottle applicators made the booth nearly self-sustainable.  Community members thrived!  If only we had more chairs…

Creating a Community Mural in One Day

The people who created this community mural ranged in age and experience.  Some of the participants have already become skilled from working on the Artes de la Vida 2009 and Pacific Symphony murals.  They were familiar with the cuerda seca technique (dry-line) and loved the 20 color palette of vibrant Creatable Colors glazes.  For some, this was their first experience in creating the art form, and we were impressed at how so many people took such pride in the traditional work.  The young through the elderly held concentration in glazing their tiles with care and newly learned skill.  For many, the technique brought them right into the moment.  The experience created this day is one to be remembered by many.  We came together and created the Arts Alive 2010 mural that will be enjoyed for decades to come.

Creatable Colors Glazes

The products from Laguna Clay Company that made this community mural possible are the Creatable Colors underglazes and bottle applicators. Without these products, participation could be limited to only the highly skilled or well trained.  The ease of use and forgiveness of error is what now makes community participation in public art a reality!  We have used the Creatable Colors to formulate a palette of over seventy colors. The larger two ounce bottles are more flexible and easier to handle.  The range of size in the needle-like applicators was changed depending on the size of the area to be glazed.  This allowed for more precision by the participants.  Even we discovered new possibilities with Creatable Colors through the creativity of the youth as they created extraordinary effects.

About Arts Alive 2010

The mural represents the Arts Alive 2010 festival so there are several forms of art represented including chalk art, still photography, movies/theater, painting with the Georgia O’Keefe flower and a Diego Rivera mural. Spanish Revival, Craftsman and Frank Lloyd Wright are types of architecture depicted in the mural.  Transportation design is seen with the cars and airplanes.  Product design is represented with the Green & Green glass lamp and ceramics with the Gladding-McBean cups.  The theme of this year’s festival was the 1930’s and 1940’s, so on the left panel of the mural, we have represented what Mission Viejo may have looked like back then with the Saddleback Mountains, orange trees, agriculture and of course the cattle ranching.  Surrounding the mural is a link that represents the four mile paper “Chain of Caring” that was touchingly linked together at the festival for Rachel’s Challenge.  The four corners of the border include the city logos with a rose, oak leaf, brown bear and red-tailed hawk.

My dad, Joe Koons, ceramic mentor to many, was the inspiration behind these community murals.  He had offered workshops like, “Mural in an Hour,” to arts educators and met Dru Maurer, Cultural Services Supervisor, at an arts education conference.  He put our team of four artists together and consulted with us to create a series of community murals to enhance the city’s creek trail.  In the process, something even more important has been created:  a sense of community here in Mission Viejo.  A short time after the mural’s completion, our team’s mentor passed away quietly and unexpectedly at home.  We soon realized that when he passed away at 11:12 pm on May 4, our mural was in the kiln, transitioning from a fragile state into a material that will last forever.  This loving thought caused us to add a line to the mural’s plaque, “Dedicated to Joe Koons at 865 degrees Fahrenheit.”

See the Arts Alive 2010 Mural

Empty Bowls & Colored Clays by Craig Hinshaw

May 31st, 2010

Introduction by Julie Brooks, Laguna Clay Creative Director

Craig Hinshaw is one of the nicest people I have encountered in the ceramics field. His book, “Clay Connections,” available from Laguna Clay Company is a wealth of information packed into a friendly, lively heavily illustrated format. I got so excited about this lesson that I  headed to the lab to work with Juan to see which Laguna products would work best. After a few more test runs we’ll be posting details about Laguna products that will work well with Craig’s lesson plan.

Lesson Plan: Empty Bowls & Colored Clays by Craig Hinshaw

Each year the Michigan Art Education Association sponsors an Empty Bowls luncheon (more details below) at its annual conference. For many years I have taken fifth grade bowls to the conference. But one year the dates slipped up on me and I only had a week to get the bowls made, dried and fired – hence the following lesson which created beautiful bowls and only necessitated one firing.

I have always prided myself in taking quality student bowls in which every bowl, or almost every bowl have been selected by one of the over 500 art teachers all attendance. I tell students second best isn’t good enough when giving of your time and talents to help those less fortunate. The following single firing method fit the bill.

