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Remembering Jean Shackelford: An Exceptional Arts Advocate and Friend of Young Audiences of Virginia

February 3, 2025 By Cindy Sherwood

“Among her greatest joys was her 33 years of involvement with Young Audiences of Virginia! She served on the Board of Directors for numerous years and as President. She loved Young Audiences’ creative offerings annually to involve children in the arts.”  Obituary for Jean Hogge Shackelford

Arts for Learning mourns the loss while celebrating the remarkable life of Jean Shackelford, who died last month at the age of 95. Jean made a lasting contribution to arts education in Hampton Roads and Virginia as a whole.

“She had such a huge impact on arts education in Virginia. I think others have tried to fill her shoes, but I don’t think we’ve ever had such a strong advocate as Jean,” said Beth Hazelette, immediate past president of the A4L board of directors. “Her passion and her drive were to provide quality arts education programming for all students.”

Jean was a teacher and administrator in Portsmouth Public Schools for decades, and, as Beth put it, “built the program” as the supervisor of music for PPS. Beth, who served as supervisor of music for Norfolk Public Schools, considered Jean a mentor. They first met when Beth was a high school choral student and continued the relationship for decades as Beth became a teacher and later an administrator and board member for Young Audiences, where they worked side by side.

“She worked really, really hard for the students and educators of Portsmouth,” Beth said. “She was so tough, but for a good reason. She worked tirelessly to promote a program that could have easily gone by the wayside. She was a bulldog. She wouldn’t let it die. She wanted to make sure all the students in Portsmouth had opportunities in music.”

Longtime board member Minette Cooper first worked with Jean in 1975, developing and implementing programs that put teaching artists in the classroom to guide students in music, poetry, and dance. Minette credits Jean with smoothing the way to integrate the arts into the schools.

“She was a remarkable lady who accomplished so much because she could persuade people to help when probably no one else could,” Minette said. “She was a doer, a really well-informed doer who could get things done as easily as possible. She was phenomenal.”

Minette Cooper, Jean Shackelford, Judy Thaler, Susan Einhorn, and Marty Einhorn celebrate the 65th anniversary of Young Audiences of Virginia/Arts for Learning in 2019.

In addition to her work in Portsmouth, Jean was a powerful voice for arts education at the state level. She received Lifetime Achievement and Distinguished Service awards for 20 years of leadership as a member of the Virginia Music Educators Association (VMEA). And after she retired from Portsmouth Public Schools in 1989, her efforts continued—she served for 11 years as the legislative liaison in the General Assembly, working to establish the Virginia Coalition for Fine Arts Education that advocates for the arts across the Commonwealth. She acted as a vital communications link to VMEA about all legislation that might affect the arts.

“She had this passion not just for Portsmouth and Portsmouth school students but for music students across the state. She made sure that someone was keeping an eye on what was happening in Richmond because there were a lot of decisions being made that in the end did impact the arts,” Beth said.  Those decisions included the initial years of implementing high-stakes testing in Virginia. Beth says Jean was on the “ground floor” as Virginia created grade-specific Standards of Learning (SOLs), making sure the arts weren’t ignored amid the push to emphasize core academic subjects.

After her retirement, Jean also joined the board of directors of Young Audiences, serving multiple terms as president. As a recipient of Young Audiences’ Arts-in-Education Advocacy award, Jean was lauded for her leadership, insight, and vision. The proclamation states:

“Particularly of note is her guidance in helping us understand and utilize the Standards of Learning as a vehicle to better serve Virginia schools.”

Among other contributions as a board member, Jean helped secure new grant funding for various projects and was instrumental in helping to develop the current mission statement of “engaging and inspiring” students in and through the arts.

 “She lived her passion for arts education, she really did,” Beth said. “She led a very purpose-driven life.”

For more on Jean’s lasting contributions to arts education as well as other aspects of her life—such as eight years as an elected member of the Portsmouth City Council—please read this: Jean Hogge Obituary. We wish her family members peace in this time of mourning and express our gratitude for all Jean achieved for the students, educators, and artists of Virginia.

