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Cowboy poet rides into Langdon Elementary
Artist in residence helps students learn through writing
By AMY FREIER
Republican Staff Writer

Photos by MARLO MILLER
Republican Editor
Reprinted with permission of the Cavalier County Republican, Langdon, N.D.
Forty different
countries listen to the music of T.J. Casey. His current album is number one
on the Western Music Charts, and he has already
authored one book of
poetry. Last week, T.J. Casey spent time here in Langdon entertaining and
challenging the minds of the third- through
sixth-graders
at Langdon Area Elementary School.
Casey was the artist in residence this year. Casey's visit was sponsored by
the Northern Lights Arts Council and North Dakota Council on the
Arts. He spent
the week teaching students to explore poetry by listening to his poetry and
writing their own.
LAES has been having artists in residence as long as forth-grade teacher Jayne
Parker can remember. Each artist, Casey being no exception,
allows students to
experience different aspects of art and culture, according to Parker. Casey's
culture is cowboy.
Casey is a resident of Montana. He started playing guitar at age five, writing
poetry at age 14 and at age 18, putting his poems with music.
In 1982 he became
published and two years later, recorded a cassette. After a few years off,
Casey came back to the music and his art and
as he says, "the
rest is history."
Because he loves what he does and does it well, students are happy and excited
to go and learn about a subject that some may find boring.
"He is fun to learn from," fourth-grader Jaime Lundequist said.
"Poetry is fun because T.J. is fun to listen to and he can play his guitar
really good," said Marc Economy, fifth grade.
Their teacher, Mrs. Parker, could not be happier over what her students are
learning through Casey. "It is so fun to see the kids get involved
with the arts,"
Parker said.
Besides the benefit of seeing different art cultures, each student is learning
about themselves and what they can do. Casey works to have each
student use his or
her imagination to write their own piece of poetry.
"My number one goal is to have every child in every class that I work with to
have successfully written a poem and to show them different ways
to do this," Casey
said.
His goal was accomplished. Each student wrote a personal poem on Monday and on
Tuesday, Casey showed them how to write a collaborated
poem. Using
collaborated poetry, Casey teaches students how work together and to listen to
each other's ideas all under the guise of writing a poem.
"I like that students are working together and are accepting each other's
ideas. This will be carried back into the classroom," Parker said.
Why does Casey spend so much time away from his home and family? The answer is
two fold. The first, Casey is a cowboy and through his
work with students,
he is passing along his heritage to them.
Cowboys have always been poets.
'Writing poetry is part of cowboys' history. It is what we do," Casey said.
By sharing his poetry most of which is based on his experiences as a cowboy or
others experiences as a cowboy, Casey can share experiences
most of these
students will never have. It is a way to preserve a lifestyle that is quietly
fading from America.
"I believe in our roots and heritage," Casey wrote on his website. "I got a
story to tell. We all need to stand up and protect the traditions and
legacies we've
inherited. I want to be an image for kids to look up to, and hopefully instill
in them this same love of country and customs I
know and respect.
Without our heritage, our children lose focus. Without our children's focus,
we lose our world."
Besides remembering our heritage, Casey helps students find a talent they may
not have thought they had.
"Good Lord has given me this talent. He gives us all talents to different
things," Casey said.
Casey hopes to help our students discover their own talents.
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