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growth mindset

7 Reasons to Relax: Classroom Decor Made Easy!

August 19, 2020 By dhcbaldwin 2 Comments

7 Reasons to Relax: Classroom Decor Made Easy!

You’ve arrived at this blog post because you want an answer to– 7 reasons to relax: classroom decor made easy! I think I can help. Although this post was written several years ago, much of it is still as important as it was then. So, read on…

In my opinion, there is one thing about this pandemic which is/was good. Celebrities have been de-mystified. Since everyone is quarantined at home, suddenly we are all alike.

We see people we admire on television or movies or the stage in a whole different light.  Gone is the lighting, makeup and hair stylist. When you’ve watched these folks day in and day out for years, you begin to think they are super humans with flawless skin, perfect hair and toned bodies.  You expect their homes to be decorated with the latest style and elegantly.

Seven Reasons You Need to Stop Stressing About How To Decorate My Classroom

That hasn’t always been the case now that the pandemic has kept most of us at home.  I watch Good Morning America every day and I love seeing the newscasters who are televising from home.  In particular, Ginger Zee and Robin Roberts appear to have rather normal homes.  Ginger usually televises outside or near a window.  Robin televises from her basement.  The first week, the wall behind her was plain white.  I think it’s painted blue now.

7 Reasons to Relax: Classroom Decor Made Easy!

Robin trades out photos people have sent her after they appeared on GMA with her.  Lara Spencer televises from home with her darling dog, Reba who has calmed down considerably since the pandemic began.  Lara’s house is beautiful, but I think that’s to be expected since she has an interest in interior design  It’s stylish, colorful and but not over the top.  I appreciate that.

This is leading me somewhere, honest.

I appreciate finding famous people quotes.  Just like watching all these celebrities in their homes as they televise, the quotes give me some insight into the real person, not their public image. Many times you can gather some insight into their growth mindset.

I have a blog post about growth mindset here: Growth Mindset in the Study of Famous Theater Artists

7 Reasons to Relax: Classroom Decor Made Easy!

The easiest way to decorate your classroom is with posters.  Here are seven reasons which you could use from famous stage actors.

  1.   These artists are in the spot light all the time, so it’s easy to find something new they can be quoted for saying.
  2.    Use their quotes in a class discussion.
  3.   Many are fabulous role models for our students (see Viola Davis and Lin Manuel Miranda, for example.)
  4.   They are timely–You can use them all year and they never have to be switched out for others.
  5.   If you find the quotes yourself, they are free to use.  Check brainyquote.com for ideas.
  6.   This is a unique idea. No one else in your school will have them so students won’t see them repeated in anyone else’s     room.
  7.    They can be used a variety of theater exercises or projects–Use a quote to devise a theater piece or in an improvisation.  Wouldn’t that be neat?

Viola Davis 

“Your ability to adapt to failure, and navigate your way out of it, absolutely 100 percent makes you who you are.”

Lin Manuel Miranda

“The fun for me in collaboration is, one, working with other people just makes you smarter; that’s proven.”

By the way, here’s a free poster for your use: Lin-Manuel Miranda Poster

Daveed Diggs

The act of being nice to somebody at Starbucks is actually a huge thing. It’s a real change you can effect in somebody’s life every day.”

7 Reasons to Relax: Classroom Decor Made Easy!

Meryl Streep

“The gift of human beings is that we have the power of empathy.”

Benedict Cumberbatch

“If you have an over-preoccupation with perception and trying to please people’s expectations, then you can go mad.”

If you are looking for posters for your classroom, I’ve got several. (I could never find what I wanted for my classroom, so I made them myself.) Click HERE.

Seven Reasons You Need to Stop Stressing About How To Decorate My Classroom

7 Reasons to Relax: Classroom Decor Made Easy!

Idina Menzel

“I wish I had read more and majored in literature rather than theatre. I think I would have been a better artist for it. I am trying to play catch-up now.”

Denzel Washington

“I’d be more frightened by not using whatever abilities I’d been given. I’d be more frightened by procrastination and laziness.”

