I started my career in education thirty - nine years
ago as an art teacher with the Tarrant City School District and was honored to receive the National Elementary Art Educator of the Year award.
Not exact matches
So it is with «balanced literacy,» which has reared its head once again in New York City,
as schools chancellor Carmen Farina places
Teachers College professor Lucy M. Calkins back on the English language
arts curricular and pedagogical throne that she briefly occupied a decade
ago until Joel Klein learned what a catastrophe that was.
In a guest editorial in Educational Leadership 20 years
ago (April 1989),
Art Costa suggested five approaches to «reassessing assessment»: (1) reestablish the school
as the locus of accountability; (2) expand the range and variety of the assessment techniques used; (3) systematize this variety of assessment procedures by developing schoolwide plans for collection and use of information; (4) reeducate legislators, parents, board members, and the community to help them understand that standardized test scores are inadequate indicators of the quality of schools,
teachers, and students; and (5) remind ourselves that the purpose of evaluation is to enable students to evaluate themselves.
As my
art teacher, Mr.. A says ---- «GO TO BUSINESS SCHOOL» 20 years
ago, I graduated h.s. and I did not listen to his advice about going to Bradley University.
For the exhibition Provincetown Prints: Then and Now,
Art Teacher Ginny Ogden and students from her Printmaking II class attended a workshop at PAAM, which focused on the history of the white - line wood block — also known
as the Provincetown Print, which was developed in Provincetown more than 100 years
ago.
Dearest Montien (2013), which we reprint in full, describes the Thai
art scene since the artist's death more than a decade
ago, and the impact Montien,
as artist,
teacher, mentor and friend, has had on the tight - knit
art community, particularly his sociopolitical, and later spiritual, approach to
art making, which combined local, everyday materials to explore topics ranging from Thailand's industrialization to Buddhist notions of impermanence and mortality.