I teach art at Bountiful Elementary School, using the TAB teaching model. I stumbled on this method last year. It was my first year teaching art, and I was struggling. I had some students that loved every project every week, but many were dissatisfied.
One week I introduced pastels, and "Randy" loved it. He was usually disruptive, but not that week. He was engaged, fascinated with the pastels, and the way they'd glide over the paper. When the hour of art was over, he ran to me, breathless, "Can we do this again next week, Mrs. Dyer? Please?" I mumbled some sort of noncommital "we'll see, Randy", figuring that by the next week, he'd have forgotten all about it.
Randy walked into class the following week, and marched over to me as quickly as he could, "Mrs. Dyer! Mrs. Dyer! Are we going to use those same things today? You know, those papelle things?"
I was stunned. Here was a boy that was usually antsy, uninvolved, silly. He couldn't remember where the trash can was from week to week, but he remembered using
pastels? Even if he couldn't remember how to pronounce it, I knew that, clearly, this was something he was excited about.
I had to disappoint him, "No, Randy, we're not using pastels today. But we
are going to do something just as fun!" He just kind of hung his head, "Can we use them again another day?" he pleaded.
That was when I knew that I was going to make changes. I began by coming up with a "free time" table; after students finished the assigned project, they could use the free time materials as they pleased. The kids hurried through their assigned projects, then raced over to the free time materials, often creating complex and well thought out pieces. I thought to myself, "too bad we can't have free time for the entire art period". But I was convinced that somehow, that wasn't allowed, it was against the rules.
Fortunately, last November, as I was surfing the internet, trying to come up with a Thanksgiving themed art project, I came across this blog:
http://tabchoiceteaching.blogspot.com/ It was a revelation! Here was an accepted method of teaching children art! Without forcing them to churn out cookie cutter projects! I read up on this method, mostly here:
http://knowledgeloom.org/tab/index.jspI started making the transition in January 2006. And you know what? I haven't looked back!