I think it’s a great hobby collecting quotes of all kinds from famous people or books.   They lift your mood, help you to express your thoughts, inspire you, give you a different perspective, costs nothing and are tremendously interesting because you select the ones which speak to you.  You should try collecting quotes.  I have one friend who collects book passages that she loves and notates them in a journal.   She’s done this for many years.  I wonder how many journals she has filled?

In-depth Investigation of a Remarkable Person

7 Reasons to Relax: Classroom Decor Made Easy!

I ran on to the website: technokids.com with an excellent reason to study people and use quotes as a stepping off point.

An in-depth investigation into a remarkable person can fit into almost all curriculum areas: language arts, history, social studies, science, art, or computer studies. Here are some ideas:

  • Write a Life Story: Practice expository writing. Write an engaging life story that offers insight into a person. Captivate reader’s attention.
  • Celebrate a Historical Figure: Develop a deeper understanding of a historical period. Research the contributions of a historical figure. Explain their importance to the past and influence on future events.
  • Acknowledge a Hero: Inspire others with the accomplishments of personal hero, role model, mentor, or newsmaker. Detail their successes and challenges. Outline reasons their efforts are admirable.
  • Investigate Scientific Contributions: Appreciate amazing research findings and inventions. Outline the path to discovery of a scientist. Explain how their work has improved the lives of others.
  • Appreciate the Arts: Learn about an art period or artistic style by studying a famous artist. Examine their artwork. Describe its meaning and how it influenced other artists.
  • Develop Word Processing Skills: Introduce advanced word processing skills in a computer studies course. Learn to customize styles, insert a table of contents, draw a graphic organizer, organize data using tables, adjust page layout, and add bookmarks.

If you are looking for more theater artist quotes, I have two products Growth Mindset Posters for this express purpose. 

 

7 Reasons to Relax: Classroom Decor Made Easy!

7 Reasons to Relax: Classroom Decor Made Easy!

Here is a new set!  Drama Class Posters

Each product includes:

This is a set of 24 growth mindset, the arts and character education posters which highlights the subject by quoting famous theater artists. In addition, the set includes suggested uses such as class discussion, improvisation or for an essay. These posters can be displayed all year long or along with a particular theme.

7 Reasons to Relax: Classroom Decor Made Easy!

These quotes speak about being your authentic self, how to handle failure, what makes the arts and theater special, being versatile, loving yourself and resiliency.

Although these were created for secondary classes, an elementary class could use these as well. The teacher is the expert as to which posters their students should study. Check out:  Growth Mindset Posters

I heartily suggest you or your students collect quotes which speak to them. One of my favorites by Ann Landers is, ” People of integrity expect to be believed. They also know time will prove them right and are willing to wait.” Boy, that’s me all over although I don’t like the waiting part….

I’ve just created pendants for the theater classroom!  You can find them here:  Posters and Pendants Theater Artists Quotes

What is a favorite quote of yours?  I’d love to hear it.  Contact me at dhcbaldwin@gmail.com or DeborahBaldwin.net

Seven Reasons You Need to Stop Stressing About How To Decorate My Classroom

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Filed Under: Arts, arts education, Creativity, drama education, Education, middle grades, performing arts, Teacherspayteachers, theater, youth theatre Tagged With: Benedict Cumberbatch, Daveed Diggs, Denzel Washington, Ginger Zee, Good Morning America, growth mindset, Lara Spencer, Lin Manuel Miranda, Oprah Winfrey, quotes from famous people, Robin Roberts, Viola Davis

Growth Mindset in the Study of Famous Theater Artists

November 12, 2019 By dhcbaldwin 6 Comments

Growth Mindset in Theater Artists

Growth Mindset in the Study of Theater Artists

Today, let’s talk about the importance of growth mindset in the study of famous theater artists, Growth mindset is a popular buzz word phrase used for a few years.  At first, I wasn’t certain I knew what it was.  Now that I’ve studied it, it’s a terrific philosophy. 

