grphilbrick-blog
grphilbrick-blog
LANGUAGE heARTS
11 posts
Combining a love of art and literature in the ELA classroom
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
grphilbrick-blog · 7 years ago
Video
youtube
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCxzRGKl9qA)
0 notes
grphilbrick-blog · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
0 notes
grphilbrick-blog · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Friday. Tried to go out on a high note this week. I have so much respect and love for those teacher friends, mentors, and colleagues giving 💯. They often do it without thanks or recognition and sometimes they take a real trouncing for trying to do their level best. This one is for my professional pals (and hall buddies), my little guy for making me laugh, and the daily folks gettin’ their “teach” on with a smile (even when it’s rough). Holidays are approaching—-peace and love in advance.#thankateacher #thanksteacher #elateacher #teacherskid #iteach #teaching #teachingenglish #teachersfollowteachers #teachersofinstagram #winterbreakiscoming #thankyouteacher #thankyouteachers #teacherlife #teachers #teachershare #educators
0 notes
grphilbrick-blog · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
“Tho I am inland far, I hear and I know, For I was born the sea’s eternal thrall.” Today I hitched a ride on a tropical fish and looked for poetry about missing a home by the sea. #dreamofthesea #luciddream #elateacher #teachersofinstagram #teachersfollowteachers #findjoy #findbeauty #artiseverywhere #publicart #cityart #simplethings #whatmakesyouhappy #neverstopexploring #neverstoplearning #educator #teacher #teaching #poetrylife #teachersday #teachersofinstagram #teacherweekend #urbanadventure #mermaidvibes #teachertravels #coolplaces #visualcrush #postitfortheaesthetic #wednesdayvibes #ilovethesea #theweekend #photographylover
0 notes
grphilbrick-blog · 8 years ago
Video
My. Gosh. Just leave me here. Really, I’m not kidding. Hiding a grin I cannot suppress on this trip. I am embarrassed that I am blissing out on this ride more than the kids. I ❤️ 💕💕💯love weekend adventures. #mermaidforaday #mermaidlife #teacherweekend #iteach #teacheradventures #educatorlife #educator #beakidforever #elateacher #highschoolteacher #teachersofinstagram #teachersfollowteachers #artiseverywhere #sculptures #publicart #ifindbliss #ifindthebeautyineverything #makejoyhappen #followme #ornot #lovelife #artinstallation #havesomefun #livingart #simplethingsinlife #happyplace #artinthepark #todaywasagoodday #thursdayevening #experience
0 notes
grphilbrick-blog · 8 years ago
Video
Don’t worry—-no need for a fire drill!🔥🔥🔥🔥 A little writers’ workshop before break. Room 3030 is always on our hustle. Pi student essays are straight fire!!!!! We put in the work! And I am a cornball ... and I have a problem with corny teacher jokes. #teachersfollowteachers #teachersofinstagram #elateacher #almostbreak #winterbreakiscoming #whiteboardfun #straightfire🔥 #teaching #teachers #teachingwriting #teacherlife #teachersday #teachersrule #teachersrock #educator #highschoolteacher #teach #ninthgrade #classroom #norwichfreeacademy
0 notes
grphilbrick-blog · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
I hope this is a catch and release situation because it’s Friday! Hey teachers and students ... you can’t pour from an empty cup! Be good to yourself this weekend! Feeling very Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland in this here city! #saturdayfun #graffitiwall #artgram #murals #muralart #streetartistry #urbanart #wallart #artwall #grafittiart #graffitiartist #iteach #elateacher #educators #teacheradventures #teacherlife #travelingteacher #teachers #teachersday #highschoolteacher #graffiti #urbanexplorer #teaching #urbanexploration #coolart #streetartphotography #cityart #weekend #captured #awesomeart
0 notes
grphilbrick-blog · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Don’t mind if I do. Winter break 2017. I won’t post photos of the stack of essays that need grading right now—no need for a buzz kill!!! #dontharshmymellow #chill #teacher #winterbreak #teacher #teaching #elateacher #highschoolteacher #educator #teachertime #sleepinglate #teacherlife🍎 #teachersworkhard #essaygradingcanwait #fridaymood #instagraff #fridayvibes #teachersfollowteachers #teachergram #streetart #neon #urbanartist #murals
0 notes
grphilbrick-blog · 8 years ago
Video
youtube
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zIX0X6T5LJQ)
0 notes
grphilbrick-blog · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
“B4″ You Finish Your Fellowship…
It’s the craze that’s sweeping the 2017 FFT Fellow class. FELLOW BINGO!
Rules of the Game
Create a horizontal, vertical or diagonal line with photos of you “in action” on your fellowship (creativity encouraged).
Provide the proof in a single email with FFT BINGO in the subject line to [email protected]. Send the photos and descriptions of the boxes you’re dotting.
We mail you an FFT Swag Bag.
