Update: The Universe Within Is In Full Swing At Patagonia Public Schools

Update: The Universe Within Is In Full Swing At Patagonia Public Schools

Mat Bevel Company’s The Universe Within world-building course is helping students at Patagonia Elementary School increase their problem-solving abilities. Taught by Science and Math Teacher David Clovesko-Wharton, third and fourth graders at Patagonia Elementary School are the first students to participate in The Universe Within full coursework. 
 
Clovesko-Wharton says, “Without surprise or warning these motivated virtue heroes of The Universe Within make an intelligently creative impression on me every day with their intuitive comments on problem solving in the real world and their artistic innovations expressed in their colorful geometric headdress pieces. The curriculum rocks and the chemistry is both fun and an entirely alternatively universe.”
 
The Universe Within launched on March 4, with a student field trip to Mat Bevel Company President Ned Schaper’s Museum Of Kinetic Art in Tucson. Students enjoyed a “Welcome to Beveldom” program, then a personal tour of the museum.
 
The course was developed to address a national creative intelligence deficit through a local grassroots effort in Southern Arizona. The basic premise of the course is that genius and creativity are not so much about IQ as employing daily practices to solve problems. It also fits into STEAM, an educational approach that uses science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics to help meet the needs of a 21st century economy. 
 
Patagonia Public Schools Superintendent Rachell Hochheim thinks the course is valuable because, “The approach used to engage students targets their natural curiosity and imagination. This allows for students to make judgment-free inquiries that lead to higher levels of thinking and ultimately increases students’ confidence in thinking critically about their environment. Many students couldn’t stop sharing their enthusiasm after they returned from their field trip to the Museum Of Kinetic Art.”

Five course modules are integrated into 16 two-hour classes that align with Arizona state standards.

The Daily Doodle

Students identify a creative solution for overcoming major social issues in their worlds, and identify the character they will play and that character’s virtues, powers and morals.

Corrugated Headgear

Students learn about design, technology and spatial relationships as they construct three-dimensional replicas of their characters’ headdresses from recycled materials.

The Art of Kinetics

Students learn about technology, motion, forces, gravity and balance as they complete four-dimensional kinetic structures from their characters’ worlds from recycled materials.

Digital Story Book

Students reflect on their group identity as world-builders, explain choices they made while creating their characters’ worlds and examine the evolution of their ideas through digital stories.

Exhibition & Pedestrian Carnival
Students curate and install their doodles, headgear, kinetic art, photos and video stories for The Universe Within group exhibition and, during the exhibition, they share their characters in a group parade. Peers, family and community get to see the students’ entire process of creating their work.

Dr. Bruce Bayly, Professor of Math at University of Arizona, works with MBC to translate the world of Beveldom into science and math lessons through video introductions, classroom instructions and hands-on activities.

Dr. Mark Runco, Faculty at Southern Oregon University, is using creativity tests to assess students’ creative potential and performance before and after coursework. A new interactive 3D creativity assessment was developed on the iPad, with support from Patagonia Regional Community Fund (PRCF). Other major sponsors for development of the curriculum include South32, Arizona Commission on the Arts and Doug & Mary Rogers.

Paula Schaper, Vice President and Executive Director, who works from MBC’s Patagonia location, says she is already receiving requests for the curriculum from others in Southern Arizona and “going forward, we hope individuals, corporations and foundations will continue to support new dimensions of The Universe Within. In school year 2019-2020, the curriculum will extend to more ages, subjects and schools.” 

To get involved and for more information, contact Paula Schaper at 520-604-6273 or pschaper@matbevelcompany.org.

Museum Of Kinetic Art Virtual Reality Tour is Live!