Growth mindset is the belief that we can grow and change through education and practice.  Some people don’t have a growth mindset, but one that is fixed.  A fixed mindset looks at challenges and changes as a threat.

Recently, I’ve discovered I’ve always had a growth mindset I just didn’t realize it. In fact, I demonstrate it daily.

The Transformative Power When Students Apply Stage Makeup
The Transformative Power When Students Apply Stage Makeup

When I was a student in the seventies, it would have helped immeasurably if someone taught us growth mindset.  Instead we fumbled through our education learning about important people but never understanding the reasons to study them.

As a theater educator for over thirty-eight years, I discovered most of our students aren’t familiar with Broadway performers.  They know the ones which are most popular as Lin Manuel Miranda, Ben Platt, Idina Menzel, and Kristin Chenoweth.  Those are all performers.

Here is some news about Lin Manuel Miranda which is awesome!

https://www.broadwayworld.com/article/Lin-Manuel-Miranda-Family-Fund-Has-Committed-1M-To-Theater-Scholarships-For-Students-Of-Color-20200304

What about playwrights, composers, choreographers and designers? Or lesser known performers such as Billy Porter equally as important?

Check out my bundle of Famous Theater Artist biographies! This a smaller resource than the unit mentioned below.

Growth Mindset in the Study of Famous Theater Artists

Growth Mindset in the Study of Famous Theater Artists

I researched the subject of growth mindset and ran upon this article in Times Magazine, which states:

“The process of historical inquiry—and what it teaches students along the way—is history’s greatest reward. Studying history teaches that society is not stagnant. Studying history teaches us to question how and why things change, who drives those changes, whose interests are served by them and who gets left out of the equation. History teaches that human actions have consequences. Analysis of past events teaches students to ask probing questions, challenge preconceived assumptions and to recognize that humans have the capacity to be both very, very good and very, very cruel.

Analyzing historic documents teaches us to be careful readers. To be skeptical of one side of the story. To be aware of our own biases. Most critically, history teaches us who we are. I am a Jew, a New Yorker, a citizen of the United States, a grandchild of Holocaust survivors. These identities mean nothing without a historical backdrop to set them against. “We swim in the past as fish do in water,” wrote historian Eric Hobsbawm. “We cannot escape from it.”

Becoming Rigorous Thinkers

Growth Mindset in the Study of Famous Theater Artists

Historian historian Eric Hobsbawm continues, “Our students may not go on to all be historians, or even remember the hundreds of facts they learn in a given year. But through history they can become more disciplined and rigorous thinkers. They can be challenged to be more independent-minded analysts, and, I would argue, more compassionate human beings—skills that historical study inculcates and that lead directly to life and career success.”

Someone for Students to Admire

They allow you to stand on the shoulders of giants. In the 1670’s Sir Isaac Newton wrote in a letter to his friend Robert Hooke, “If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.” That is exactly what reading biographies can do for you – allow you to see further because of what these people have achieved. Admittedly not every biography is about a “giant” but most are (and you can certainly pick from that list). However, even if the person you’re reading about is despicable and not worthy of praise or admiration, there likely are still many lessons to be gleaned from their life experiences and behaviors – even if most are “things you don’t want to do.”

  They remind you that history repeats itself. George Santayana wrote in 1905, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” It was true long before then, it was true then and it hasn’t changed today. Reading about the real experiences of others gives context for the decisions and consequences that we all will face. History (recent or distant) will repeat itself because those who are making history were, and are, human beings. One of the best ways to take advantage of the experience of others is by reading biographies of historical figures, not academic tomes about history.

The Importance of Growth Mindset Study

Growth Mindset in the Study of Theater Artists

  They promote self discovery. A good self help or professional development book will outline specific steps, tools, techniques and approaches to try. These can be valuable and successful shortcuts to help you make improvements and get results in most any area of your life. A biography, on the other hand, won’t be as direct.

You will discover ideas and approaches on your own through the stories and experiences of others. This discovery learning process is often far more satisfying, and most always more lasting, than reading a list of steps.

