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November 4, 2002
Theater Arts instructor helps fill gaps after
school's funding cut
By Scott Rappaport
Renowned dance choreographer, performer and teacher Tandy Beal has
performed in major cities and festivals on four continents. She has
created works for dance, film, circus, television, theater, animation,
and even halftime for the San Francisco 49ers.
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| Youngsters at the Watsonville Charter School
for the arts are getting help from students in Tandy Beal's Art,
Education & the Community class. |
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But when she heard last summer that a public school in her community
was facing major funding cuts for its arts programs, Beal responded
with an innovative teaching program.
A theater arts instructor at UCSC, Beal called Sue Forson, principal
and co-founder of Watsonville Charter School of the Arts, a predominately
Latino school. She offered to mentor her UCSC students to go into all
of the charter schools classes with lesson plans about art that
were connected to the curriculum. The students would come from Beals
UCSC class titled Art, Education & the Community.
"Tandy is a master teacher and she provides solid support,"
said Forson. My arts funding was severely reduced. This costs my school
nothing. Its a gift."
Bealss program is unique in that she sends her UC students into
the classroom in teams of three to five people. They work with each
teachers curriculum and come up with their own creative lesson
plans in subjects such as science, literature and social studies.
"All my teachers really enjoy the infusion of energy and richness
that the UCSC students bring," Forson noted. "And its
not just an imposition on their day. Its taking what the teachers
need to cover--state standardsand adding an enrichment component.
Its directly related to the content theyre covering anyway.
I really think its fabulous."
In her UCSC class, Beal models different ways to approach classes for
children. Her students read articles and spend a great deal of time
practicing teaching techniques and getting feedback from each other.
"College students have enormous passion," Beal noted. "If
you can help them use that passion and love of the arts and give them
an opportunity to see they can make a difference in the community
well,
thats what my best teaching is about. If people know they can
make a difference at a young age, the whole trajectory of their lives
can change."
Movement exercises are being used to motivate public school students
who may be reluctant to participate in creative projects. Lessons on
beat and rhythm and dance games are helping elementary students memorize
scientific facts about bats, or retain information about plate tectonics
and movement of the Earth. Younger children are making mobiles of their
family members, or sock puppets of the person who cares for them, to
help them visually represent their feelings.
"Even though most of us in the class at UCSC are artists, were
not learning to become art teachers, explained 19-year-old Rebecca Wolfe,
an undeclared sophomore major. "Were here to give these kids
a sense of community through the arts and give them skills, as well
as teach them respect and a sense of responsibility. Were using
the arts as a tool to learn and have fun."
"As students at UCSC, its a huge learning opportunity for
us," added Seth Weiner a 21-year-old community studies junior.
"We learn just as muchif not morethan the kids we teach.
This is a prime example of experiential learning, which I really believe
in."
Beal has spent nearly 30 years focusing on the relationship between
art and community--ever since she became one of the first funded instructors
to teach dance in the public schools in 1968.
"Our UC students are learning from the classroom students and
the classroom teachers," Beal said. "They are bringing in
their zest and appetite for the arts, but not much experience teaching.
The children benefit, while the UC students are able to put the theory
they have learned into real-life practice. My hope is that some of them
will choose to become teachers after this."
Beal is working on having older students from the Watsonville school
come to campus in the future to see what university life is like. "This
age can be crucial for students in deciding whether to commit to school
100 percent or become a slacker," she added. "It may plant
some seeds that may make a real difference in a kids life."
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