National Arts in Education Week: Teacher mixes art with other classes
TOLEDO – Art classes may be a fun addition to the school day, but in Ohio they also count as a high school graduation requirement.
National Arts in Education Week, an annual observance since 2010, is Sept. 9-13. To showcase what Woodward High School is doing, local news media were invited to visit Angie McClue’s art classroom on Thursday to see the lessons her students are working on.
“Students of all ages – from kindergarten to college to creative-aging programs – benefit from artistic learning, innovative thinking and creativity,” according to the National Art Education Association.
McClue teaches general art, painting, metals and jewelry. She also teaches a section of the AVID (Advancement Via Individual Determination) College and Career Readiness program, in which students learn study skills and note-taking skills. She said she includes art examples within the general studies class when she can.
“You can integrate it with other subjects,” McClue said about visual arts.
To make the point: McClue’s classroom includes a poster of significant eras in art history and the years in which they flourished. She will also ask the students what they are learning in other classes to give art context to those lessons.
Art, music and literature, she added, are all “the history of mankind.”
Today’s trends certainly influence what projects students want to try. Jewelry-making and polymer clay figurines are among the currently popular lessons.
“The DIY culture has become so huge,” McClue pointed out.
Aunesti Simon, a junior, is among those who have previously taken a jewelry class and is in this fall’s painting class. “I just liked making bracelets,” she said about her art interests.
And Alayah Yowpp, a junior in the painting class, said she also had taken a previous art class that featured mixed media.
The painting class is currently studying color theory, using watercolors to mix and paint the specific shades of a color wheel.