Before working with the fifth graders I rolled out slabs of a white clay and a terra cotta. This was before I got a slab roller and used a large rolling pin and canvas board. Once the bowls were dry I brushed on a clear glaze and fired them to cone 04.

Final Note: I always have the students address a postcard to themselves back at school which I stamp. These are taped to the students’ bowls so the art teacher who selects their bowl can write them a note. Once, a keynote speaker at the conference wrote a student and called them a heroe! That left a lasting impression on me and hopefully my students.

Materials:

  • Terra cotta
  • White clay
  • Rolling pins or 1 ¼” wood curtain rods cut to 8” lengths
  • Pin tools
  • Bowls to function as a drape mold
  • Clear glaze

Empty Bowls

Empty Bowls was begun by two Michigan art teachers as a method for their students to raise money for the less fortunate. Students make bowls and a soup luncheon is held. For a fee, usually around $20 participants are served a simple meal; soup, bread and a drink and get to keep the handmade bowl.

The name Empty Bowls comes from the sad fact that at meal times, many around the world have an empty bowl. For more information about this wonderful program, please visit www.emptybowls.net.

Visiting Teaching Artists Model Strategies for Building Emotional Competency

May 24th, 2010

By Karen Merchant-Yates, Visual Artist

“The current tendency to reduce, divide and hierarchically rank the processes of thought that belong in their entirety to our species and to our biological make-up produces a subtraction of cultural resources and a consequent impoverishment of thought itself. Rationality without emotions and empathy and, equally, imagination without cognition and rationality, build a more limited, incomplete and impoverished knowledge.” Vea Vecchi, “Innovations in early education: the international reggio exchange” pg 9 Winter 2008

Background

A teaching artist here in Los Angeles, and particularly a teaching visual artist, like myself, is very often contracted to teach art projects in a school for six or eight weeks to a number of different classes, varying in age and stage of development. A teaching visual artist brings an artist’s studio into the classroom, and often shares the learning space of the classroom teacher as a guest. The teaching visual artist’s curriculum quickly establishes a routine for the tools, media and clean-up in order for classroom teachers to feel more comfortable about how the classroom will be used. The visual arts curriculum also emphasizes academic integration and supports broad social-emotional perspectives which the classroom teacher can refer to and may not have the opportunity to promote single-handedly.

Purpose of this Paper

This paper then, will focus on the last element of a teaching artist’s lesson, the social-emotional element, and specifically how modeling emotional intelligence and using strategies to support emotional competence, can transform the arts lesson. After all, the visual arts and aesthetics in general, form a body of knowledge that centers on mind training and concentrated pattern recognition. (“Adaptation” by W. Deresiewicz, pg.28, The Nation, June 8, 2009) Emotional competency is one aspect of mind training, and a growing body of physiological brain research supports cognitive psychologists in their focus on emotional stability as a requirement to the construction of knowledge. From many points of view, successful relationships (whether in the job market, schools or by connecting to abstract concepts) are determined by emotional competence rather than I.Q. Ethically, as educators and artists, our ultimate responsibility is for the whole person in every student. One way to do this is to understand emotional competence and where the emotions fit in the scheme of your brain’s component parts, and then find the best practices to support that underlying competence.

Emotional Competency

The elements of emotional intelligence, i.e., emotional literacy (being able to read or identify emotions) and our ability to speak the language of basic social/emotional needs (for example, acceptance, affection, appreciation, autonomy, attention and connection) underlie emotional competence. If you operate with emotional competence, you feel you have a choice about how you express your feelings. You have self-control, you are trustworthy and conscientious. Furthermore, on the creative side, you are adaptable and have the courage to seek innovations. You feel you are guided by your core beliefs without being buffeted by impulses and upsets which have the potential to send you into negative and unhealthy spirals. As teaching artists, we want very much to ensure that our students have these core competencies when they begin their skills-building in the arts or in general, for any creative endeavor in the classroom.