Viewing the World with a Different Perspective

  They allow you to see the world in new ways. Rather than being completely focused on your professional discipline, looking at the way you and your colleagues always look at things, reading about someone from a different era, a different background or a totally different set of life experiences will give you new perspective. In truth, most great innovations come from taking an idea from one situation, discipline or industry and adapting it to another. Reading biographies is one great way to do this.

  They give you mentors at a distance.If you have read about the life of Abraham Lincoln, Gandhi, Churchill or anyone else you select, you have had a glimpse into their mind and now have the advantage or “knowing” them. These people can become your mentors at a distance, if you allow yourself the chance to think about what advice they might give you, or what they might do in a the situation or choice you are facing.”

Looking for posters for your classroom?  Check some out here:  

Growth Mindset Posters.

Pendants and Posters with Theater Artist quotes

Growth Mindset in the Study of Theater Artists

If you are interested in your students learning about growth mindset in theater artists, I have a unit for you: Growth Mindset Unit:  Famous Theater Artists

I’m especially proud of this particular.  I won’t lie–it took me about fifty hours to complete.

This unit (36 pages, 8-10 days) concerns growth mindset in professional theater artists. Students research a theater artist, answer questions about artist’s growth mindset, consider their own mindset and finish with a creative project. This unit was created for high school students, however it could be adapted for middle grade students.

The Product includes:

  • Letter to Teacher
  • Two Warm Ups: MY versions of Popular Theater Games and Exercises
  • The Rationale for Studying Theater Artists
  • The Rationale for Studying Growth Mindset Through Theater Artists
  • Teacher’s Script–What I Say and How I Say it!
  • Procedure for Each Day
  • Theater Artists List– EIGHTY-SIX Actors, Actresses, Playwrights, Choreographers, Directors, etc. (Great care and vetting was taken to select appropriate artists from various backgrounds.)
  • Project Choices Assignment Sheet–What is Expected in the Projects
  • THREE Rubrics (EDITABLE)–Slide, Object or Monologue
  • Exit Slip prompts for 8 days–Growth Mindset Questions for the Students to Ponder about Themselves
  • Video Clips
  • Source Page

Like this?  You’ll find it here: Growth Mindset Posters

If you are home schooling your student, this would be a terrific unit for him or her, too!  There’s so many different ways this can be used.  A gifted middle school class could select one assignment of the three choices–with everyone making a slide presentation, for example.  A high school drama, language arts or even psychology class might find this an interesting project.  A unit which can be used by many different students in several grade levels and subjects is very valuable.

Here is a bundle of Famous Theater Artists which give you another way to teach about growth mindset.  Famous Theater Artists

I hope you check it out and think it’s valuable, too!

What experiences do you have with growth mindset in yourself?  That’s part of the focus of the unit.  I’d love to hear from you.

If you are interested in other drama education products for high school, check out the Play Reading Analysis Presentation and Project.

Here’s another unit I think you might like:  Tom Sawyer Study Guide and Unit

Contact me at dhcbaldwin@gmail.com or DeborahBaldwin.net

Deborah Baldwin, Dramamommaspeaks

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Filed Under: Arts, arts education, drama education, Education, excellence in teaching, High School, middle grades, performing arts, Professional Theatre, Teacherspayteachers, youth theatre Tagged With: actor, actress, biographies, choreographer, costume designer, direting, fixed mindset, growth mindset, playwright, sound designer, theater artists, theater artists lessons

Inspire Growth Mindset with Drama & the Arts

August 20, 2017 By dhcbaldwin Leave a Comment

Blue theater stage curtains with actor standing in the spotlight

Inspire Growth Mindset with Drama & the Arts
Free psychology success personal illustration

I just love the arts, don’t you? Did you know they teach growth mindset? In fact, there are Inspire Growth Mindset with Drama & the Arts—and they’re more powerful than you might think. From building resilience to encouraging risk-taking, the arts offer a dynamic path for students to grow both academically and emotionally.

In case you don’t know what growth mindset is:

People believe that their most basic abilities can be developed through dedication. Or they need to work hard hard.  Brains and talent are just the starting point.

