Beth Burkhauser and George Barbolish, International Interdependence Hexagon Project Co-Chairs, just returned from the National Art Ed conference held at the Hilton in NYC this weekend! What a great opportunity to spread the word about Interdependence and the Hexagon Project - A Social Justice Art Education Model! So many people are interested and enthusiastic! We were able to connect with Mousumi De and Dr. Marjorie Manifold and Dr. Steve Willis and we will be taking the project international at the USSEA/InSEA Conference in June in Indianopolis! We also introduced this Weebly blog to those who attended our presentation and invited all to get involved. If you look carefully at the images below, you will notice that they were taken as we explained about the Hexagon Project Blog on Weebly!
Dick Blick, Amaco, Ceramic Supply and INOVART, Printmaking Supplier, will now be sponsors -plus possibly others! Very exciting news! It is encouraging to know that what we believe to be important is finding a receptive audience and the Interdependence Hexagon Project is spreading!
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Food for thought for teachers engaging students in human rights, governance and global perspectives - written by Elizabeth Delacruz, Higher Education Leader, NAEA [National Art Education Association] 2011 in Higher List Serve:
"We need to reassert how we envision ourselves as teachers. Many of us have
set forth a
notion of the "publicly engaged scholar/teacher", and I see
teachers as local
"public intellectuals" in their own communities (although
positioning the
teacher as "public intellectual" is hardly a catchy phrase in
the current anti-
intellectual fervor that appears to have taken hold in the
US.) Teachers have
many of the same skills and dispositions that public
intellectuals in civic life
have. Both teachers and public intellectuals pursue
cross-disciplinary
understandings. And they connect their own disciplinary
bodies of knowledge
to history, to far reaching ethical questions, and to civic
life. Teachers and
public intellectuals have the ability to communicate well to
general audiences,
and they encourage their audiences to ask difficult
questions. These
questions include “Why?” “Why not?” and “What if?”
Teachers and public
intellectuals embrace research and rigorous debate; they
reject simplistic
answers and closure. And they consider implications of
actions and inactions
-- local, regional, and global, understanding that it’s
not an us/them
scenario, rather, we’re all in this together. Inquiry,
intellectual rigor,
imagination, collaboration, and civic engagement permeate
everything
teachers do.
These are the very skills and dispositions we hope to foster in our students,
and beyond our classroom walls. These are also the skills we need to apply
to the problems of public perception and support for public education today.
If ever we needed to educate both our students and the wider public about
how essential it is to be creative, critically informed, and politically engaged
citizens, it’s now.
I end this commentary where I began. Education is a political/public venture
of utmost magnitude. We need to continue to evolve as a community of
practice dedicated to both creativity and civic life in order to both address
the present situation and to continue to shape our collective future as a
society. We need to strategize about how to best pursue these aims.
I greatly look forward to hearing your ideas at the NAEA conference.
See you in Seattle.
all my best,
Elizabeth Delacruz
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