The primal skills of emotional competence involve handling impulses and dealing with upsets. Emotions are sensed physically by our bodies when we see, hear, touch, taste or otherwise perceive potential stresses or pleasures. They are called primal skills partly because they come from the oldest parts of our human brains, and partly because they are fundamental to our sense of choice in how we’ll integrate the rational and the non-rational in our lives (as well as in the classroom). From an evolutionary perspective, our brains needed to help us respond to and survive in our environment with many bells, whistles, alarms and reflexes. All our emotions fall within the general categories of pain or pleasure, being derived from the brain’s initial perceptual function of preventing pain (or death) and pushing pleasure (for the sake of
procreation or sustenance).

The oldest part of the brain, the brain stem (with its miniature brain attachment, the cerebellum) is called the reptilian brain and was the first part of the human brain to develop. Wrapped around the reptilian brain is the limbic system, the mid brain or the emotional brain, where feelings reside. Wrapped around this mid brain is the cerebral cortex, or the upper brain; it’s a gray, wiggly mass that you see so often in mad scientists’ cartoon laboratories. In the front, behind your forehead, is the prefrontal cortex.

Brain research has recently discovered how the different parts of our brains interconnect. The upper brain and the prefrontal cortex work together to manage stress, upsets and impulses by locating drives (either pain or pleasure) and memory related to these sensory stimuli and accessing them for regulation. Hopefully, our brains will pass the stimuli through the synapses of the nerve cells back through the regulatory center and up to the upper brain where the processes of critical and creative thinking will reflect on the event. If our brains have been too stressed or alarmed, cortisol flooding causes our behavior to be stuck in the mid brain: impulsive, reactive and unregulated. If we can physically or mentally “motor out” of our stress and panic, it’s possible for us to access the upper brain’s rational thinking.

When everything is working smoothly, the stimuli are perceived by the brain and it is able to independently find appropriate coping mechanisms to “motor out” the feeling response to the stimulation. However, where challenges exist we need to think about and really pay attention to the behaviors, which are red flags communicating information about how a student might be regulating his/her emotions. It is a mistake to think there is much of a moral (right or wrong) implication in the choices our brains (read, “students”) make. A student will respond in a variety of ways to stress or pleasure based on how flooded or not his/her brain is with chemicals (in general, stresses stimulate cortisol release in the bloodstream; pleasures stimulate adrenalin, among other hormones, in the bloodstream).

Constance Lillas has created a graphic representation of where our brains are working optimally. At the top of an arc of arousal, is the goal: alert processing. At the bottom of the arc is the sleeping state – also vital. When our brains are flooded with cortisol, in a fight-or-flight situation, a “frozen state” situation or even in a chronically recurring stressful situation where there appears to be “no exit”, processing gets stuck on the arc halfway up and stays in the mid brain, the emotional center. It can’t process information logically or rationally. Brains are “flooded” with cortisol and behaviors can be highly demanding, highly detached or highly compliant/ highly controlling. We have all experienced students that are “stuck” in this way; emotional centering can really help establish a window of alert processing for students who seem overly dulled or hyper-anxious or hyper-attentive. In addition, when teachers pay attention to cultural roots and accept diverse communication mores, they can give students the sort of attuned listening that moves toward inclusion, then trust, then emotional safety.

Alert processing doesn’t mean constant balance, it means you are able to find balance once a stressful, upsetting or exciting stimulus occurs. Alert processing connotes flexibility, resiliency and self-regulation. When feelings of anxiety, stress or fright have inhibited rational thought processes, any teacher will have a hard time helping children remember their lessons. Research also shows that this being stuck in the mid brain can initiate a pattern of responses that can eventually habituate thinking and prevent the brain from considering alternative responses in the future (it can’t think about the box, let alone outside it). Since the brain is a use-dependent organ, how it is used most often becomes its default, and the alternative pathways are pruned away. Retraining and growing our brains is not only possible, it is possible at any stage of your life. In early childhood, brains prune themselves of extraneous synapses, which are not being used, to facilitate denser interconnection of synapses, which are being used; so too, in puberty, from ages 8-11 years, a child’s brain will have another growth spurt. Thus, during these times, brains are exceptionally open to new experiences and relationships and synapses can grow exponentially. Nonetheless, the growth of the brain’s neurons only diminishes when learning and challenges subside into endless routines
and habits.

