Vermont Alliance for Arts Education

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A Member of the KENNEDY CENTER ALLIANCE FOR ARTS EDUCATION NETWORK

How Arts Training Improves Attention and Cognition

It is not difficult for arts educators to claim that the utilization of the arts in a school’s curriculum benefits learning across the spectrum, for it is an intuitive truth.  It is encouraging to know that studies continue to show this truth to have tangible, scientific proofs that will, we all hope, lead to greater support within the K-12 academic world or, more specifically, by the school boards that fund it.

The Dana Foundation, which sponsors research on the brain and how it’s ability to learn better through art, and which is a great supporter of arts education, has published an article on its website well worth reading: How Arts Training Improves Attention and Cognition by Michael I. Posner, Ph.D., and Brenda Patoine.

Michael Posner argues that when children find an art form that sustains their interest, the subsequent strengthening of their brains’ attention networks can improve cognition more broadly.

This is the kind of work that provides hope that we can find the appropriate balance between the teaching of the arts and the other disciplines in order to help form better students.

Filed under: All Disciplines, Resources

New Interim Board Slate Chosen

At a board meeting on September 14, the VAAE Board voted to reconfigure its board makeup by accepting changes to its by-laws.  This is in line with the results of our sustainability study.  Our foray into a potential merger passed without one offered, and our next choice was to reinvigorate the board.  By changing its by-laws, the VAAE Board of Directors was able to stabilize its current board and allows it to build a new foundation for the immediate future.

All titles are considered interim for the time being.

Wendy Cohen and Walter Judge, Co-Presidents

Gary Moreau, Treasurer

Stacy Raphael, Secretary

Joe Clifford, our past president, has resigned from the board. Joe led us during a very difficult year.  He has received a promotion at the Hopkins Center and we are grateful for his service.

The make up of the rest of the board is: Gail Kilkelly, Dept. of Education; Allyson Ledoux, VMEA; and awaiting approval, Rebecca McGregor, VT State Dance Festival; Dee Christie, VATA; and Cathy Archer, VT Drama Festival.

Filed under: Business

7th Annual Vermont State Dance Festival

Dance FestivalHey, Dancers!

Rebecca McGregor sends along this catalogue for the 7th Annual Vermont State Dance Festival, as well as a copy of the sign-up sheet.

From Rebecca’s Introduction:

The Vermont State Dance Festival is an annual event that began in 2003.  After touring all of the Vermont high schools that had dance programs in 2002 as part of an independent study in college, I wanted to create an event that allowed teachers and students from all over Vermont to work together, learn from one another, and share knowledge. The Vermont State Dance Festival offers high school aged dancers of all disciplines an opportunity to study new and varied techniques with professional dancers and to showcase their skills before professional artists, teachers, their student peers and the general public.

The event is composed of three elements: a day-long series of workshops led by the professional artists; a closed session for the dancers to perform prepared choreographies for feedback from a professional, student peers and participating dance instructors; and an evening performance open to the general public. The festival is intended to introduce students to new dance styles and techniques that they might not routinely be exposed to in their high school dance programs, or studios to allow students to interact with experienced professionals, and to provide the students an opportunity to perform before a larger audience than they might typically enjoy.

This festival has been a great success over the years, and this one promises to match them all.

Filed under: Conference, Dance

$80,000 Designated for Arts Education Title IID!

Gail Kilkelly from the Department of Education sent this along!  It seems like a very interesting possibility!

Dear Vermont Public School Music, Visual Art, Dance and Theatre Teachers – Please share this with your colleagues:

You read the title correctly!

$80,000 of Title IID (Enhancing education through technology) grant money has been reserved for Vermont’s Music, Visual Art, Theatre, and Dance Teachers. This is open to K-12 arts teachers.

This is “one-time money” and this grant will likely not be repeated in this way in the future.

Application Deadline: October 30th

To find information, instructions and the grant application, click HERE and then click on ARTS.  For the application only, click HERE.

Here’s the introductory information on Title II D Grants:

One of the essential skills most prevalent in our 21st Century education landscape is collaboration. This grant program represents the department’s work within that realm. Content area specialists are assisting to make this program a success and provide technology to support the acquisition of skills in those specific areas. Many of these content areas have not had an opportunity such as this in the past. The grants are set up for a variety of funding amounts and are targeted specifically at teachers. This is a Title IID program and eligibility requirements are in place for those schools wishing to apply.

Filed under: All Disciplines, Education, Grant Opportunity

Downs Rachlin Martin Continues Support of VAAE

Walter Judge Presents CheckWalter E. Judge Jr, a director and member of the Litigation Practice Group at Downs Rachlin Martin PLLC, presented a check for $1,000 on behalf of the DRM Community Fund to Thomas Stevens, executive director of the Vermont Alliance for Arts Education, on August 25. VAAE’s mission is to support arts education in the public schools and to contribute to the professional development of arts teachers. 

