Not long after TC moved to remote teaching in March, Richard Jochum tried to start class on Zoom one evening by doing an emotional check-in with his students.
āI said, āHow are you, how do you all feel?ā And a student burst out: āWhat are we doing here!ā I was surprised because heād written to me earlier that he was fine. When I spoke with him about later, I said, āYouāre frustrated,ā and he said āāYeah, I donāt know if Iāll be alive in two weeks.āā
For Jochum, Associate Professor of Art & Art Education, the moment was a cautionary tale on several levels.
Ultimately, I believe weāll look back on this time and think: We became better teachers, too.
ā Richard Jochum
Jochum and other instructors in his program have literally taken that approach when it comes to teaching the Collegeās studio classes in painting and sculpture. Holding these classes online would be challenging under the best of circumstances ā but itās even tougher when no one, including the instructor, has access to essential materials and tools.
āI realized, āOne needs to cautiously balance these types of explorations in class,āā he says. āBut also, in general, āDonāt try to everything right now. Be generous to yourself and your students, because weāre still in an emergency mode here. Itās important to scale up slowly.āā
Still, Jochum says, āeven in sculpture, weāre doing great stuff. We canāt do welding or use our workshop, but we can still give assignments that require students to apply and refine core principles ā for example, by using a cardboard box to create an installation, uploading a photo of it, and then playing with the proportions.ā
Students are often more at home in the digital medium than instructors, but for Jochum, there are two essentials task in teaching ā regardless of the medium and its constraints: to ācreate a story line from the get-goā and to provide students with a sense of community.
In his seminar this semester on Creative Technologies, he initially sought to do both by tasking his students with planning a symposium on interconnectivity in the arts. With artists everywhere now self-isolating, the topic has become even more timely, but of course, the staging an actual event isnāt possible. Nevertheless, working with Flipgrid, the class has gone ahead with creating posters for the symposium with fleshed out topics and potential speakers.
āIāve organized one or two symposia per year since I came to TC, and I think itās a very valuable experience for students to learn to do it,ā Jochum says. āYou need a strong brief and a strong call that attracts people, and when youāve got that the rest happens on its own. So again, storyboarding is key.ā
More recently, Jochum gave himself an intriguing assignment. At the suggestion of a colleague, and working with technology provided by ODL, heās recreated TCās Macy Gallery as a three-dimensional online space. ( to visit Jochumās online 3D Macy Gallery.) Instructors can use it to post student projects and deliver end-of-semester critiques ā but it can also be used for a full-on exhibition, and in July, the Art & Art Education program will do just that, with a show devoted to student work.
āI think the trick with technology is to leverage what you know, proceed slowly, and continually stretch yourself just a little bit beyond your comfort zone,ā Jochum says. āTeaching online gives us a new lens for thinking about our teaching in the classroom. Ultimately, I believe weāll look back on this time and think: We became better teachers, too.ā