Optimal Learning

Learning best occurs in states of alertness, when emotions are positive or at the very least, neutral. To encourage young brains in school to develop states of alertness requires the language of emotions and needs, in either implied or explicit ways. Caring adults working with students know this language is a first step, so that feelings and needs begin to compliment the intellectual characteristics we already acknowledge in a person, and their personality becomes more distinct and memorable to us. An adult envisioning the long-term outcomes resulting from emotional competency understands it takes time and effort to achieve emotional literacy. It takes patience to learn how to identify and acknowledge (instead of stuff) feelings as they occur. Repressed feelings result in stress (“where is there a safe place for their appropriate outlet?” or “feelings are distasteful, and should be avoided”) and fear (“what will happen when I tell someone how I really feel?”). As Joseph Chilton Pierce states, “Learning in a fear-based state imprints and reduces the ability to recall.” (pg. 29 Compassionate Classrooms). The emotional centers of the brain are so powerful that negative emotions (hostility, fear, anger, anxiety) “downshift” the brain to survival mode and the prefrontal cortex areas of reasoning and self-regulation are shut down. (pg. 18, Compassionate Classroom) During these high-stress times, taking a moment to perform a sensory activity (deep breathing, stretching exercises, quiet music or even a drink of cold water) completes the sensory loop begun in the emotional mid-brain and can really calm students and help them return to their higher order thinking skills.

Once classes are in session, a shorthand technique of assessing and addressing emotions will provide the students’ underlying need for connection, and trust will flow from there. For example, “You have a big frown on your face. ‘ You wish you could choose which group you’re in?” The adult makes an observation and guesses at what feeling/ unmet need the student is experiencing. If the student acknowledges this guess is correct, the teacher can proceed to engage with unconditional curiosity, openness, acceptance and love, the acronym “COAL” coined by Daniel Siegel (2007), and to empathize (by giving feed back, for instance, about how it must feel to not have much autonomy). At this point, it’s important to avoid ‘fixing’ the problem, commiserating, comparing how you or others are feeling. Empathy is a moment of
reflection about what it feels like to be in another person’s shoes, no matter what reservations you might have. Setting realistic limits, for instance, “Today it’s too late, I will have to choose which group you work in.” Developing solutions and following through with these strategies will finish the work that you start of finding agreement with your students: “Next week, do you want to choose which group you’re in?” You have begun to establish a system of dialogue, of giving and receiving. This system demonstrates your values and your respect for others’ feelings, and their need to express them.

What else is needed? Safe emotional states give the brain the most opportunity to choose how it will process critically, creatively or emotionally. How do we establish safe emotional states for our learning environments? We CAN model emotional safety when we build an atmosphere of trust in classrooms through our relationships with students. It must be noted that forms of punishment or coercion will seriously undermine this trust which we try to build, and we must try alternative methods of engaging; and precisely because these methods of engaging with students take more time to accomplish, we know they are building relationships with more intrinsic emotional connection. The focus on relationships is a product of brain research which shows that the most important childhood learning is skill-based (i.e., “how to investigate the world and interact with other people”), rather than fact-based (i.e., “the names of animals, different colors”, the alphabet, etc.). School readiness research also supports relationship building because it provides children with the early experience of collaboration, which can be later built on with confidence because of this experience of nurturing, reliable carers. (pg. 231 Your Brain, The Missing Manual).

Safety & Trust in the Classroom

We have to keep in mind our goals are emotional competency, and in order to bring safety and trust to a classroom we will want to 1) focus on the needs of everyone in the classroom and 2) learn and practice the language of giving and receiving. This focus can help offset the preponderance of didactic, teacher-centered learning which we have been trained to accept.

To fulfill our dream of classrooms filled with young artists and successful learners, the following list of possible relationships would be vital to it (pg. 23, Compassionate Classroom):

1) Teacher-Self: a teaching artist can model self-regulation and will be able to better maintain an unbiased perspective. By first giving ourselves the same empathy one wants to give students and being able to recognize humor in situations can help teaching artists in the thick of it feel empowered. Reflective moments set aside to journal about lessons provides insight and direction that will prepare us well for understanding the underlying issues we observe but may not in the moment know exactly how to handle.