In 2017, Ned Schaper received an artist research and development grant from Arizona Commission on the Arts to support development of the Museum Of Kinetic Art (MOKA) into a 360-degree virtual reality tour. Over the last year and a half, he’s been experimenting, learning and producing a tour so that people anywhere can enjoy the Museum Of Kinetic Art. Approximately 7 minutes from start to finish, the tour allows viewers to feel as if they are inside the museum and get a close look at many of the mechanized characters. The tour is now live on YouTube: https://youtu.be/L8U0pFU1hHg. Footage is also being used in classroom videos for The Universe Within, a creative thinking and world-building course developed by Mat Bevel Company. Ned’s original idea was to put a virtual reality camera on a motorized cart and move it through the museum as a person would walk through the space. But after purchasing and experimenting with a 360fly virtual reality camera, he realized the images were far more interesting when you put the camera inside the sculptures. He explains, “It looks like you’re in a city of skyscrapers. It makes the viewer feel like he/she is a small entity inside a giant warped universe of junk.” So instead of moving the camera like a normal virtual reality tour where the viewer controls the experience, for example using goggles, the camera stays still, Ned controls the virtual reality output, creating a final video piece as a normal HD video.
Ned got the idea to build kinetic devices to move the camera while in “Watch Me” editing mode. The first thing he tried was a turntable that made the camera slowly turn in a circle. He says, “This world of rotating sculptures reminded me of a spiraling galaxy of junk sculpture stars.” This gave him the idea to set the whole room of sculptures into a circular installation, packed with all the sculptures and lights in one small area with the camera right in the center. You’ll easily pick this effect up in the video. Ned went to work creating this circular installation while shooting from the same camera position. Once the installation was complete, and he got the shot he was looking for, he then began moving the camera around close to the sculptures without the rotating turntable making use of the bizarre fish-eye effect. When he started the project, the Museum Of Kinetic Art occupied the entire space, but after he built this installation, the museum was packed into a smaller circular area.
With many years’ experience shooting and editing video, the virtual reality technology represented a major step forward for his art. The project substantially expanded his knowledge of how to use virtual reality technology, how to move the camera in new ways and how to capture localized sound. The three cameras give Ned a whole new context and narrative for his theater’s world of Beveldom. This helped him establish the look and feel of Beveldom as a space junk experience in a galaxy of kinetic art stars. Ned says, “One interesting aspect of the 360fly is how it changes what’s desired for the ceiling. With 360fly the ceiling is such a big part of it, you want to work with what’s above.” This project changed his artistic path. Experimenting with the new 360fly camera technology gave him an internal perspective on the museum. It led him to design a new 360 Theater for the future, in a new location where he can combine a live and a virtual theater with a virtual reality camera in the center of a circular stage. The theater set will help establish the look and feel of Beveldom—”the galaxy of junk”—with a full sphere of kinetic sculpture and light.
Addressing A National Creative Deficit At A Grassroots Level

Addressing A National Creative Deficit At A Grassroots Level

A Nation-wide Creativity Crisis

In Dr. KH Kim’s “The Creativity Crisis (2011)”, she reported that American creativity declined from the 1990s to 2008. Kim’s 2017 Creativity Crisis Update: How High-Stakes Testing Stifles Innovation reveals that “The Creativity Crisis” has grown worse since 2008. The results also reveal that the youngest age groups have suffered the greatest.
SOURCE: http://www.creativitypost.com/education/the_2017_creativity_crisis_update_how_high_stakes_testing_has_stifled_innov

The significant declines in outbox thinking skills (fluid and original thinking) indicate that Americans generate not only fewer ideas or solutions to open-ended questions or challenges, but also fewer unusual or unique ideas than those in preceding decades (Figure 1).

According to Dr. Ken Robinson, one of the world’s most influential voices in education, our schools are killing creativity

“America is now facing the biggest challenge it’s ever faced—to maintain its position in the world economies. All these things demand high levels of innovation, creativity, and ingenuity. At the moment, instead of promoting creativity, I think we’re systematically educating it out of our kids.”

