On a clear morning, you begin to notice things as you drive east through Tennessee. The area between Cookeville and Crossville is home to a particular type of working environment, including furniture workshops, auto parts suppliers, and small manufacturing facilities where people have made careers out of their hands in ways that are rarely discussed in discussions about education reform. Therefore, it’s an odd setting for what may be one of the more subtly fascinating experiments taking place in American public education at the moment.
The first state in the nation to implement a long-term, federally recognized teacher apprenticeship program was Tennessee. Just that would be noteworthy. However, the more focused aspect of this story—the part that doesn’t fit neatly into a press release—focuses on what happens when individuals with years of experience in industrial craft, manufacturing, and fabrication begin to enter art classes. not as invited speakers. as educators.
A real-world issue served as the foundation for the University of Tennessee system’s Grow Your Own initiative. The traditional pipeline—college, certification, and classroom—was not producing enough people quickly enough or in the right places, and Tennessee’s teacher shortage isn’t going away on its own. In order to prevent working adults from quitting their jobs or accruing unmanageable debt, the state developed an earn-while-you-learn model. Instead of dragging people through a far-off university system and hoping they return, it covers tuition, offers mentorship, and keeps people connected to the communities they actually live in.
The particular knowledge these workers possess is what makes the creative arts aspect of this so intriguing. Most qualified art instructors just don’t have the same understanding of material, form, and tolerance as a machinist who has worked in metal fabrication for ten years. A woodworker understands joinery, grain direction, and the patience required to work with a medium that will not cooperate when you rush it. These are not artistic abilities. They are precisely what students need to see modeled by someone who takes them seriously in a well-designed arts classroom.
Tennessee Tech’s Appalachian Center for Craft has been offering educator workshops that focus on this relationship. The center, which is located on a campus surrounded by cedar-forested hills outside of Cookeville, offers immersive sessions where participants work with clay, glass, and metals as practitioners attempting to sharpen something real rather than as hobbyists. A teacher who has recently struggled with a new medium is thought to be more sympathetic than one who mastered it twenty years ago and has since forgotten what it was like to fail at it. There is a component to that. It’s possible that when the person in front of the class still has a stake in the outcome, arts education is most successful.

All of this is further complicated by the Tennessee Arts Academy, which has operated its Summer Institute through Middle Tennessee State University since 1986. Every year, about 325 educators come to Murfreesboro for a week of intense training that includes visual art, dance, theater, and music. The Academy estimates that participants directly impact over 200,000 students the following school year, demonstrating the truly remarkable reach of that one week. That adds up to something noteworthy over forty years. According to the institution’s own count, over 7,500 educators received training, impacting over three million students.
The overall effectiveness of the factory-to-classroom transition is still unknown. There is a significant difference between someone who is skilled at making things and someone who can captivate twenty-two eighth graders on a Tuesday afternoon in February, and career transitions are rarely as straightforward as program materials imply. No apprenticeship model can completely close that gap before someone enters a room by themselves with students for the first time.
However, there’s a sense that something worthwhile is emerging in these hills as Tennessee works through this and pulls on threads that most states haven’t even realized exist. Up to $18,000 in teacher training grants are available from the Tennessee Arts Commission to school districts and arts organizations that take their curriculum work seriously. It is not coincidental that the state places a strong emphasis on integrating creative arts with career and technical education. It reflects a true, if flawed, theory: those who are most familiar with materials, processes, and manufacturing are frequently the most qualified to instruct others in using their hands to think.
Tennessee is currently addressing the question of whether that theory holds true at scale.
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