The day I gave my lesson at NFA I barely slept the night before. I don't know why I was so nervous, I'm usually more comfortable in front of a classroom full of students than a presentation in front of my peers. I think it was because I just didn't know how this lesson was going to be received. I put a lot of unnecessary pressure on myself and got all stressed out. In actuality, the lesson went really well, better than i anticipated.
These are some pictures of me teaching the first part of my lesson. I feel like a lot of the students were looking forward to me teaching, I'm not sure why, maybe because I was a visitor and they were curious about me. They were quite chatty at times and I found that I had to pick and choose times to address it,
I let it go unless it became so distracting that I lost my train of thought. However, as chatty as they were, I found that every time I did a demo drawing my hand, you could suddenly hear a pin drop. It scared me a little but the first time, but I got used to it. Another thing I found teaching this lesson throughout the day was that there is a definite stigma in art when it comes to drawing. Students felt that if they were not good at drawing they were automatically "bad" at art. I knew about this already, but I guess, seeing it so much was a little disheartening. I made sure to explain to students that drawing was a skill, that even people who have natural ability have to practice all the time to get better at it.
I also noticed that keeping the students who had very little confidence in their ability was my greatest challenge for the day. I tried several approaches, but the one I found to be the most successful was telling the student that I wasn't grading their drawing. After I told them this and came back around 5 minutes later, they had finally begun to draw. I felt relieved, but a little sad at the same time. It shouldn't be like that. Students today are tested so much and judged on everything that they do that they are afraid to put a mark on the page.
Aside from this, all the students seemed to be getting into the drawing process and that made me feel good. My teacher was having fun too, taking the day to sit and practice drawing along with the students.