Deadline to submit photos is Labor Day 2017. Game on and good luck!
4 notes · View notes
grphilbrick-blog · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
To learn or not to learn? There is no question
Gretchen Philbrick (Norwich Free Academy - Norwich, CT) is following The Bard across Europe on her Fund for Teachers fellowship – experiencing The Globe Theatre and Stratford-Upon-Avon in England; attending the Gdansk Shakespeare Festival and European Shakespeare Research Association convention in Poland, and exploring Romeo and Juliet’s Verona in Italy – to expand creative and performative approaches to Shakespeare that explore, curate and connect students with content.
Shakespeare lessons “test my mettle” as a teacher. For my students, who confront numerous challenges, Shakespeare makes them face their biggest fears: they struggle to understand the text, make it their own, and share it with an audience of peers.
Why do I believe Shakespeare is worth the struggle? Because reading Shakespeare in the classroom does so much more for my students than just increasing content knowledge. The embodiment of the text and the performances give students a chance to work on skills that extend beyond curriculum. They surprise themselves and inspire me each year. Shy students face their public speaking fears. Quiet students discover their voice. Outgoing and extroverted students enjoy the pride and revelry of being in their element. In their interpretations, students showcase their love of their culture, pop culture, youth culture, and gamer culture. We laugh. We celebrate. We agonize over the tragic events in the text. I always view our Shakespeare unit of study as a blank slate, as odd as that may sound. It is a place for students to project so much of themselves and their vision.
I designed my Fund for Teachers grant to pursue a path for invigorating, nurturing and strengthening how I teach Shakespeare. My pilgrimage addresses three areas:
Shakespeare’s Home Beginning in London, I attended a live theatrical performance at Sam Wannamaker’s reconstructed Globe Theatre. While I know that this portion of the grant is somewhat predictable, I think it is important to remember that many of us have never been to these landmarks. It would be a major oversight to miss these stops. I then traveled by train to Stratford-upon-Avon to tour Shakespeare’s home and visit the Church of the Holy Trinity to view Shakespeare’s baptismal and burial place. While there, I took an afternoon tour of the Royal Shakespeare Company’s “The Other Place” which provides access to production spaces where “a play makes its way from page to stage.” I am looking for a way to use the scant resources I have to maximize the classroom stagings and I walked away with new ideas regarding costuming and props.
Shakespeare’s Inspiration In Verona, I spent several days exploring both the imagined, and real landscapes, depicted in Romeo and Juliet and took in as much of Italian culture as possible. Italy was a great draw for Shakespeare and I previously wondered why Shakespeare was so fascinated with Italian culture. I think it is important to share this idea of “borrowing” as it relates to Shakespeare with my students. Shakespeare felt free crossing cultural divides and appropriating and “borrowing” from others. I think often “purists” forget that many of Shakespeare’s plays were published as quartos and were drastically different from what we read today. In preparation for my fellowship, I attended the Folger Shakespeare First Folio exhibit and felt validation as I learned that adaptation was always meant to be part of the legacy of Shakespeare. I think this is something to share with students who feel Shakespeare is “stuffy” or staid.
Shakespeare’s Legacy My 18-day European tour is now culminating in 2017 European Shakespeare Research Association convention and Gdansk Shakespeare Festival in Poland. During the convention, I am attending two panels. The first is “Shakespeare and Dramaturgical Strategies in Contemporary European Performances.” This panel focuses on the unique and novel staging and appropriation of Shakespeare’s plays. From everyday, found objects (think ketchup bottles, sponges, etc.) arranged on a table top to radical “mash-ups” of Shakespeare’s war scenes broadcast as contemporary news footage, this panel discusses the new, innovative, and experimental approaches to staging Shakespeare’s work. The second panel is “Now Let Us Anatomize Shakespeare: Shakespeare-Inspired Ballets in European Ballet Companies.” This panel explores dance and music as points of entree for Shakespeare’s work. I use music as a way to bridge complex literary concepts and complicated texts. I look forward to being able to explore dance as another medium for interpreting the work with my students.
Enjoy photographs from Gretchen’s fellowship here.
The bottom line is this: I ask my students to persevere and pursue challenges in the classroom every day. I ask them to put themselves in situations that make them feel uncomfortable in an effort to seek personal and academic growth. This fellowship required facing a similarly daunting task and confronting my own anxieties in the name of development. I am terrified of flying and have not traveled since my twenties. I am afraid, like a student facing Shakespeare for the first time or performing a scene in front of classmates, of not being able to master my anxiety and my fear in pursuit of something important to me professionally and personally. However, to not go, to not learn, to not model growth, was not a question.
Gretchen has been happily teaching ninth grade English at Norwich Free Academy for the last four years. She came to her own education and her teaching career later in life and this non-traditional path gave her a sincere appreciation of education’s ability to shape, enrich and change lives.
1 note · View note