They were writing.
There’s a story behind how these students came to the Museum that day. Last spring, at the close of another successful professional development program for teachers hosted by the Museum and taught by the Milwaukee Writing Project (MWP), Museum education staff and the MWP co-founders had an idea. The excellent activities modeled in the Writing Project programs, encouraging low-stress writing inspired by art from the Museum’s Collection and the Six Traits of Writing taught in schools around the region, could easily be adapted to use with students in the galleries on a tour. A few months later, after a few planning meetings and a docent workshop, the Writing & Art Tour was born–and we began to pilot the program with a few schools in the Milwaukee area.
Let’s return to our scene in Windhover Hall, where those students are purposefully jotting, sketching, and looking deeply at the space around them. They were doing a “sketch and stretch” activity, writing in journal-sketchbooks given to them by the Museum. The importance of brainstorming on paper is one that artists, writers, and the average Joe uses all the time–to flesh out thoughts, to spark ideas, to refine thinking. These students, inspired by the awe-inducing views of Windhover Hall, were engaging in what some of the most popular and admired thinkers of our time have extolled for years (one example: writer Daniel Pink).
View of gallery with Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione, Noah and the Animals Entering the Ark, ca. 1650. Oil on canvas. Milwaukee Art Museum, Centennial Gift of Friends of Art, Myron and Elizabeth P. Laskin Fund, Fine Arts Society, Friends of Art Board of Directors, Francis and Rose Mary Matusinec, Burton and Charlotte Zucker, and the Milwaukee community. Photo by the author.
Throughout each activity student participated differently: some students enthusiastically shared their favorite or “golden” sentences, others exuberantly attacked writing challenges, and still others quietly and with great focus jotted word after word in their sketchbooks. We engaged these students for an hour and a half (quite a long time for anyone, let alone an elementary schooler!) and they were excited the whole time. Kudos, students–we loved having you at the Museum!
I’ll end this post with the students’ own voices. At the end of the tour, each student wrote a postcard to their future self with a reminder of an idea or concept they wanted to return to in their future writing or drawing. Here are two of their postcards (click the image to view larger):
Chelsea Kelly, the School and Teacher Programs Manager, oversees school tours, special K-12 programming, and events for teachers at the Museum, and also creates resources for educators about the artworks in the Museum’s Collection.