2) Teacher-Student: a teaching artist can envision various ways to connect with students in order to stay in the frame relational learning. Body language establishes connection by meeting students’ eyes, smiling and using affirmative gestures. As teaching artists master the art of attuned listening, which hears almost without evaluation and judgment, the need to hear obedience, compliance or only the facts you just presented becomes less important than responding to a child’s opinion, theory, questions or conclusions. Students can lead discussions and teaching artists can participate in them. Engaging respectfully with students about matters that interest them builds connections, and this endeavor goes beyond retrieval of facts. In this sense, teaching artists can shed the need to be “right” during discussions.

3) Teacher-Environment: a teaching artist will want to set up the classroom so there is as much success and as little failure as possible. Providing structures for “play” (time management, quiet spaces) can give students the inner peace they need in light of the many frustrations they feel; playing with materials and ideas gives children the ability to coordinate what they do know, representing what they know (as opposed to what someone else tells them they should know) which will build their self esteem. The way a teacher designs traffic flows, materials distribution and the time allotted to directed study vs. exploration will help students meet needs for collaboration, connection, autonomy and productivity.

4) Student-Student: this relationship is a powerful scaffold for learning. In small groups, independent expressions of ideas and creative solutions can be managed and then coordinated. Students’ relationships with each other are so vital that forums for safe (guided) exchange can be formally agreed on to provide a problem solving and follow-through “councils”.

In-Class Experiences

Throughout these classroom relationships, students experience making choices, listening to others and taking in others’ perspectives. As a result, students feel there is a safety net. They able to feel they can recover from failure and success, make mistakes and learn from them.

However, this dream may seem very distant to our day-to-day teaching experience. Like the following teaching artist’s testimony, many art teachers feel overwhelmed.

“I love being able to teach my passion, which is art. I do a lot of self-evaluation with my students. I don’t give out rewards. I give a lot of choices. Despite my efforts, I find myself pulled more and more into the domination system. I fell like I am out there on my own in this monstrous system. I see these kids who absolutely hate school. It’s an enormous battle. It’s wearing me down.” (pg. 10, The Compassionate Classroom)

While systemic issues can feel overwhelming, creating a classroom culture of emotional safety and competency can help the students on whom you have an immediate and direct effect. Over a period of 5 weeks in the spring of 2009, I observed master teaching artists who have formed relationships in public school classrooms. These student/teacher relationships were social constructions on which to scaffold their art forms. Each unique individual will have his/her own way of building emotional competency in classrooms.

The following are excerpts from my conversations with them.

“In my visual arts classes:

  • I establish guidelines about the amount of space we use together in the room.
  • I use beginning and ending/ opening and closing rituals centered on breathing.
  • The criteria I write on the board reflects how students will ‘make choices about…’
  • I use elements of art as a way to reflect work concretely and build self-esteem.
  • Feedback guidelines are important for giving thoughts. For instance, don’t make fun.
  • I forecast the challenges in trying new stuff, giving them concrete feedback and letting students know we will concentrate on their work together until it’s finished. I’ll hold their work up in front of them to get a different view of it, and ask what else they think it needs.
  • I constantly remind the students, “As artists, we…”
  • I do what I say I am going to do, which makes me accountable and models that for kids.
  • I accept a child’s reservations as a starting point rather than glossing over them.
  • If the students are very lively, they have just come in from recess, I spend time transitioning them into a visual arts “mind.”
  • I personalize the skills learning with stories I tell while I teach.
  • I set up the materials and tools with a thought of the traffic flow; I watch their desks to see if the materials get piled too high and if so, I call ‘Stop – spend a minute discarding what you don’t need so you can keep a clear idea of the materials you have in front of you.’
  • I don’t offer materials on a first-come, first-serve basis. I stress there is an abundance of materials, as many as will be needed. They are offered in sequence with the lesson.

