
June 2008 > School News
PLI Takes Curtain Call with Innovative
BRAVO! Project
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The BRAVO! Project
June 6, 2008
From left, Erika Chong Shuch, Eric
Lowy, Gloria Minjares, Tom Hughes, Tasha Anestos, Carlos Alvarado and
Kevin Pattison in "Excuse Me"
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The
Principal Leadership Institute (PLI) piloted The
BRAVO! Project with
the help of leading Bay Area artists. One purpose of the project is to prepare future administrators to integrate arts into local schools.
As part of the preparation in the model leadership program, the
credential candidates in PLI Cohort 8 spent four project days (30 hours) with the
artists and PLI graduates Karling Aguilera-Fort, Kyla Johnson, Marilyn Zoller Koral, Kevin Pattison and Han Phung during the Spring 2008 semester in theese artisitic mediums: such
as performance, spoken word, theater, digital storytelling and printmaking.
“They have started and will continue to experience the arts deeply and carry their importance
into their work as school leaders,” says PLI Coordinator Lynda
Tredway. “To
do that we examine the racial and school segregation history of
California, use the arts as healing and community-building and learn
how to work in diverse school communities.”
Their ongoing efforts culminated with special works-in-progress performances and
exhibitions: Taking Risks as Artists and Leaders in
and around Tolman Hall on June 6. The innovative projects, attended
by several PLI graduates, local school administrators, artists/mentors and
artists. The pieces included:
“Voices Of Superwomen with artist/mentor Ellen Sebastian
Chang
“Excuse Me” with artist/mentor Erika Chong
Shuch
“Sittin' On A Hyphen with artists/mentors Carlos
Aguirre and Tommy Shepherd
Digital Storytelling with artists/mentors Anne-Marie Harvey and Lina
Hoshino
Visual Arts with artist/mentor Victor Cartagena
Susan Stauter, Artistic Director, SFUSD and Antigone
Trimis, SFUSD Arts Education Master Plan Implementation
Manager, who helped coordinate the project, described the BRAVO! Project:
“Years ago, audiences shouted ‘Bravo!’ when
a performer exceeded expectations and took a great risk on the
stage; the word was and remains a powerful accolade, not voiced
lightly.
“From the start the thinking behind the design of this pilot BRAVO! Project
was guided by the goal to honor process over product so that students and artists
would be afforded a safe space to create where they would be free to go deep
and take the sort of risks that are the hallmark of the creative, artistic
experience. What would happen if students were allowed to follow their artistic
interests and passion and work one on one and in groups with accomplished artists?
What choices would they make, given the scaffolding of the arts and artistic
technique to assist them in expressing their personal truths and beliefs? When
is a risk worth taking, and how, in the arts, do we use risk to drive ourselves
to new insights and creative depths?
We are honored to celebrate the point to which the creative journey
has led these students in visual, media and performing arts, under
the guidance of their gifted and devoted artist/mentors. We applaud
the courage it takes to be vulnerable; the empathy it takes to create
something new and the perseverance it takes to give form to the
important beliefs, ideas and questions we hold in our hearts and
minds as educational leaders living in times of great chaos and
change.”
The BRAVO! Project is funded by the Arts Education Initiative,
which is funded in part by the Ford Foundation and the Clarence E. Heller Charitable Foundation, with special thanks to Ben Grandy and Susana Flores for their extra work on this project.