Tuesday, August 25, 2009

A Motto For The School Year

I love this quote. It makes a great mission statement for any school.

"There are only three colors, ten digits, and seven notes: it's what you do with them that's important."
Ruth Ross

Monday, August 24, 2009

Confirmation -- Kids Need Art!

I found this blog entry from another arts organization committed to teaching creativity that confirms what I've been saying for years -- kids start losing their creative expression around age 10. Now, I've contended that kids need art instruction in realism at this point to get over the hump.
Abrakadoodle is having a lot of success doing just that.
http://www.abrakadoodle.com/blog/?p=214

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Back to School -- Ready for a Creative Year

I didn't intend to take the summer off from blogging, but we went from one adventure or endeavor to another. My creative pursuit was building a pocket garden out of our bare patio. You can read my diary blog about this DIY project at http://pitifulgardener.wordpress.com. Here it is time for school to begin and we're still fiddling with the plants. Gardening is one big problem-solving experience, for sure! It's not my favorite thing to do, but when I finally get it right, I do enjoy the results.

At an educator's conference I attended in Chicago, two of the keynote speakers discussed creativity at school. It's a topic hitting the mainstream more and more. Wouldn't it be great if the people directly responsible for giving the green light at the school level could embrace it -- by understanding exactly what creativity is and why we have to teach the skills to develop it? What a revolution!

I spent the month of August preparing to teach in a brand new art room. Though we are in a recession, this private school just completed a fine arts building. It was time to move out of a dark 25-year-old modular -- and if you know anything about art teachers, they've got stuff stashed to the rafters since they can't bear to throw anything out. The new room is a bright space banked with windows overlooking fields and hills. Wow! How could creativity not flourish in such a space? Not only are the students ever so fortunate, but so is this teacher!

The summer art studio for kids -- teaming up with Reptacular Animals and all their kid-friendly critters -- begins tomorrow. That's Monday, August 24. The focus is on giving kids a chance to work on longer projects in different media, inspired by the animals doing the modeling. We're starting off meeting a pile of wriggly snakes -- long and short, pythons and boa constrictors, and several varieties I don't know. First the kids play with the snakes, then make a life-size papier mache snake. This week we'll also make a pond project, featuring frogs and fuzzy ducklings, and a painting of the rainforest featuring live parrots, and even a macaw. This is certainly the most unusual art class in the Los Angeles region...maybe anywhere! Kids get to look closely at a big array of animals. Observation always improves drawing.

Information is stored in our thinking as pictures. Drawing provides direct access to creative thinking. It's the "doing" that helps spark it. Even if you feel you're bad at drawing, do it anyway. It's the simplest, most effective tool at your disposal. It's not the product you're after, but the thinking that results from the activity. If you've got kids in the house, make sure they get to draw every day. Doodles count!