(This post was originally written in 2009 for a blog salon on Americans for the Arts’s ARTSBlog discussing emerging leaders and intergenerational dialogue. For a couple of years, it had the distinction of being the most-commented post on ARTSBlog ever, thanks to the rather cheeky tone I decided to take. It later become Createquity’s mostRead More
Archives for August 2014
[Createquity Reruns] Ten Strategies for Engaging Generation Y in the Nonprofit Workplace
(Emerging leaders week at Createquity gets off to a fashionably late start with this post from 2009, one of those that helped expose the blog to a wider audience. Generational succession in the nonprofit sector was a hot topic five years ago, with early baby boomers widely expected to start retiring yet many of themRead More
[Createquity Reruns] Looking Beyond Our Borders for National Arts Education Policies
(Talia Gibas week at Createquity concludes with Talia’s capstone article for the Createquity Fellowship in January 2013, a look at arts education policies across six continents. This is easily one of the most ambitious articles ever written for Createquity, involving tons of original research and compiling piles of useful information into one place. It mayRead More
[Createquity Reruns] MOOCs and the Future of Arts Education
(Talia Gibas week at Createquity continues with Talia’s analysis from last fall of how MOOCs (Massively Open Online Courses) could impact our practice and advocacy for arts education. As enlightening as this post is on its primary topic, my favorite part is Talia’s anecdote about a(n e)special(ly nerdy) birthday present from her dad. -IDM) TheRead More
[Createquity Reruns] Unpacking Shared Delivery of Arts Education
(This week in Createquity Reruns, we’re celebrating Talia Gibas, who has been involved with the site in one way or another continuously since applying for the Createquity Fellowship two years ago. Now a stalwart member of the editorial team, she has been our resident arts education expert for all that time. Here, in one ofRead More