SOURCE: http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/sept09/vol67/num01/Why-Creativity-Now%C2%A2-A-Conversation-with-Sir-Ken-Robinson.aspx

One of the world’s top business thinkers, Dr. Teresa Amabile’s Theory of Creativity outlines three components necessary for an individual to acquire creativity, defined as the production of ideas or outcomes that are both novel and appropriate to some goal:

  • Expertise
  • Creative thinking skills
  • Motivation

SOURCE: http://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Publication%20Files/12-096.pdf

A Grassroots Solution

The Universe Within is a world-building course developed by Mat Bevel Company to help solve this national creative thinking deficit at a grassroots level. Coursework integrates Mat Bevel Company President and Founder Ned Schaper’s magical world of Beveldom and his Available Resource Technology (A.R.T.) practices. Students learn how to innovate, problem-solve and navigate unknown situations through original thinking exercises and out-of-the-box approaches.

Students stretch their imagination during classes by watching footage from Beveldomthe museum’s whirling fine-art sculptures and the theater’s funny characters. Classroom instruction teaches students how to capture, connect, test and activate their original ideas through a series of classes: The Daily Doodle, Corrugated Headgear, Story Book and Pedestrian Carnival. 

Students play the part of a central character in a unique imaginary world of their own making all while learning art, science and English language arts lessons.

With the addition of The Universe Within TV show that will launch in the fall of 2018 in partnership with Creative Tucson. new inspirational educational programming will be used in the classroom and for long-distance learning.

Mat Bevel Company Takes Students into The Universe Within

In early April, Mat Bevel Company’s Paula Schaper and Lars Marshall met with Patagonia Public Schools art teacher Elizabeth McCowin and School Superintendent Rachell Hochheim to plan the new world-building educational pilot called The Universe Within. Classes with students in 6th through 8th grade art class began on April 16.

The program is inspired by Mat Bevel Company President Ned Schaper’s world of Beveldom–a fine-art mechanical land teeming with inspiring characters–and his Available Resource Technology process. Students participated in a four-part introduction to world-building where they played the part of a central character in a unique imaginary world of their own making.

The Universe Within taught students specific hands-on skills to help them tackle life’s challenges with greater creativity. Skills were developed through journaling, doodling, and mask making. Stories were created, told, and performed. Students learned how to create and share their own novel characters, scenarios and plots to learn grade-relevant English language arts, listening, writing and speaking skills, as well as science-based design, construction, observation and presentation skills.

Mat Bevel Company Vice President Paula Schaper says, “Traditionally education emphasizes the importance of achieving goals. Students strive to achieve perfect grades, win at contests and sports, and finish what they start. While good grades and high achievement are important, if we’re too focused on the goal, we lose the creative ability to see all the possible solutions. The Universe Within encourages students to let their minds open up to less obvious possibilities so that, in the long run, they have a larger universe of solutions for life’s toughest challenges, those challenges that require them to think out of the box in order to adapt and succeed.”

Mat Bevel Company Vice President Paula Schaper says, “Traditionally education emphasizes the importance of achieving goals. Students strive to achieve perfect grades, win at contests and sports, and finish what they start. While good grades and high achievement are important, if we’re too focused on the goal, we lose the creative ability to see all the possible solutions. The Universe Within encourages students open their minds up to a larger universe of answers and solutions.”

If you’d like to support The Universe Within educational program, please consider making a donation or purchasing a shirt.

Each of the four classes started with a 5-minute inspirational and instructional video. Students will be encouraged to open their minds to fantastical concepts from the world of Beveldom. Then, step-by-step instructions outlined specific classroom activities.

The first classroom script asks students:

Do you know where one of the best sources of creative problem solving comes from? Inside of you. There’s an entire universe within just waiting to be discovered. We’d like to introduce you to someone who found his universe and created his own world, just like you can. Meet artist and scientist Ned Schaper. He made a magical world called Beveldom from thousands of recycled items.

After the video, school teachers and Mat Bevel Company staff guided students as they created their own world. Class one was The Daily Doodle. By using the art of doodling, students developed the basic elements of their world, determining what their world looks like, what it’s made of, who lives there, what character they’ll be in their world and the rules of their world. The lesson focused on giving students a daily routine of activating and capturing their ideas in a “doodle” notebook through words and drawings. This activity will helped students develop the capacity to draw out and express creative ideas for themselves, serving as an outlet and brainstorming tool throughout their lives.