If you’d like to make a memorial contribution to Arts for Learning in honor of Jean, please click on this link: Donate Now

Filed Under: ArtsEd, News, Volunteer Spotlight Tagged With: arts advocate, Arts Ed, arts education, Arts for Learning, Arts for Learning Virginia, arts integration, arts-in-education, board of directors, Jean Shackelford, music education, Norfolk Public Schools, Portsmouth Public Schools, teaching artists, Young Audiences, Young Audiences of Virginia

Celebrating 20 Years with Young Audiences/Arts for Learning: Talking with Anna Green, Chief Operations Officer

January 4, 2024 By Cindy Sherwood

On January 4, 2004, Anna started work as Scheduling Director for Young Audiences of Virginia, booking hundreds of artistic performances a year. On this day, twenty years later, we learn why she remains more committed than ever to the philosophy and practice of producing exceptional arts education for Virginia’s children.

“The first thing that comes to mind is believing in the mission. Because that drives you every day, it gets you out of bed. I decided long ago that nonprofit was my place. You’re creating and you’re living an authentic life because that’s the reflection of art is life. And vice versa, life is art.”

Where It All Began

Anna’s parents are professional potters who opened their business when she was three years old. “When you’re raised in a family of artists, that’s pretty much your driving factor. I was always involved in the arts.”

When she was 18, Anna was looking for a job after graduating from Maury High School where she’d been involved in the performing arts. “I walked from Ghent down to the Wells Theatre where my grandmother and I had been season ticket holders, and I walked into the box office and asked how I could apply to work there. I ended up interviewing that day with the box office manager, who hired me.

“And then I walked another day to the Generic Theater and Hurrah Players that were off of 21st Street at the time and asked if I could volunteer. So I was working at Virginia Stage Company at the Wells Theatre and volunteering for Bob Nelson at Generic Theater and that’s what started the process of my being in nonprofit arts.”

She briefly worked at a for-profit company, but quickly learned it wasn’t for her. “Working in an office every day for money and not creating art didn’t feel right.”

The Next Chapter

After nearly ten years learning different aspects of arts administration with Virginia Stage Company, Virginia Arts Festival, and smaller arts nonprofits, Anna was ready for a new challenge and accepted the job at Young Audiences.

“I spent the first part of my time at Young Audiences scheduling programs and reaching out to artists, introducing myself and establishing those relationships. It was nice to form such lifelong bonds with them, explaining to them that I had parents who were artists, and so I understood that this was their livelihood. And I think that they respected me more for knowing and understanding that, and then I worked really hard to get them bookings.”

It was a couple of years into the job that the education portion of YAV’s mission resonated more deeply with Anna.

“In the beginning it was the artists and then it was the children. And then I had my own child, and it was the children and the artists and the teaching and how all that came together—I can respect the artists that do the work and want them to be paid their professional fees, I can see the children and how much it means to them and what a difference it makes in their lives, and then I can respect the educational components and how we teach further understanding of knowledge in and through the arts.”

Becoming COO

By jumping in and learning about all different aspects of YAV, Anna became an invaluable resource to the organization. In August 2016, the board of directors named her to the new position of Chief Operations Officer, a management role in which she influences every facet of the nonprofit.

“There was an opportunity and a need for someone to step in who knew all aspects of the business. I had worked in finance. I had done development. I’d done bookings and marketing, I’d assisted the executive director, I’d written our volunteer handbook, I’d run residencies. When I became the COO, there was a real need for someone who understood and was familiar with the structure of the organization, who could keep things moving and running, so I stepped in and said I’m here to help.”

Her job keeps evolving. In August 2023, Anna assumed a new challenge as she took over the duties of a finance manager. It’s an area in which she’s always excelled, but it’s the first time she’s been responsible for the hands-on duties that the job entails. And that’s something she’s loved about her twenty years at Young Audiences/Arts for Learning: although some basics such as booking programming remain the same year after year, others change as the organization responds to changing needs with new services. That mixes it up for Anna who says she always has to “have things that keep me going in a job to keep it interesting.”

Staff members celebrate Arts for Learning’s 65th anniversary in September 2019.

Greatest Accomplishments

In looking back on her time at the nonprofit, Anna is proudest of two very different accomplishments. First, she was instrumental in conducting an IT assessment that convinced the board to invest funds in updating the technology that’s needed to run an efficient, modern-day nonprofit. In March 2020, when COVID-19 shut down schools and hundreds of Arts for Learning programs were canceled, that technology made all the difference—employees were able to work from home with laptops connected through the A4L server. Within two weeks, our artists were producing short videos designed for students learning at home.