Amen and amen.

Here’s an article from Edutopia.com concerning ways to accelerate learning and growth mindset through the arts.  It’s worth a read.

teaching apple

Teaching Failure as a Path to Confidence and Creativity

At New Mexico School for the Arts (NMSA) — a dual arts and academic curriculum — failure is taught as an important part of the journey toward success. Understanding that mistakes are indicators for areas of growth, freshmen learn to give and receive feedback. By senior year, students welcome tough, critical feedback — and even insist on it.

When Natesa, a senior at NMSA, arrived as a freshman, she had a hard time pushing herself in the areas that were difficult for her to master: choreography and getting into character.

“Now, I feel like I can channel my inner self and my inner fierceness when I need it, and even my inner beauty,” reflects Natesa. “I became more willing to take risks, and I think that taking risks is a big part of who you want to become, and who you’re choosing to be.”

Students audition to get into an NMSA program specific to their craft — dance, theater, music, or visual arts. Each day, they have their academic classes from 9AM to 2PM, and after lunch, they have their art classes until 4:45PM.

“Students have to take risks,” says Cristina Gonzalez, the former chair of NMSA’s visual arts department. “That’s something that is so unique to learning in the arts. Great art comes from risk-taking, from being willing to fail. Maybe it will work. Maybe I’ll discover something about myself, something about my capacity that I wasn’t even aware of, and that’s so exciting for a student.”

If you want to help your students develop a growth mindset — the belief that they can improve their abilities through effort — helping them become more comfortable with risk-taking and modeling critical feedback through critique journals are two of NMSA’s strategies that you can adapt to your own practice. Here is someone with a growth mindset  your students will appreciate:  Audra Mcdonald 

Inspire Growth Mindset with Drama & the Arts

Teach Your Students That It’s OK to Make Mistakes

Making mistakes, not knowing the answer — this is part of the artistic process. “You’re going to make bad paintings,” says Gonzalez. “You’re going to make bad photographs. You’re going to fumble your way through it, and in fact, that’s how you learn. You need to make those mistakes.”

The idea that you learn from your mistakes is embedded into their entire arts curriculum. Teacher, expert, and peer critiques are innate to the arts process. Immediate feedback is part of the norm. You might pause your piano student in mid-rehearsal to say, “When you get here, make sure you get a really clean pedal on the B flat, but that was great. That’s the kind of energy you want.”

Inspire Growth Mindset with Drama & the Arts

Try, Reflect, Repeat: Learning Through Immediate Feedback

In dance class, you might tell your students how they need to rotate their legs differently when taking their demi-plié in first position.

When ninth-grade theater students rehearse their Working in Silence scenes, they perform in front of their peers and faculty, receive feedback from their teachers, and then re-perform the scene to immediately incorporate their feedback.

“Getting to do the scenes a couple different times really helps because then we get to take the feedback and we get to apply it, and that is the whole learning process,” says Kara, a ninth-grade theater student. “If you fail, then you can do it again, and you could make big leaps and bounds and learn from that.”

Teach Your Students That It’s OK to Make Mistakes

You can connect risk-taking — and helping your students build comfort around it — to their interests outside of school. Gonzalez has students in her class who enjoy skateboarding. She draws connections to risk-taking by referencing their experience with trying a new trick. “

A skateboarder knows what it feels like to try a new trick, how scary it is that they actually might fall,” she says. “They could get hurt, and all their buddies are watching. We ask them to do that every day in the art studio.”

Inspire Growth Mindset with Drama & the Arts

With any art form, students can fall into a pattern of doing what they’re comfortable with or what they’re good at doing without risking something new because they don’t want to make a mistake. “It’s our job as teachers to go, ‘Do that new new trick. Go to the precipice,'” explains Gonzalez. Looking for a Growth Mindset Unit?  Grab one here

By encouraging your students, you’re helping them to explore their craft and expand their ability — whether they execute a new technique right out of the gate or over time with feedback and practice. Either way, they see that taking risks pays off.

