Tomorrow the installation of the Pizza Hut will come down from Field Work and Hannah will go away back to Toronto. So in case you were not able to see it, there are some pictures of the installation here.
PS, Hannah has been involved with this project called The Pedagogical Impulse working with Helen Reed for a woman named Stephanie Springgay at University of Toronto’s teacher education program. The panels and workshops that they did at Open Engagement were SO NEAT. Today they made a human concept map with 1-inch buttons pinned on everyone’s clothes, and a bunch of blaze orange nylon twine. And in Toronto, they have been making an edition of chocolates with a class of 6th graders. GOODBYE HANNAH I’LL MISS YOU
May 18
Blue tarp video on loop next to display of gorgeous prints of Pizza Hut details
May 18
For Immediate Release! From Hannah! ##################
Howard Hutsis/was a series of embedded art-works and experiments produced in the woods near Corbett, Oregon in collaboration with 6th graders, high school students and staff of the Multnomah Education Service District’s Outdoor School. This project was initiated in parallel to ArtODS, a pilot project that began to incorporate the arts and creative practices into the existing curriculum and community life at Howard Outdoor School during the Fall of 2011. Both of these initiatives have been generously supported by; Friends of Outdoor School, the Gray Family Fund, the Wieden Family Public Fund and The Starseed Foundation.
Also, thanks to all of the organizers of Open Engagement!
“Open Engagement is an international conference that sets out to explore various perspectives on art and social practice and expand the dialogue around socially engaged art making.” It’s a function of PSU’s Art and Social Practice program!
It’s happening in Portland this weekend! I will be there, Hannah “Minty” Jickling and her partner Helen Reed will be presenting about their art and education pedagogy, it will be amazing.
Minty (Hannah Jickling) cut and planted five posts that will be the framework for the Animals hike bird blind.
This week, sixth grade students from Da Vinci, Beach, Skyline, Jason Lee, Gray, Boise-Eliot, and Dexter McCarty schools got to learn about fort building, sculpture, and bird blinds. Minty guided their use of tools to transform red alder and vine maple saplings into materials for building.
Sep 29
At Fall Session Consortium, staff members from Sandy River, Namanu, and Howard Outdoor School sites work with Artist in Residence Hannah Jickling on the fort.
Art is a lot of things, but ODS stands for Multnomah Education Service District’s Outdoor School program. You might be wondering, “What is Outdoor School?”
In the last 45 years, Outdoor School has provided hands-on, place-based education in a residential community to 300,000 sixth graders in this region. Traditionally, Outdoor School brings four sixth grade classes from different parts of Multnomah County to a site in the outdoors, where they learn, live, work, eat, and play together for a week. High school Student Leaders volunteer to give a week of their lives as the students’ field study instructors and cabin leaders. A staff of 12 mentor these Student Leaders in their teaching and leadership, and ensure that students are safe and well cared for.
In each week of Outdoor School we see students who discover that they are smart and can be successful in science, who socially transform before their peers’ and teachers’ eyes, and who love their experience so much they can’t wait to return in four years to give it to another group of children. As Student Leaders, high school students gain countless skills and strengths in their practice with youth. The program has inspired generations of leaders and educators. MESD Outdoor School is outstanding for many reasons, but one of its core strengths is that it is designed for everyone in the region to experience. It has become a rite of passage for anyone who has grown up in Multnomah County.
However, as school districts have faced enormous funding challenges in recent years, this fall the only districts that are able to participate are Portland Public Schools and Gresham-Barlow. These two districts are sending their sixth grade classes for a three day, two night field science experience.
My name is Jennifer Starkey, or Jingo at Outdoor School. I got to go to Howard ODS as a sixth grader in 1993, and was a Student Leader at Sandy River ODS from 1998-2000. I got to return to Howard and work as a Plants Field Instructor from 2007 to 2009. My experience teaching at Howard helped me decide to pursue a Masters of Arts in Teaching from Lewis & Clark in secondary arts education. In Fall 2010, I chose to return to Howard to serve as a Program Leader. That session, I was introduced to Hannah Jickling, a practicing artist from PSU’s Art and Social Practice program who was interested in what happens at ODS. In collaboration with Dan “Teal” Prince, the Outdoor School Coordinator, and Kim Silva, Development Director of Friends of Outdoor School, we recognized the potential of incorporating the arts into Outdoor School’s program. Through the winter, we developed a plan and applied for funding to help make it happen. Thanks to the generosity and support of Friends of Outdoor School, the Gray Family Fund, the Wieden Family Public Fund, and The Starseed Foundation, we are implementing a pilot project at Howard this fall called ArtODS.
ArtODS will be facilitated by Artist in Residence Hannah Jickling and myself. Caldera Arts, a non-profit organization that mentors low-income youth in Portland and Central Oregon with the arts, will work with us to give us support, equipment, training, and consultation.
I will be helping Howard’s four Field Instructors create lessons that use art to support science instruction, and helping its six Program Leaders with using creativity in community building activities.
Hannah will focus on place based art-making, outdoor architecture, and bringing contemporary art practice to sixth grade and high school students during their stay at Howard.
ArtODS will allow us to find out some of the answers to these questions: What if we could turn Weather into a tv show? What if we could incorporate creative writing into cabin time? What if we could build forts in the forest? What if we had a photography station? What if we turned this lesson into a video? What if every cabin got their own art materials? What if the experience of Outdoor School was already a giant art project anyway? What if students got to find out that they are artists, even though they thought they couldn’t draw?
One of our primary goals is to help students experience art outside of the classroom and gain practice with multiple forms of media, which might include writing, performance, mapmaking, song, video, dance, photography, drawing, installation, sculpture, or any combination of those things. Authentic application of these things in the field, in the community, and with a practicing artist will offer a chance to expand students’ understanding of what art can be.
We aim to help Howard’s experienced, talented staff explore and develop lessons that they might not have had time or resources to implement otherwise. We hope to make creative thinking another dimension of our curriculum so we can make science and friendship even more accessible to students, replicable at all sites, as another asset of this long-standing program.
I go on site with Hannah and the rest of Howard staff tomorrow! I hope you follow us on our ArtODS journey!