“Without the technology, we wouldn’t have been able to do that, let alone our jobs at all. It meant that we were able to do programming for the kids. It didn’t stop the work, and our downtime was only two weeks, and I’m really, really proud.”

That digital programming, known as “Take 10,” won the 2020 Dominion ArtStars award for Eastern Virginia, recognized for its innovation, enterprise, and artistic quality.

But Anna is just as proud of another program that won the ArtStars Award, and it’s one that remains close to her heart. In her senior year of high school, Anna lived with her namesake grandmother, Anna Henderson, in Norfolk. Her grandmother had been a teacher at Maury High School and headed Norfolk Public Schools’ math department for a number of years. And although she thought Young Audiences did good work, she had told Anna she thought there was a bigger role for using the arts to teach math. In 2014, the two Annas collaborated on the first iteration of the Dance for Life program, working together on curriculum, session by session, along with teaching artists Cindy Aitken and Sheena Jeffers.

Teaching artist Sheena Jeffers describes the positive effects of Dance for Life.
Dance for Life

 

“My grandmother was in her recliner. She didn’t walk well, she was having trouble. I’d visit her every Sunday and I’d bring the curriculum I was working on. I wrote that with her.”

Anna with her beloved grandmother in earlier years.

The elder Anna fell in October of 2014 and broke her hip. She passed away in January of 2015. The next year Dance for Life would go on to win the Dominion Energy ArtStars Award presented by the Virginia Commission for the Arts.

And to have the Dance for Life program go on and be as successful as it was and for it to win the ArtStars Award was very fulfilling. It was such an honor to do that with her.”

Goals in 2024 and Beyond

Max and Anna
A4L board president Dr. Michael Geller and Anna at the December board of directors meeting.

Today, January 4th, is a day to honor Anna’s twenty years and all she has brought to our organization. The celebration began at December’s board of directors’ meeting when president Dr. Michael Geller surprised Anna with recognition from the entire board. The occasion was made even more special by her 13-year-old teenager, Max, being on hand to witness it.

As for the coming year, Anna is looking forward to furthering the cohesion of the staff, building the roster of artists, developing programs, and being “proud of what we’re putting out.”

And although she’s celebrating a major milestone, it’s fair to say that her dedication to Arts for Learning’s mission hasn’t dimmed.

“That’s what I wake up with every day—how am I helping the organization achieve what it’s meant to do? Because the arts is the telescope, it’s the magnifier, for learning to happen, and that’s what we’re here for. We’re providing something different and unique that students aren’t seeing in the regular classroom.”

On behalf of the staff and board of Arts for Learning, we wish Anna a very happy 20th “workiversary.” We’re grateful for all her contributions to the students we serve, and our artist, educator, and community partners.

Filed Under: News, Staff Spotlight Tagged With: 757 arts, 757 nonprofit, Anna Heywood Green, anniversary, Arts for Learning Virginia, Young Audiences of Virginia

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Main Office
Arts for Learning
420 North Center Drive
Suite 239
Norfolk, Virginia 23502

Phone: 757-466-7555

Main Office

Arts for Learning
420 North Center Drive
Suite 239
Norfolk, Virginia 23502
Phone:
757-466-7555

Arts for Learning Virginia Names New CEO to Lead Arts-in-Education Nonprofit

The Board of Directors of Arts for Learning, the Virginia Affiliate of Young Audiences, voted at its annual meeting to name Anna Heywood Green as CEO of the organization. Heywood Green has served as Interim CEO since January 1, following the retirement of former CEO Christine Everly. Prior to January, Heywood Green worked as the organization’s […]

Join the A4L Mailing List!

Sign up to receive the latest news on arts integration from Arts for Learning! Thank you for supporting arts-in-education.

Select list(s) to subscribe to


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: Arts for Learning Virginia. You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact
At Arts for Learning Virginia, we’re proud to be part of the Virginia Commission for the Arts’ Passport Program. While Passport holders typically receive free admission and 50% off classes at participating organizations, all our programming is always free—no discount needed. To learn more about our public events, check out our calendar of events page here.

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