Class two was Corrugated Headgear. Students developed the features of the character they wanted to represent from their world. Using the ancient art of mask making, students created a unique sculptural helmet or headdress from recycled corrugated cardboard and wrapping paper to represent their character. The headgear helped students slip into character and transports them into their world. This lesson focused on teaching students spatial-mechanical aptitude skills as they created functional art from recycled materials.

Class three was Story Book. Students got ready to share their world and articulated their ideas to other students, teachers, family and the community. They brought together meaningful elements of the world they created through their doodles, words and headgear in a story board format. This lesson focused on teaching students how to refine, organize and present their original ideas so they could make important points and communicate what’s meaningful to them.

Class four is Pedestrian Carnival. Student will get into character, step into their world and take the show on the road. Wearing their sculptural headgear, costumes and accessories, students parade around campus, creating a pedestrian carnival so that teachers and the student body can see their creativity and original ideas in action. Students gain valuable feedback as they see people’s reactions to what they created.

You can never look an idea straight in the eye for invention lies in the periphery of distraction.

Nonprofit Mat Bevel Company created The Universe Within to increase students’ creative thinking skills and give them flexible and imaginative approaches to problem solving throughout life.

The Universe Within is a grassroots solution to a national creative intelligence deficit. It increases student capacity to innovate, problem-solve and navigate unknown situations by providing original thinking exercises that encourage imaginative approaches to solving problems in a playful and supportive environment.

Support for The Universe Within comes from Mat Bevel Company Educational Sponsors:

Elizabeth Eynon Wetherell (FL)
William Taft (MI)
Gerry Isaac and Lynne Weatherby, Stage Stop Inn & Wild Horse Restaurant (AZ)
Santa Cruz Foundation for the Performing Arts (AZ)
Kathleen James and Gary Retherford, La Frontera Realty (AZ)
Sonoita-Patagonia Rotary Club (AZ)

To learn more about the importance of teaching your children creative thinking skills, read this article that provides good advice on how they can succeed: https://qz.com/1021749/a-leading-happiness-researcher-says-were-giving-our-kids-bad-advice-about-how-to-succeed-in-life/

Students at Patagonia Public Schools Step into Beveldom during 2018 Career Fair

Students at Patagonia Public Schools Step into Beveldom during 2018 Career Fair

Mat Bevel Company brought the world of Beveldom to high school and middle school students during the 2018 Rotary Career Fair at Patagonia Public Schools on Friday, May 9. Video excerpts from Kinetic Saturdays and the new TV show Bevel Café amused and fascinated students, who are eager to get their hands on and participate in upcoming Beveldom programs. Students were invited to vote on and earn a chance to win their favorite shirt design from Beveldom. Three winners were drawn and will receive the t-shirt they chose for free. The winning t-shirts designs were….

You won’t want to miss out on these one-of-kind “Desert Saguaro” and “Life is like an Arrow” t-shirts! Get yours today at the Beveldom Store and enjoy the magic of Beveldom and support a great charity. 

Beveldom-WorldBuilding-Educational-ProgramDuring the event, Mat Bevel Company announced The Universe Within, its new educational pilot that builds creative thinking skills by increasing student’s capacity to innovate, problem-solve, and navigate unknown situations. The Universe Within is a grassroots solution that addresses a severe national creative intelligence deficit through original thinking and imaginative approaches to solving problems. Students in teacher Elizabeth McCowin’s 6-8 grade art classes will be part of the educational pilot that runs April 12 through April 24. This program is inspired by Mat Bevel Company President Ned Schaper’s world of Beveldom, a fine-art mechanical land teeming with inspiring characters. Students will participate in a four-part introduction to worldbuilding in which they will construct an imaginary world of their own. Students will also develop and play the part of a central character in their own unique world.
The pilot integrates hands-on activities of journaling, drawing, mask making, and storytelling, to teach students language arts and science lessons. Classes start with a 5-minute inspirational and instructional video where students open their minds to fantastical concepts from the world of Beveldom. Step-by-step instructions are outlined for the day’s activities. After the video, the teacher along with Mat Bevel Company storytellers Paula Schaper and Lars Marshall guide students and provide support for the following classroom activities in which students create their own world: Class One: The Daily Doodle Class Two: Corrugated Headgear Class Three: Storybook World Class Four: Pedestrian Carnival
A showcase of each student’s work, as well as classroom videos and activities, will be on display during a community Fine Arts Gala on campus, May 9, 2018. Students take home their headgear and storybooks, and receive a certificate for their participation in The Universe Within. Students were excited about this innovative worldbuilding class. A high school student was so excited by the idea that she volunteered to help teach the class. For more information contact: Paula Schaper Vice President / Executive Director Mat Bevel Company 520-604-6273 pschaper@matbevelcompany.org www.matbevelcompany.org