The DRM Community Fund was launched in 2000 to celebrate the firm’s 50th anniversary. Since then, DRM has awarded more than $180,000 in small grants to approximately 180 private, non-profit organizations in Vermont and western New Hampshire to support innovative, grass-roots arts, education, economic development and historic preservation projects that strengthen community. 

Judge, the sponsoring director for the grant, has been a member of VAAE’s board of directors for four years. He also has served on several of the organization’s committees and assists with events. “I am very excited about VAAE’s future under the leadership of the new, energetic director, Thomas Stevens. We are pleased to be able to support this valuable organization’s efforts to advocate for arts education programs for all students and to provide professional development opportunities for arts educators.”

DRM is a full-service law firm with more than 60 attorneys and seven offices in Vermont, New Hampshire and New York.  DRM provides legal services to local, national and international clients in practice areas that include bankruptcy and business restructuring, business law, captive insurance, energy and telecommunications, family law, health law, intellectual property, labor and employment, litigation, real estate and land use, environmental law, tax law and trusts and estates.  The firm represents clients in legislative, regulatory and public affairs through the Government and Public Affairs group. DRM is the law firm member for Vermont of Lex Mundi, the world’s leading association of independent law firms.

Filed under: Business, Conference

Martha Graham Dance Company to Perform at Lyndon State College

MarthaGrahamThis press release came courtesy of Rebecca McGregor and Marianne Handy Hraibi, dance instructors at Lyndon Institute and St. Johnsbury Academy, respectively.

This is an exciting opportunity for our students in the Northeast Kingdom to see an extraordinary and historic dance company perform.  Hope you can make it too!

St. Johnsbury Academy to Present the Martha Graham Dance Company

The internationally acclaimed Martha Graham Dance Company will perform September 29 at Lyndon State College and one of its principals will conduct a private Master Class for St. Johnsbury Academy Dance students.

Sponsored by the Ned & Sarah Handy Fund for Dance and the Academy, the performance represents a collaboration with Catamount Arts and LSC initiated by Academy Dance instructor Marianne Handy Hraibi, a former Graham Technique demonstrator and performer.

The Company was founded in 1926 by dancer and choreographer Martha Graham, and is America’s oldest and most celebrated contemporary dance company, receiving international acclaim from audiences in over 50 countries throughout North and South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.

Graham’s uniquely American vision and creative genius earned her numerous honors and awards such as the Laurel Leaf of the American Composers Alliance in 1959 for her service to music. Her colleagues in theater, the members of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees Local One, voted her the recipient of the 1986 Local One Centennial Award for Dance, not to be awarded for another 100 years. In 1976, President Gerald R. Ford bestowed upon her the United States’ highest civilian honor, the Medal of Freedom, and declared her a “national treasure,” making her the first dancer and choreographer to receive this honor. Another Presidential honor was awarded in 1985 when President Ronald Reagan designated her among the first recipients of the United States National Medal of Arts.

Martha Graham Company dancers have performed at the Metropolitan Opera, Carnegie Hall, Paris Opera House, Covent Garden, and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, as well as at the base of the Great Pyramids in Egypt and in the ancient Herod Atticus Theatre on the Acropolis in Athens, Greece. The Company has also produced several award-winning films broadcast on PBS and around the world.

Though Martha Graham herself is the best-known alumna of  her company, dancing with the Company from its inception until the late 1960′s and choreographing 181 works in her lifetime, the Company has provided a training ground for some of modern dances’ most illustrious performers and choreographers.

Former members include Merce Cunningham, Erick Hawkins, Pearl Lang, Elisa Monte, Paul Taylor, Glen Tetley, Jacqulyn Buglisi, Donlin Foreman, and Pascal Rioult. Among celebrities who have joined the Company in performance are Mikhail Baryshnikov, Claire Bloom, Margot Fonteyn, Liza Minnelli, Rudolf Nureyev, Maya Plisetskaya, and Kathleen Turner.

Alan M. Kriegsman of the Washington Post referred to the Company as “one of the seven wonders of the artistic universe.”   A Los Angeles Times critic noted, “they seem able to do anything, and make it look easy as well as poetic.”  Ismene Brown of the London Daily Telegraph called the Company’s performance “unmissable,” and Donald Richie of Japan Times described its dancers as “Graham’s perfect instrument.

The Academy Master Class will be conducted by Miki Orihari, who has performed at St. Johnsbury Academy with her husband, Stephen Pier, a member of the Julliard Ballet faculty in 2004, 2005, and 2007.

Academy dance students also traveled to New York City in 2002 and 2005 for private Master Classes at the Martha Graham School of Contemporary Dance.

The Ned & Sarah Handy Fund for Dance at St. Johnsbury Academy is sustained by donors who support the Fund’s mission of providing professional concert dance exposure and training to the students of St. Johnsbury Academy.

There will be a book signing at the event for John Deane’s publication “Acts of Light.”

Additional information and tickets for the Martha Graham Dance Company concert can be obtained by contacting Catamount Arts at (802) 748-2600.

Filed under: Dance, Education