When students gather in Kat Lee’s art studio on the fifth floor of Jesuit Hall, they get right to work on projects they have developed. Usually, the medium and subject is up to them, after some consultation with Lee, who is often working alongside them, modeling how to be an artist, how to use the studio to its fullest potential.
Lee and her colleague Jenna Robinson, Chair of Fine and Performing Arts at the Prep, are “choice-based art educators,” allowing students the opportunity to explore their creative ideas.
“We start, of course, by teaching the craft and hold them accountable with high expectations,” Lee says. “After that, however, we allow them the flexibility and creativity to get there themselves, to find their way.”
Robinson says that it is important to ensure that the student artists have the groundwork. “We teach all of the necessary skills at the beginning so they have that knowledge,” she says. “In the fashion of true Jesuit education, we also reflect as we go to ensure that they are really learning the lessons.”
The art teachers facilitate project-based classes. “It is very student-centered,” Robinson says. “Their voice, their agency, is at the center of everything.”
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