Showing posts with label A Art School Teacher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Art School Teacher. Show all posts

3.23.2017

art school teacher: on writing nonsense





as a way to discover rhythm in words
i suggest to the students: try writing nonsense




it's not as easy as you may think
writing whatever words rise to the surface
without having to make it make sense




i tell them i once made a habit of writing nonsense
months of months of nonsense




they stare at me
unimpressed









3.09.2017

Art School Teacher: Comics Class



art by Renaissance High School students
photo comic by Chloe





We each scribbled on newsprint with a colored marker

until there emerged:

a face,

an object,

a figure,

a landscape.




We each arranged our four drawings

as a four panel comic,

adding details with a black marker.

About Rose's, I pondered all week:




The astonished cat,

The grounded stag,

A twisted shadow, surprised

The mountains echoing the birds' cry.




Then we added characters and voice bubbles.

And made new four panel comics

by photographing details.










3.06.2017

Art School Teacher: six word stories assigned, rebellion staged





teacher assigns
students groan
teacher sighs


students know
the teacher
doesn't know


students demand
no restrictions!
teacher cries


teacher books
spring break
to Guadalajara


resignation letter
signed, sealed
never sent


teacher 
spends weekend
grading papers
again







2.23.2017

Art School Teacher: A Six-Sentence Story








1.  The teacher assigns a six-sentence story.




2.  The tall student asks, "Does it have to be six sentences?"




3.  The stout student asks, "Do we have to write about something specific?"




4.  The one who has trouble sticking to past tense asks, "Does it have to be in present tense?"




5.  The boy who wears make-up asks, "Can the sentences be any length, and is it due next week?"




6.  The sly student asks, "What if it isn't really a story, but still is six sentences?"










2.16.2017

Art School Teacher: Encountering Legends







The girls in podcasting class were arguing over whether it was called
the Anne Frank Room or the Marilyn Monroe Room.

What I gleaned from their conversation about the room; 
perched above the balcony, boarded up, supposedly haunted, 
seemed more Anne Frank.

But when we went to get the microphone from the theatre shop, 
there was a giant painting of Marilyn Monroe.

"See!" the oldest girl said.  "This painting used to be in that room 
before someone died in there and they boarded it up."

Only one of the three was willing to make a spooky laugh on tape.
But they all chatted excitedly for over 15 minutes
sharing what they know about the legends of West High.










2.14.2017

high school haiku (free verse)






the bell rings
joyous reunions
lockers slamming

new clothes though unsure
where to go for homeroom
searching for a friend

old teacher shocked
how short the girls’ skirts 
how long the boys' hair

leaves falling
sweater weather
dreaming of kissing

teacher announces quiz
students groan
fooled again!


the first snow
everyone at the windows
lessons abandoned

loud speaker blaring
report to the auditorium
students slump, yawning

passing in the hall
hands briefly touching
hearts loudly thumping

after the students
exit the auditorium
a glove left on a seat

smells of tater tots
fish sticks and ketchup;
lunch!


absurd high schoolers
wondering what is absurd
and deciding everything

thick snow falling
praying for a snow day
instead, school

oh no! forgot
to study for the test
again!

muddy tracks through snow
a paper tumbling, a cold wind
winter school yard


day dreaming in class
notes passing, hearts breaking
teacher calling for attention

hallway empty
except one student
head bent, crying

warm sun, robins call
after school students loiter
holding coats, laughing

windows open wide
last day of school, finally!
the lake beckons

staying out late with friends
cicadas calling
hoping summer never ends










1.06.2017

Art School Teacher: Preparing for Storytelling at The Draw, Wednesday January 11th, 6:30pm




hope you can join us!

Renaissance High School for the Arts

storytelling students
and adults from their lives
sharing stories about themselves

featuring:

bucks, bows, birds
bunnies
bites
balconies, bromances
banjos, bees
and lots of bravery

!











1.03.2017

Remembering those who left us in 2016: Scott Dutton





Scott Dutton at The 602 Club, April 2015, Appleton


The first time I met Scott Dutton, a fellow teacher at Renaissance School for the Arts, I picked him up at his charming brick house, along with his drums.  When the students came to happiness class that afternoon, I told them how excited I was because the drum circle was going to be so fun.  Scott leaned on his drum and growled to the students, “Whenever someone tells me I’m going to have fun, that pretty much guarantees that I won’t.”

Scott was confrontational and challenging.  He loved drama, and I didn’t, adding to his fun.  I was the new writing teacher, hired because he had quit, though not because he didn’t want to teach, but only to prove a point.   

I was struggling, trying to figure out how to critique the students’ writings.  Scott asked me pointedly, “But do you love them?”  And it freaked me out and got into my head, and I ended up not talking to him again for a year. 

Later, when we became friends again, I referred to it, and he said, “You didn’t talk to me for a whole year?” 

“Yes,” I said. 

“Why not?” 

“Because you asked me if I love the students.”  We laughed about that for a long time.

When Scott laughed, which was often, he laughed with his whole soul. 

“I used to be a really big guy,” he once told me, because I only knew him as a stooped ill man, nearly coming to his end one afternoon walking from his car to my house.  He stood in my living room with his arms held open and his chest lifted to the sky.  “This is how I get it going again,” he wheezed about his temperamental heart.

Scott was not afraid of dying.

Nothing meant more to him than his students. 

The craziest conspiracy theory he ever told me was that our DNA is actually the invention of aliens who are breeding us and harvesting our energy.  “You mean, you don’t know that’s true?” he asked, concerned for my mental wellbeing.

He gave me the courage to be a more honest and open teacher.  And for that I will always be grateful. 


Whenever I think of Scott, I feel like celebrating. 




12.06.2016

Art School Teacher: Ten Questions for a New Critique










What did you notice while making this work?

What was your intention?

How is it similar to work you've done before?

How is it different?

What surprised you?

What discoveries did you make?

What could you do with this work?

How could you use this work to launch another?

What works have recently inspired you?

What links can you make between your work and the work of others?









12.05.2016

a New Critique, what is?









a New Critique:

instead of judging the work of others,
learn how to notice our own

rather than labeling good or bad,
practice discussing what we notice

instead of evaluative judgment,
substantive observation