“In my dance classes:

  • I use beginning and ending rituals, such as welcoming stretches and goodbye dances. Rituals set up parameters and safety. I make them sequentially easier to more difficult or new and different.
  • I set up criteria to reflect both my and the students’ accountability.
  • I organize people in space: transitions are directed and move from simple one-step processes to complex three-step processes, based on skill levels and abilities.
  • I give class members a variety of entry points in multiple intelligences (“what color will you be to skip across the floor?”).
  • I keep standards and expectations consistent and challenging; no child is excluded when they make an effort to achieve the standards I have set, and I notice efforts. I celebrate and support their adaptations of challenging tasks; some students find it a challenge to walk across the floor, so that is an effort I note and support, too.
  • I try to keep a finger on the pulse of the cognitive, physical and social responses.
  • When I ask a child to change his/her behavior and s/he does, I give them a subtle, often non-verbal encouragement.”

“In my music classes,

  • I involve student’s analytic thinking as well as their creative thinking;
  • I use a conversational tone when I give my directions; directions are concrete (in a sense-perceived language) and individualized, based on my observations of the students’ actions;
  • I make sure children have choices and they have the opportunity to make their own choices, within the framework of the skills-building;
  • I add more and more elements (more instruments, more variety of beats) onto the foundational skill, once it is established;
  • I vigilantly notice if children are in their bodies or not, and ask them to bring their eyes back to the classroom;
  • I find ways to include multiple intelligences in skills-building: i.e., I ask what colors are the shapes they are making to the beat, etc.”

These master teachers have been working in the school system for years, developing ways to encourage students and provide the emotional safety net, which the arts in all their expressive and creative powers can provide. Using the brain’s most recently evolved social forms (language and consciousness) will empower young thinkers to acknowledge fears and yet enable them to take risks anyway. Students will use this skill to adapt to changes in the environment, like the social demands of peers and the physical rigors of a compulsory education. They will be motivated to change perspectives and create innovative solutions. They will begin to communicate their questions and concerns; we will hear their voices.

“The brain works for the mind; the mind exists in our bodies and in relationship to our family and our community.” (Daniel Seigal, The Compassionate Classroom)

Bibliography:

  • How Children Make Art by George Szekely
  • Mama, listen! By Ruth Beaglehole
  • Making Learning Visible: Children as Individual and Group Learners by Harvard Project Zero and Reggio Children
  • Literacy Through Play by Carol Owocki
  • The Compassionate Classroom by Sura Hart and Victoria Hodson
  • Life in a Crowded Place by Ralph Peterson
  • Working with Emotional Intelligence by Daniel Goleman
  • Dimensions of Teaching Learning Environments by Elizabeth Jones with Elizabeth Prescott
  • Your Brain, The Missing Manual by Matthew MacDonald

Copyright 2009 by Karen Merchant-Yates
Visual Artist

elpho@sbcglobal.net

Mud Cloth Video

April 19th, 2010

Learn How Mud Cloth is Made

In follow up to our earlier posting with lesson plans from CAEA by Ann Fuerst, Ph.D., we have a video to share about making African mud cloth using clay.

Bring this Project to Your Classroom

After viewing the video, download Dr. Fuerst’s lesson plans so that you can use these projects in your classrooms:

All Roads Lead to Mud: K-12 grades

All Roads Lead to Timbuktu: Grade 7

Welcome Alfredo Ratinoff

March 9th, 2010

It is with much pleasure that I welcome Alfredo Ratinoff as co-host of Laguna’s “Clay In Class” blog.  Alfredo’s education and experience will bring a unique and exciting view to this blog. In Washington D.C., where Alfredo lives, he is a faculty member for the ceramics department at the Resident Associates Program at The Smithsonian Institution.

Resident Associates Program at The Smithsonian Institution

Alfredo’s enthusiasm and creativity inspires teachers and students alike to incorporate ceramics at a higher level into their education. Not only does Alfredo teach people how to create art, he also speaks on the importance of a continuing arts education. Alfredo’s experience with communities and schools is a strong connection we share. My dad, Joe Koons, first met Alfredo when Alfredo came to Riverside, CA. Their friendship blossomed from here as they talked about their art and toured the tile work throughout the Mission Inn. We know the importance of a society who values art and arts education!

To learn more about Alfredo, please read his bio on our blog and visit his Web site.


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