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MC Voices

We started the 2020 Spring Semester at Montgomery College with regular classes.  Lectures, lab, studio work, it was all what we were used to. Then with the medical crisis of Covid-19, the college responded by very quickly limiting students’ access to all MC buildings and by engaging in remote learning and education. The teachers and the students transitioned to online learning. Everyone was very creative in trying out new collaborative software solutions to try to keep the classes together. Some classes were cancelled altogether, and altogether it was and still is a period of transition.

During this time of change, we’ve looked at all sorts of ways to keep the momentum going and everyone has given a good-faith effort. At the same time, we’re all going through all sorts of personal life transitions, whether it be a loss of employment or income, or a lack of interactions of the desired type, or changes in regular habits and lifestyle.

Now as we get near the end of the semester, we are all going to face another transition: classes will be done, and we won’t even have the little bit of interaction which that offered. I’m a non-credit student, but I strongly believe in completing all assignments and participating in all class discussions and critiques.  So for my Figure Drawing class, that means completing the final assignment of a triptych (that’s a three-part drawing, where each part is a finished drawing in its own right, but the three work together as a unit as well). So I’m finishing this now.

But come next week and after I’ve uploaded the files, then…transition. No work due for any class, no pressure or any kind of deadline, no drawings due, no commissions to complete. So I need to find my own drivers, my own inspiration, and my own path for development.

It might be some time before we have face-to-face classes again, and in the meantime, we each have to find our own way to keep going. We have to foster a culture of continuous learning, of keeping up interest, of striving forward. It certainly won’t be a linear path but I know we will all manage the upcoming transitions.

 

Arleen Seed

Hi! My name is Arleen Cannata Seed and I’m studying Fine Arts here at Montgomery College in Takoma Park/Silver Spring. Originally from New York City, I studied Art as an undergraduate years ago, but chose to spend my career in a totally different field, working for the United Nations and traveling all over the world bringing technological solutions to global problems.

Once I retired, I had the time and mental space to practice Art again, but I knew I had forgotten the fundamentals. So, I enrolled in 100 level courses in drawing, painting, and sculpture at MC. This was just the catalyst I needed! The professors at MC, in both the Community Arts and the regular credit courses, provided a course of study and opened my eyes to the different ways in which Art is taught in the 21st Century.

This blog is about my journey, my transition from working adult to pursuing an earlier dream, and I’m hoping this story resonates with young people thinking about their career choices and older people yearning to rekindle pursuits which have always interested them.

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