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Teaching artist resume examples from 2026

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Updated March 26, 2025
6 min read
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How to write a teaching artist resume

Craft a resume summary statement

A well-written resume summary is basically an elevator pitch. You are summing up your skills and experience in a few sentences to wow recruiters, hiring managers, and decision makers into giving you an interview. Here are some tips to putting your best foot first with your resume summary:

Step 1: Start with your current job title, or the one you aspire to. Are you a passionate manager? A skilled analyst? It's a good starting point.

Step 2: Next put your years of experience in teaching artist-related roles.

Step 3: Now is the time to put your biggest accomplishment or something you are professionally proud of.

Step 4: Read over what you have written. It should be 2-4 sentences. Your goal is to summarize your experience, not recite your resume.

These four steps should give you a strong elevator pitch and land you some teaching artist interviews.

Please upload your resume so Zippia’s job hunt AI can draft a summary statement for you.

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List the right project manager skills

Many resumes are filtered out by hiring software before a human eye ever sees them. A robust Skills section can let recruiters (and bots) know you have the skills to do the job. Here is how to make the most of your skills section:

  1. Look at the job listing and skills listed. You need to include the exact keywords from the job description to get your resume in front of an actual human. Do you have those skills? Fantastic! Be sure to list them.
  2. Include as many relevant hard or technical teaching artist skills as possible for each job you apply to.
  3. Be specific with the skills you have and be sure you are using the most up to date and accurate terms.
These five steps should give you a strong elevator pitch and land you some teaching artist interviews.

Here are example skills to include in your “Area of Expertise” on a teaching artist resume:

  • Art Curriculum
  • Arts Education
  • Art Lessons
  • Public Schools
  • Creative Drama
  • Poetry
  • Classroom Management
  • NYC
  • Art History
  • Musical Theater
  • K-12
  • Visual Arts
  • Graphic Design
  • Shakespeare
  • Professional Development Workshops
  • Digital Photography
  • Public Speaking
  • Kindergarten
  • Improv
  • Pre-K
  • Fine Arts
  • Mathematics
  • Art Classes
  • Syllabus
  • Printmaking
  • Language Arts
  • Elementary Schools
  • Social Justice
  • Conflict Resolution
  • Art Projects

Zippia’s AI can customize your resume for you.

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How to structure your work experience

Next you should include your work experience. Structure your work experience section by listing your most recent experience first, followed by earlier roles in reverse chronological order.

Start with your job title, company name, city, and state on the left. Align dates in month and year format on the right-hand side.

Include only recent, relevant jobs. Avoid including work experience over 20 years to avoid ageism.

Beneath each job, you should have bullet points to emphasize why you're the perfect fit for the teaching artist.

How to write teaching artist experience bullet points

Your resume is your chance to show your biggest accomplishments. Don't just list your job responsibilities, instead take the opportunity to show why you're really good at what you do. Here is how you do that:

  • Start with strong action verbs like managed, spearheaded, created, etc. Your goal is to show what you did and verbs will help demonstrate your contributions.
  • Use numbers to quantify your achievements. Did you save time with a new report? Increase revenue? How large was the team you managed?
  • Keep it concise. You're highlighting your achievements. Consider if all details you are sharing are relevant, or can be written more efficiently.

Here are effective examples from teaching artist resumes:

Work history example #1

Program Coordinator

Sam Houston State University

  • Mentored student managers by reviewing documentation and recommending changes and proper follow-through on critical incidents and reporting.
  • Conducted presentations concerning various Health and Wellness topics including Lung Cancer, Eating Disorders and Tobacco Use.
  • Collaborated with academic research team to develop recruitment and retention strategies for study participants of the chronic disease health promotion program.
  • Negotiated Articulation Agreements with twenty school districts in career and technical education; oversight of two fiscal grants.
  • Established collaborative relationships with students, parents and teachers for thorough communication.

Work history example #2

After School Program Coordinator

Playworks

  • Planned and developed after-school programs to meet the individual needs of participating students through collaboration with principal and classroom teachers.
  • Provided overall management, evaluation, planning and developed methods, procedures and practices for efficient program functioning.
  • Prepared official reports concerning CPRP personnel investigations, violations, suspensions, and terminations in a highly confidential manner.
  • Developed extensive guidance documents, publications and organization materials to support the work of RSVP across an eleven county work area.
  • Instructed CPR to girls in particular groups.

Work history example #3

Teaching Artist

Belcan

  • Participated in IEP meetings, parent- teacher conferences as well as faculty and staff meetings.
  • Established and maintained positive relationships with students and colleagues, fostering an environment of open communication & support
  • Assisted professor in teaching, grading, tutoring, and mentoring Introduction to Engineering Design for 3 semesters.
  • Introduced biological concepts and outlined laboratory procedures.
  • Assisted ESL students with math, computer and reading $ Demonstrated science projects $ Participated in report card night as Portuguese interpreter

Work history example #4

Voice Teacher

Natick

  • Attended numerous teacher-training programs through Suzuki Association of the Americas.
  • Achieved certification in Suzuki Pedagogy, Level Three.
  • Instructed a studio of private voice students Created a positive and nurturing studio atmosphere Prepared students for recitals and competitions
  • Coached students for auditions and competitions, and presented two public recitals per year.
  • Conducted and managed all-inclusive fourth and fifth grade choirs and all-inclusive first through third grade chorus.

Zippia’s AI can customize your resume for you.

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Add an education section to your resume

Employers are looking for a few things when looking at the Education section of your resume:
  • The highest degree you have achieved.
  • TWhere you attended school, and the dates (Although if you graduated some time ago, leave the date off to avoid ageism)
  • TField of study
  • TAny honors, relevant coursework, achievements, or pertinent activities

Here are some examples of good education entries for resumes:

Master's Degree in music

University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH

2014 - 2015

Master's Degree in theatre

Texas State University, San Marcos, TX

2011 - 2012

Highlight your teaching artist certifications on your resume

If you have any additional certifications or education-like achievements, add them to the education section.

Start simple. Include the full name of the certification. It's also good to mention the organization that issued the certification. Next, specify when you obtained the certification.

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