Art education majors volunteer at detention center
July 8, 2012
A new volunteer program emerged this summer: Art education majors visit the
Portage County Juvenile Detention Center and teach students art history.
Dan Humphrey, a senior art education major and president of the National Art
Education Association student chapter, established the program this year.
Humphrey said he “immediately fell in love with the students” at the detention
center during his field experience.
“I enjoy knowing that I’m making [the students’] day that much better,” Humphrey
said.
The program provides kids in the detention center the opportunity to learn art for
a 10-week period. Kent Students teach two, hour-and-a-half-long classes every
Friday. Out of the 15 volunteers, three to six visit the detention center each week.
“We also prepare students for alternative teaching, so they’re really getting this
powerful, holistic, ‘I can teach anywhere’ experience,” Linda Poling, art education
coordinator, said.
Students at the center are between the ages of 12 and 17. Each class has about
seven or eight students. Humphrey said they generally focus on lessons about
contemporary art.
“We really stress the use of contemporary art because it speaks to the current
generation,” Poling said.
During each class session, the volunteers teach art history, play game then go into
the studio. They develop their own lesson plans and topics to teach the students
based off of their own interests.
“Personally, I find a work I really enjoy then find two more supporting artworks that
support it,” Humphrey said.
Humphrey’s favorite lesson was based off of TOMS shoes. TOMS is an organization
that donates a pair of shoes to a child in need when another pair is purchased.
Humphrey’s lesson was to make two ceramic coffee mugs. Students could keep one
and the other was donated. By the end of the lesson, students wanted to donate
both.
“The students realized they were making a difference in someone’s life,” Humphrey
said.
Volunteers gradually build rapport with the students.
Julie Dorff, art education professor, said the students have different comfort levels
and fears. She also said each student starts at a different point.
However, with the prior field experience of the volunteers, students become more
comfortable in the classroom.
“Their ability to take charge in the classroom and the inner confidence makes the
learning so much more powerful,” Dorff, said.
Humphrey said the number of volunteers exceeded his expectations of the program.
Kent State art education majors have been visiting center 20 years for their field
experience, and this is the first time it branched to summer. The program will be
continued for future summers.
Contact Marissa Eisenbrei at [email protected].