Tuesday, April 9, 2019

More Than Drawing and Coloring: Art (and Art Teachers) Have Power

More Than Drawing and Coloring: Art (and Art Teachers) Have Power

More Than Drawing and Coloring: Art (and Art Teachers) Have Power


“What are you going to do with that?” It’s a question college students and newly minted college graduates often hear from family and friends. For Allison Richo, who finished college in the 1980s, the that” was an art degree.
Allison Richo
Allison Richo
Today, she holds a bachelor’s degree in fine arts from Spelman College in Atlanta, Ga., and for the last 25 years has helped high school students in Prince Georges County, Md., see the world through artistic eyes.
“It’s been the best thing ever,” says Richo, who once owned an architectural design business with two friends.
When the business folded, Richo started to substitute teach.
“I did so well as an art teacher, I got a call [to return] and that started my career.”

Multiple Hats

It’s been nonstop for Richo, who teaches at Oxon Hill High School. Despite her love of art, and her long list of personal awards and recognitions, her attention is squarely centered on her students. So much so that she takes on a mammoth amount of responsibility: visual arts chairperson, interactive media and production coordinator, and academy and national art society sponsor. She also teaches five prep classes that include AP Drawing Studio, AP 2-D Design Studio, Basic Design, Drawing and Painting, and Art 1. Richo also earned National Board Certified status while battling a health crisis.
From your shoes to your cell phone, everything is connected to the arts.” – Allison Richo, art teacher
“I know it’s a lot, but I’m determined to give my students the best art education I can. If that means taking on more than what I need to, then I’ll do it.”
Richo is unafraid when it comes to looking directly at societal challenges, and bringing them into her classroom. Her students have examined issues like the murder of Michael Brown, an unarmed black man who was killed by police in Ferguson Mo., during August of 2014, and the Louisiana communities that were neglected following Hurricane CONTINUE READING: More Than Drawing and Coloring: Art (and Art Teachers) Have Power