Keywords
Teachers, personal artistry, learning environments, collaboration
Abstract
Many K-12 art teachers have rich artistic backgrounds and continue to be active as artists in spite of the challenges of time, energy, and stereotypes that insist a real artist would not teach. This article describes a research project that examined the educational dynamic engendered by teachers who are also artists. We interviewed and observed teachers to explore how teachers’ personal artistry and artistic activities beyond school contributed to their teaching in school. It was clear that some teaching artists changed the educational dynamic of the classroom in ways that invigorated both the content and practice of teaching and learning. They cultivated complex learning environments that disrupted predictable approaches to schooling by creating unstructured and hospitable spaces characterized by play, conversation, and collaboration.
Original Publication Citation
Graham, M. A.& Zwirn, S. G. (2010). How Being a Teaching Artist can Influence K-12 Art Education. Studies in Art Education.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Graham, Mark and Zwirn, Susan Goetz, "How Being a Teaching Artist Can Influence K-12 Art Education" (2010). Faculty Publications. 7550.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/7550
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2010
Publisher
Studies in Art Education
Language
English
College
Fine Arts and Communications
Department
Art
Copyright Status
Copyright 2010 by the National Art Education Association Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research 2010, 51(3), 219-232
Copyright Use Information
https://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/