Mat Bevel Company is a finalist for ArtPlace America’s 2017 National Creative Placemaking Fund

(June 7, 2017) Today, ArtPlace America announced that Mat Bevel Company is one of 70 finalists for the 2017 National Creative Placemaking Fund (NCPF). ArtPlace’s National Creative Placemaking Fund is a highly competitive national program, receiving 987 applications this year. Mat Bevel Company’s project one of just 7% of the projects across the country to make this cut.

Through this national program, ArtPlace America invests money in communities across the country in which artists, arts organizations, and arts and culture activity help drive community development change across 10 sectors of community planning and development: agriculture and food; economic development; education and youth; environment and energy; health; housing; immigration; public safety; transportation; or workforce development.  

Mat Bevel Company proposed the Patagonia Pollinator Project, a new model of K-12 place-based learning that cross-pollinates the knowledge of 8 to 10 local expert change makers with students. In a unique approach called “kinetic junk theater,” Mat Bevel Company will use theater, found-object kinetic art, hands-on learning techniques, new media arts and digital storytelling to drive educational and youth development outcomes.

Partners for the project include Rachell Hochheim, Superintendent for Patagonia Public Schools, Cassina Quiroga Farley, Director & Program Developer for Patagonia Creative Arts Association, Jose Manule Barraza Santos, 10th grade student and artist at Patagonia Public Schools and Mandy Montanez, Business Manager for Red Mountain Foods, Town of Patagonia Planning & Zoning member and Patagonia Public Schools site council member.

“The National Grants Program is actively building a portfolio that reflects the full breadth of our country’s arts and cultural sector, as well as the community planning and development field,” said ArtPlace’s Director of National Grantmaking F. Javier Torres. “Knowing that these projects, and the hundreds of others who applied, are using arts and culture strategies to make the communities across this country healthier and stronger is inspirational.”

“We believe that these projects, when added to our tremendously strong portfolio of demonstration projects, will inspire, equip and connect members of the arts and culture field, the community planning and development field and those who are working to make healthy and equitable communities creatively across the country,” said ArtPlace America Executive Director Jamie Bennett.

The complete list of the 2017 finalists for ArtPlace’s National Creative Placemaking Fund may be found here.

About Mat Bevel Company
Mat Bevel Company reveals the magnificent potential of resourcefulness using ART—Available Resource Technology. The 501(c)(3) non-profit organization inspires people of all ages to cultivate greater awareness, ingenuity and purpose through found-object kinetic art, theater, hands-on learning experiences and new media arts. The work builds a deeper connection to art, science, education and our culture through the Museum Of Kinetic Art, Surrealistic Pop Science Theater, the School of Intuition and Bevelvision Productions.

About ArtPlace America

ArtPlace America (ArtPlace) is a ten-year collaboration among 16 partner foundations, along with 8 federal agencies and 6 financial institutions, that works to position arts and culture as a core sector of comprehensive community planning and development in order to help strengthen the social, physical, and economic fabric of communities.

ArtPlace focuses its work on creative placemaking, projects in which art plays an intentional and integrated role in place-based community planning and development. This brings artists, arts organizations, and artistic activity into the suite of placemaking strategies pioneered by Jane Jacobs and her colleagues, who believed that community development must be locally informed, human-centric, and holistic.

Media contact:        
Paula Schaper
Vice President
Mat Bevel Company
520-604-6273
www.matbevelcompany.org
pschaper@matbevelcompany.org

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