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Showing 3,511 to 3,525 of 4,684 results
Peer reviewedParks, Michael E. – Art Education, 1992
Maintains that teachers and artists are alike in that they are communicators, inquirers, required to know themselves, trained to think qualitatively, concerned with technique, and evaluated by their work. Argues that using the model of the teacher as artist is superior to using only technical and quantifiable methods. (CFR)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Activities, Art Education, Art History
Peer reviewedMurdick, William; Grinstead, Richard – Art Education, 1992
Contends that writing across the curriculum, including the visual arts, has become a major educational trend in the past decade. Argues that writing helps shape the processes of art criticism and appreciation. Includes suggestions for writing assignments and examples of student writing. (CFR)
Descriptors: Art Criticism, Art Education, Creative Writing, Curriculum Design
Peer reviewedBeittle, Kenneth R. – Art Education, 1990
Describes how Zen and the art of pottery expand into a Great Tradition where the potter dreams his forms in a realm of imagination between sense and mind. Explains how decoration plays a vital role connecting art and our life-world. Outlines how students need a decade to reach this spiritual level. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Art Expression, Art History
Peer reviewedJeffers, Carol S. – Art Education, 1990
Compares and contrasts discipline-based art education with Viktor Lowenfeld's creative self-expression approach, using growth, medical, and molding metaphors. Maintains that these two approaches are similar because the views of the child, the teacher's role, and the relationship between them has not changed. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Expression, Art Therapy, Childrens Art
Peer reviewedKaelin, E. F. – Art Education, 1990
Discusses the nature of aesthetics, the kinds of activities involved, its sources, and competing ideologies. Recommends a plan for teaching aesthetics. Maintains that, for aesthetics to be fully implemented into the school, teachers must be asked to participate in designing the curriculum. (KM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Aesthetic Values, Art Education, Art Teachers
Peer reviewedJohnson, Kate; Walpole, Rachel – Art Education, 1990
Points out that the word "style" can mean how an object is designed or how to identify a particular artist, group, culture, or movement. Illustrates four artworks from the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Provides background information and questions for students to analyze, interpret, and create artwork. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Art History, Class Activities
Peer reviewedPetit, David A. – Art Education, 1990
Describes how three groups of twentieth-century U.S. artists--Landscape and architectural artists, pop artists, and the photo-realists--used the object as the primary image in their artwork. Maintains that this approach to studying still life may be more relevant for teachers and students today. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Expression, Art History, Art Teachers
Peer reviewedHolt, David K. – Art Education, 1990
Examines how criticism of Discipline-Based Art Education (DBAE) compares with the larger critique in the visual arts of high-modernism by post-modern critics. Examines DBAE's philosophical position on Classical Idealism and its back-to-basics approach. Suggests that the diversity in today's world should be represented in the classroom. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art History, Art Teachers, Cultural Awareness
Peer reviewedWardle, Barbra L. – Art Education, 1990
Examines how a discipline-based approach to multicultural art augments multicultural education. Focuses on Native American arts. Illustrates how symbols, colors, natural materials, and methods differ among tribes. Suggests teaching activities, including focusing on a particular artist to raise specific questions about specific symbols. Profiles…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art Expression
Peer reviewedArenas, Amelia – Art Education, 1990
Provides six lesson outlines to help teachers motivate high school students to discuss basic questions about the meaning and function of art, aesthetic responses cultural context, and artistic skill. Illustrates artwork from the Museum of Modern Art by Marcel Duchamp, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, and Meret Oppenheim. (KM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism
Peer reviewedLankford, E. Louis – Art Education, 1990
Outlines an issue-centered approach to teaching aesthetics, where students identify and analyze possible solutions before learning an aesthetician's viewpoint. Suggests that teachers acquire basic aesthetic knowledge but also be willing to accept planned uncertainty as an educational principle. Presents a fictional art forgery scenario to…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
Peer reviewedStout, Candace Jesse – Art Education, 1990
Shows how learning, in an art appreciation class, can be more meaningful and lasting by emphasizing expressive outcomes that develop during class and reflect students' life experiences. Explains how teachers can take advantage of students' spontaneously generated questions. Provides four examples from an undergraduate class that can be applied at…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
Peer reviewedKatter, Eldon – Art Education, 1995
Contends that craft art should be viewed as the inherent connectedness between an art object and its maker and perceiver. Maintains that school craft programs can increase students' international and intercultural perspectives. Asserts that crafts are meaningful if they are examined in context. (CFR)
Descriptors: Art Education, Citizenship Education, Cultural Context, Cultural Interrelationships
Peer reviewedMarschalek, Douglas G. – Art Education, 1995
Presents a sequential curriculum in design education focusing on product design embodying conceptual statements to guide instruction. Discusses conceptual statements for primary, intermediate, and middle school levels. Concludes that the study of design must be an integral part of the art curriculum. (CFR)
Descriptors: Art Criticism, Art Education, Art History, Art Products
Peer reviewedBillings, Mary-Michael – Art Education, 1995
Compares two closely related distinct approaches to art teaching: (1) the issues-oriented approach; and (2) the thematic approach. Contends that the issues-oriented approach to art education supports cultural diversity by emphasizing art's potential to promote political change. (CFR)
Descriptors: Art Education, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Cultural Images, Cultural Influences


