Great video to show students on first day in the art room to encourage them to believe they can do it if they believe.
Category Archives: Teachers
The Last projects of theTransforming Learning: Summer Teacher Institute 2012
Day 3 at the Transforming Learning: The Summer Teacher Institute
A great day at the summer Institute today, with another great project for students. Today project was to create a site-specific Monumental Marquette. The following is my example of this Project.
Trace Monotypes and Allegory
First Project of the this year Transforming Learning: Summer Teacher Institute
University of Wyoming Art Museum Transforming learning summer Teaching Institute
The past three years I have participated in the University of Wyoming Art Museum Transforming Learning Summer Teaching Institute. During this time, I and other school and community educators focus on learning through original artwork, artists, and other original resources for an entire week. Unlike many other educational
institutes or workshops we do not talk about teaching and how teach, we just
explore, learn and grow from each other. In turn, the ideas and resources we learn about will help us to inspire creativity in our students in the coming year. That’s all we really want as art educators to inspire creativity in our students. Below are some of the original art works that I created during the institute that has inspired so many ideas and lessons for my student including the Blueprints on Fabric.
The Top 10 of what students mistakenly call their Art Teacher.
Throughout the school year students mistakenly call me by the wrong name. Here are my top ten wrong names
- The names of the PE teachers: I hear students call me the PE teachers’ names more frequently than even my own name at times.
- Mrs. Winsch: This a just a honest mistake because students hear Mrs. more often than Mr.
- Dr. Winfield: I believe it started as a joke by two of my students at one of my schools but it caught on and now I hear it a couple of time a month.
- Mr. Winchester: This name came about when a student tried to find a way to remember my name but like Dr. Winfield it became one of the names many student mistakenly call me.
- Mr. Flinch: This is a combination of my name and a student teacher’s. I heard it from a sweet Kindergartner.
- Ms. Winsch: Very common for Kindergartners to say.
- Mr. Lynch: I have very creative students.
- Mr. Vinsch: Actually this is how my grandfather spelled his/my last name. I first heard it from a student from Russia during my student teaching.
- Mr. Winchey: It also started has a joke and it quickly caught on as well.
- Called by Mom, Dad, Grandma or Grandpa: Even though I rarely hear students call me by these names, I can guarantee a student will call me mom, dad, grandma, or grandpa sometime during the year.
It always amazes me how students can find ways to mix my name around but every year they come up with new versions. I will add them to the list as they happen in the future.
Memorable Teachers
As I think back to the teachers that I have had the ones who stand out in my mind were my art teachers. One might not think they were not spectacular teachers at first, but they were there and they fueled my love of art. Mrs. H. was my first art teacher who always wore a blue denim smock. She allowed us to explore and create art that related to us. She always made class fun and engaging. One project Mrs. H. had us do was a drawing of a bull’s skull. I do not remember what we used to draw it with, but I do remember it took a long time to complete. When I finished the drawing it gave me a great sense of accomplishment and instilled in me the fact that if I worked hard I could achieve my goals and anything worth doing was worth doing well. Why I remember her is that she allowed us to be us and allowed us realize that we could achieve our goals.
Mr. R and Mr. H were my junior high school art teachers. One had a coach’s mentality and the other look like Mr. Clean with a mustache. I always looked forward to their classes, especially if I had a hard day in my other classes. Their classrooms were inviting and safe and allowed me and others to take ownership of our work. They both were committed to us and willing to help us succeed. And best of all they wanted to get to know us. That showed me they were genuinely interested and concerned about their students.
Then there was Ms. W., my high school ceramics teacher. She let us be us and think creatively. One thing I do remember is that she showed me that an art teacher can be an artist. Often when we were working on our work she was doing the same. Ms. W made her classroom into a collaborative studio. She helped us when we needed help and asked for our help on her work. She truly made us feel that we are in this together – failure or success. There were a few failures by the way, including some memorable Rako firings.
One teacher that was spectacular from the very moment I met her was Mrs. G. She was not technically my art teacher but was an art teacher. She was the elementary art methods instructor during my student teaching. Mrs. G. was the nicest person you will ever meet and believed in all of our abilities as teachers and as people. She conducted the class has if it was her art class and at the same time showed us tips and strategies she learn over the years. She shared her lesson plans and her sweet personality which made the class inviting and safe. Without the resources, tips and strategies my first few years of teaching would not have been as smooth as they were. I wish I could of said thank you to her so many times but she passed away a few years ago. Even though Mrs. G was not my art teacher, I still to this day think she was the best art teacher I ever had in so many ways.
These teachers and others have shaped my life in so many ways that a simple thank you does not express my gratitude fully. I hope that I can be as memorable to my students as my teachers have been to me. Thank you Mrs. H, Mr. R, Mr. H, Ms. W. and Mrs. G for you have had a tremendous impact on me and indirectly on my students. By affecting one student in a positive way your spirit spreads too many more you will never know.




