Position: Director of Theatre Arts
School: McKay High School
School District: Salem-Keizer Public Schools
City, State: Salem, OR
Music that Describes Tiffany
Tiffany Carstensen was nominated by her colleague Jo Strom Lane.
Ms. Carstensen's curriculum and productions are centered on student voice and relevant teaching - and they have been long before others put a name to what she was doing. Students in her classes are given choice after choice in creating art that is meaningful to them. They take turns in leadership positions in and out of class.
She encourages students to express their life experiences or cultures in the production process whenever possible. For example, in her school's production of The Wiz, each land and character Dorothy encountered represented either that actor's heritage or one of the cultures in the student body of McKay while honoring the Black music and culture in the original script. The costumes, choreography, staging, and makeup were beautifully mixed with modern-day Black artists in a way that honored all and marginalized none.
But she didn't stop at the school level; she took it to the state level. Teaching at a school with over 25 languages and a 90% poverty rate, it didn't take long for Ms. Carstensen and her students to see the pattern in the award winners at the Oregon Thespians State Festival. With her hard work, research, and support of her students, the McKay actors and technicians grew to believe in themselves and that there was a place for them in the entertainment field apart from stereotypical or trauma-focused parts. Her students graduate believing they can do anything, any job, college, or career they want, whether they see themselves represented in that dream or not.
"In her 20 years at McKay, she has improved countless lives," said Strom Lane.