Artistic interfaces
Alex Coolman
Caitlin Whelan fine-tunes the animation sequence she has created on her
computer as pictures flow smoothly across the monitor’s glowing screen.
A sound clip of her digitized speech rattles off snippets of enthusiastic
narration. But it seems to Caitlin that the motion and the sound are not
synchronized quite as well as they should be. Is a six-second delay what
she wants here, or would nine seconds work better?
She plays the sequence again, testing. The voice piping through the
speaker sounds like that of a child, which is what it is.
Caitlin, the computer animator, is 8 years old.
“Eight and a half, actually,” she is quick to point out.
Caitlin put together the animation sequence--the sort of thing that would
baffle most adults--because she attends the Art Center, a Newport Beach
summer school and after-school program developed by two Orange County
teachers to bring together kids, art and computers.
The center was started in June by Molly and Patricia Stark, who are
sisters-in-law, with the goal of helping children enhance creativity and
problem solving.
The center teaches children skills in the arts, and it also introduces
them to the challenges and rewards of working with computers.
“They kind of go hand in hand,” Patricia Stark said of the integration of
technology and art. “They both build creativity.”
The center offers a “kinder-art” program for children ages 4 to 6 in
addition to its after-school classes. Even the 4-year-olds are introduced
to the digital cameras, scanners and the Internet.
It all seems like rather advanced material, but the Starks say it is wise
to teach children to be cyber-literate.
“These are going to be the kids who are going to grow up and make the
software so they might as well learn to do that now,” Molly Stark said.
Just down the road, at Lisa Albert’s Art School in Costa Mesa, more
familiar childhood activities are on the agenda. A class of young
sculptors begins a mask-making exercise, and the room resounds with the
sound of clay being vigorously whacked and kneaded.
On the walls of the studio, Picasso prints are hung next to students’
colorful, fish-filled renderings of snorkeling scenes. In the center of
the activity, distributing pieces of newspaper to her students and
slicing off fresh slabs of clay, Albert is a whirl of activity.
“I have quite a different way of teaching,” Albert said. “I’m from
Australia. In Australia, art is a big part of the school curriculum.”
Albert’s art school offers after-school and summer classes. They involve
work in various media, from paper mache and plaster to oil pastels and
tempera paint. Underlying all the projects, Albert says, is a philosophy
that encourages individual expression.
“I want everybody to be themselves,” Albert said. “One child might want
to make the trees pink with yellow fruit. That’s fine with me.”
As for technology, Albert leaves it outside the classroom. “I feel the
kids are getting it in abundance from Nintendo and computers at home,”
she said.
But to the Starks, there is a crucial difference between the kind of
mindless fidgeting induced by video games and the experience they hope to
create for their students.
They are interested in computers because they believe that interacting
with complex programs is an effective way to develop children’s
analytical abilities.
“It’s a lot of problem solving and critical-thinking skills to do that,”
Molly Stark said, gesturing at the animation flashing across a computer
screen.
“For everything they do, they have to make a decision,” Patricia Stark
said.
The Starks’ convictions come from their backgrounds as educators. Molly
Stark taught Gifted and Talented Education and bilingual courses for
eight years in the Newport-Mesa, Laguna Beach and Placentia Yorba Linda
school districts. Patricia Stark, who was trained as an architect,
developed “Student Visions For Architecture” for the American Institute
of Architects. It introduced students to basic ideas of architecture and
design. These experiences gave rise to a hands-on teaching approach that
emphasizes complex groups of skills rather than memorization of isolated
units of information.
“Kids learn best when you give them the whole picture and not just
pieces,” Patricia Stark said. “It allows children to make connections.”
Albert, too, draws on a considerable educational background for her
lessons. Her studio opened three months ago, but she has been teaching
art for a decade and has developed art programs in Orange County and Los
Angeles.
Ultimately it may matter less what sort of art education children are
exposed to than that they are at least exposed to something. The arts are
an essential piece of a child’s intellectual development, said Joan
Bissell, the director of UC Irvine’s Collaborative After-School and
School-Age Care Learning Project.
“The arts are important in themselves, but they’re also used as a vehicle
for enhancing children’s understanding in other disciplines,” Bissell
said.
“When we focus only on literacy or mathematics, these youngsters won’t
have the opportunity not only to develop these [artistic] skills, but to
use these skills as a foundation for their understanding of literacy and
math and science.”
A major way that this education reaches students, Bissell said, is
through after-school programs, whether they are publicly run or privately
arranged like those offered by the Starks and Albert.
“After-school programs have become part of our social and educational
fabric,” Bissell said.
This is good news for parents who can send their children to special
programs.
Cindi Dupuie, whose son Ryan attended the Art Center, said the Starks’
program was a perfect fit.
“I work, and I have another child, and I’m just in and out,” Dupuie said.
“I think what [the Starks] offer is very well-rounded. Those women have a
good thing going and a lot to offer.”
A one-month session at the Art Center runs almost $200.
Albert, who charges $80 for four weeks, says that she tries to keep her
prices low because she wants students from all economic backgrounds.
“My priority is to keep the cost down in the classes to where everybody
can afford it,” Albert said.
Even for children in public programs, Bissell said, new opportunities for
enhancing art awareness are developing because of technology.
Bissell says that UCI’s Learning Project has developed a CD-ROM and
companion Web site, www.gse.uci.edu/afterschool/ca, to bring educational
resources to all classrooms. Students using the programs can follow links
to the Louvre, the Metropolitan Museum of Art or hundreds of other free
art resources.
Of course, in order to do this, children will need to know how to use a
computer.
“It’s a new essential literacy,” Bissell said. “Technological literary.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.