Teacher

NAME: Ron Brown rbrown@fisdk12.net

SCHOOL: Friendswood Jr. High

Art1, Art2, and Art Portfolio. I also coach girls volleyball, basketball, track and field and coed-soccer.

SCHOOL PHONE: 281-482-7818


About The Teacher

Flexibility, creativity gives edge to Friendswood Coach
 
By ANTHONY JONES
 
As a teacher and coach at Friendswood Junior High, Ron Brown, finds a 
comfortable balance between the creativity of art and sports.
“I use the same thought process for developing skills and individual 
growth in all areas,” said Brown, explaining that teaching is more or 
less a second career that he began seven years ago. 
Brown has a degree in art from the University of Houston and has 16 
years’ experience as a Advertising and Market Research Manager for 
Southwestern Public Service (now Excel Energy). He began teaching 
Sunday school in Amarillo. He moved back to the Bay Area and began 
working in market research with Opinions Unlimited moving an Amarillo 
office to Houston.  He took up teaching Sunday school at Methodist 
Church in Friendswood just before he decided to try teaching fulltime.
“I was tired of the mergers and not being able to spend any time with my 
family, ” said Brown. “I also enjoyed coaching AAU Basketball for 12 years 
and knew this experience would be helpful with coaching in a school 
setting…. so I made the big switch and it has been quite enjoyable.”
He teaches Art One, Art Two and Art Portfolio, at Friendswood Junior High. 
If that is not a full plate, Brown also coaches volleyball, basketball, 
track and field and soccer. 
In his art classes, he teaches the fundamentals of drawing and painting 
as well as three-dimensional art such as shadow boxes, sculpting and 
clay pottery on the junior high school level. 
“Art allows them (his students) the opportunity for developing another 
form of expression,” said Brown. 
“I venture to say that I have some students who can create better art than 
I can,” Brown added. “We have a show at Friendswood Library and there 
are those who have to ask, ‘is this really 7th and 8th grade level.’”

Brown uses five quotes as a basis for teaching and coaching sports. He 
begins with the statement: “You are special and you will be successful 
in all things you do if you follow these simple quotes.” 
·         “First master the fundamentals,” Larry Bird.
·         “Everyone wants to win, but not everyone is willing to prepare to 
Win!”  Bob Knight.
·         “Success is achieved by those who keep trying with a positive 
attitude,” W. C. Stone. 
·         “The measure of who you are, is what you do with what we have,” 
Vince Lombardi. 
·         “Even the smallest pebble dropped into a pond makes a ripple. 
The choices we make today will have a similar impact on our future,” 
Ron Brown.   
“I start off this grouping of quotes with these words ‘You Are Special,’ 
because I believe that each student or adult has special gifts they have 
been given and it is up to me to find those gifts and help the students or 
athletes develop them Brown said.
In Art One, his class starts on basic fundamentals and builds on those 
skills to improve the students’ understanding of art and production of 
art. 
“As the student expands on their fundamental tools and they are 
exposed to more forms of art, their art works will improve and they’ll be 
graded based on how they incorporate those tools into their own work,” 
Brown said. 
“Much the same happens when you coach a sport,” he added. “As a 
beginner in a sport you need to develop a basic foundation that all new 
activities can grow from and develop into new and more complex skills.” 
“If you take dribbling in basketball for instance you start off with right 
hand and then left hand dribbling off the fingertips and below the waist,” 
Brown said. “From there you move on to speed dribbling, behind the 
back, between the legs, pivot and on and on.”  
“I could expand on each of the quotes, but I think most individuals can 
draw their own conclusion as to how they are applied,” he said
 
Brown says that his background in the arts makes him flexible enough 
to understand the player. 
“I have to use my creativity to maximize the players potential on a given 
team,” he said, leading to many undefeated and district championships.