|
Page 1 of 2
Dear Colleagues and Friends in Art Education,
In
this, my final President’s Message, I want to extend a heartfelt and
warm “Thank You” to the entire membership of PAEA for your trust,
support, and cooperation during my leadership. I am proud of the
initiatives accomplished and relationships established over the past
two years and hope that they will remain a part of PAEA’s future. I am
grateful to have met so many gifted and committed teachers, students,
and administrators in art education from all across Pennsylvania during
my presidency.
In honor of
all your dedicated work as art educators, I now want to share with you
some thoughts about ethics in art education borne of my thirty-seven
years in the middle and high school art classroom. My intention is that
some of these ideas might serve as inspiration for our thinking about
curriculum, instruction, and how we support student successes in all of
our classrooms this fall.
I
believe that the paramount responsibility as a teacher of the visual
arts is to constantly seek, honor, and draw forth the artist in every
child. With this intention, the arts classroom becomes a place where
character is built, where excellence is experienced, where the desire
to produce what is useful to the community is cultivated, and where
perseverance to accomplish what may be difficult is honed.
I
believe that to predictably and reliably support and monitor student
achievement in any discipline, the teacher must first be inspirational,
trustworthy, and connective in her thinking. She must know her subject
and how to teach that subject to students. Above all else, she must be
committed to students and their learning while thinking reflectively
and systematically about her own practice and learn from her own
experience. She must work constantly to “recognize that the other
person is you”. A teacher must constantly draw upon her own and the
students’ creativity, imagination, resourcefulness, and connectivity in
developing the structures and tools for student success. I believe that
all people are capable of making informed aesthetic judgments and
creating aesthetically sound works of art. Every student has the
capacity to successfully engage the aesthetic learning process given
clear expectations and a collaborative structure for success guided
responsively by the teacher.
The art
classroom must be designed as a safe haven for risk-taking and as a
welcoming community of learning partners. It is a place where the
artist in every person can be encouraged to come forth in an atmosphere
of respect for creative process and individual expression. In a highly
visible way, the classroom can reveal the existence of a comprehensive
system of organization and structures for promoting and managing
student achievement in a wide variety of artistic areas. The arts
classroom can be a home to “forward looking learning” (learning that is
focused on finding solutions to problems that do not already exist)
where the traditional student and teacher roles are ever-merging via
collaborative learning that involves students, teachers, parents, and
external evaluators working in partnership to develop skills,
attitudes, and sensibilities with a spirit of “can-do” optimism and a
respect for others. In this environment students develop valuable life
skills and self-confidences in addition to arts training. These skills
enable students to creatively take risks to successfully solve problems
in the future.
|