Inspire Growth Mindset with Drama & the Arts
“Failure isn’t the end of the road,” explains Cindy Montoya, NMSA’s principal. “You learn from failure. It gives you more information on how to do something better. It’s fodder for success. It’s a cycle of either learning about yourself, the content, or your art form.”

Teach Your Students to Appreciate Feedback

Inspire Growth Mindset with Drama & the Arts

Once your students go through the process of applying constructive feedback to improve their work — and once they create something beautiful as a result — they’ll see its value. They’ll learn to appreciate and even want feedback. “Being able to accept critique and not feel hurt by it is an important skill for us to learn,” says Serena, a 10th-grade student. “We’re taking those critiques and learning how to put them to use.”

Creating something, receiving feedback, and revising their work is a natural part of the artistic process that your students can apply toward their academic classes. “The strengths and skills that these artists come to us with are hard work and a willingness to keep trying,” says Geron Spray, an English and history teacher. “They have perseverance, they take constructive criticism well, and they build on it.”

It’s not uncommon to hear students say, “I’m not good at math,” or “I’m bad at writing essays.” An arts education helps students to see that they can improve at their craft with effort. They can become better at math.

Inspire Growth Mindset with Drama & the Arts

They can become better at writing essays. “They start to see that connection between struggling through the practice, getting feedback, going in for help, and the outcome,” says Eric Crites, NMSA’s assistant principal.

The Power of Feedback: Guiding Growth Through Reflection

“It’s just so great to watch a student go through that process of struggle, have a teacher believe in them, and then at the end, they have a result that they can be proud of,” adds Gonzalez.

Give your students journals to write down the feedback they receive from you. It’s a way for them to store immediate feedback from each day to review and apply later, and it also allows you to model giving constructive criticism. When providing feedback to your students, share both their successes and areas for improvement, and be specific.

“Feedback is fundamental to growing oneself as an artist,” says Adam McKinney, the chair of NMSA’s dance department. “I try to model what it means to provide critical feedback to my dancers.” One way that the dance department models critical feedback is through dance journals.

teaching apple
Throughout the class, students write their teacher’s feedback in their dance journal. For example, says McKinney, a student might write, “‘When I’m taking my demi-plié in first position, rotate from the top of my legs so that my knees are going over my first and second toes.’

For me, that next level of cognition — to understand the feedback, realize the importance of the feedback, and then to incorporate that into their bodies — is essential as young artists.”

By giving constructive criticism to their peers, your students will learn to better appreciate receiving feedback and they’ll improve their skills to self-assess their own work. “Having young artists provide critical feedback to each other provides a deeper understanding and another layer of what it means to get better as an artist,” says McKinney. “That critical feedback is essential to improving one’s art.”

NMSA develops students’ abilities to assess their own and others’ work through showing them examples of mastery, equipping them with technical vocabulary, and providing them with opportunities to practice peer critique through fishbowl discussions, Visual Thinking Strategies, and Post-it note critiques (See Mastering Self-Assessment: Independent Learning Through the Arts).

“Our students have learned that they can receive feedback — even negative feedback,” says Crites, “make a correction, and then come up with something amazing.”

teaching apple
“We develop this idea of self-reflection very early in the department,” adds McKinney. “Why are you a dancer? Why is that important to the world? I know that the power of art saves lives. I have several young people in the department — and who have graduated — who communicate that art has saved their lives, and it certainly saved my own.”

Growth mindset–gotta have it!

Interested in some posters to decorate your Classroom focused on growth mindset, character education and the arts?

Check out: Growth Mindset Posters I and Growth Mindset Posters II

Growth Mindset

The arts saved my life, theater specifically.  Here’s a post describing it: How Theater Saved My Life

What ways have you used growth mindset in your classroom?  I’d love to hear about it.

Contact me at dhcbaldwin@gmail.com  or DeborahBaldwin.net

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Filed Under: arts education, drama education, Education, Teaching, youth theatre Tagged With: growth mindset, growth mindset in the arts, learning through dedication and hard work, teaching methods

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