I have been teaching high school and college English for more than 40 years and, although I’m way too old to wallow in regret, it wasn’t until practically the third decade of my career that I understood the transcendent importance of exposing my students to what Baltimore and the metropolitan area have to offer – culturally, historically, and educationally. Our kids have priceless opportunities to see and learn from the myriad museums, theaters, and galleries that surround them; What’s more, these cultural institutions need us almost as badly as we need them.
Last spring one of my English elective classes went to a Towson University student matinee of “X,” a play about Malcom X's struggle with Elijah Mohammed and the Nation of Islam. Based on what he subsequently shared and wrote in class, one of my students clearly learned more from that production than anything I taught him. This statement is less a knock on my teaching ability than it is a monument to the power of live theater.
A few years back I had an idea to send pairs of students off to explore area theaters and then report back to the class about their experiences. Last year, two kids visited a small theater in the Station North arts district to see an evening performance of a noir play. I am certain the performance itself was illuminating, but the fact that they witnessed a community theater surviving in a tiny space in a marginal neighborhood thanks to the will and chutzpah of a struggling management team made even more of an impression than the play.
Over the past five or so years, I’ve taken groups of kids to Everyman Theatre, Center Stage, the Chesapeake Shakespeare Company, Theatre Project, Towson University, and UMBC. Typically these organizations give us great deals because they need to cultivate young audiences in order to survive. Because of the relationship my Friends School colleague Helen Berkeley has cultivated over the years with Towson University, our aforementioned trip to the production of X was comped.
Baltimore, of course, is as full of edgy museums as it is of dynamic theaters. I’ve taken several of my Friends School English elective classes to the American Visionary Art Museum to see exhibits that were thematically related to what we were doing in class. One such trip to see an exhibit of apocalyptic art coincided with our reading of Elie Wiesel's Holocaust novel Day. For my Theater of Revolt elective, in which even the darkest plays manage to end on a vaguely positive note, we visited AVAM to see an exhibit celebrating hope.
To be clear these explorations are not R&R for the kids or for me. To ensure that they’re maximally engaged, I ask students to photograph four or five works and then write about them, coming up with appropriate textual quotes to make thematic connections between what we're reading and what they saw.
Knowing that my American Experience class had a Beat unit featuring Kerouac's On the Road, Ben Roach called my attention to a Baltimore Museum of Art exhibit of mid 20th century American art to which I took the class a few years ago. There I ran into Libby Formant, a former student employed who was employed there and who has since opened her own gallery, Tectonic Space, in the Barclay neighborhood of Baltimore City. No exaggeration to say that I'm dying to find a thematic excuse to get a class down to an exhibit of hers. I wish all of our kids could see what she has accomplished there, against all odds.
Keeping it in the family, last fall, same course but with different students, we visited the Irish Railway Workers Museum in West Baltimore, co-founded by retired Friends School history teacher Nick Fessenden. There the kids learned that the horrendous experience of the New York Irish written about in Stephen Crane’s Maggie: A Girl of the Streets differed fundamentally from that of the upwardly mobile Irish in turn-of-the-century Baltimore.
There's more going on in Baltimore now than any of us could ever have time to fully learn from and appreciate, and shame on us if our kids don't get heavy doses of exposure to it, early and often.
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The Benefits Of Learning Through Field Trips - TeachThought
Major benefits for students who attend live theater, study finds -- Science Daily