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MacWhorter, Cynthia – 1989
Art education in the United States has constantly sought some degree of reinforcement of purpose throughout its history. By closely examining some of the experiences of the past, insights into the validity of a discipline-based approach to art education should emerge. Such knowledge should enlighten the profession, so that rational and valid…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Aesthetic Values, Art Activities, Art Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Smith, Peter – Studies in Art Education, 1991
Compares Oskar Kokoschka's teaching practices with American Progressive Education literature. Observes that the latter stresses the need for practicing artists to teach in the schools. Evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of the artist-in-the-classroom concept revealed in light of Kokoschka's practices. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art History, Artists, Curriculum Evaluation
Chanda, Jacqueline – 1990
Three different models for the teaching of African art are presented in this paper. A comparison of the differences between the approaches of Western art historians and African art historians informs the articulation of the three models--an approach for determining style, another for dealing with analysis, and a third for synthetic interpretation.…
Descriptors: African Culture, Art, Art Education, Art History
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Edwards, M. D. – Art Education, 1991
Considers the true value of art by outlining a number of factors that determine the price of a painting including the fame of the artist, the time of the artist's death, and the age of the work. Concludes that students should be encouraged to consider the emotional, aesthetic, and intellectual worth rather than the monetary value. (KM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Values, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Anderson, Tom – Art Education, 1991
Explores the sources of art criticism and reviews some extant pedagogical models. Outlines the content skills to be developed and the role of art criticism in a discipline-based teacher training curriculum. Recommends that art criticism should incorporate pedagogy and other disciplines of art. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Criticism, Art Education, Art History, Art Teachers
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Manley-Delacruz, Elizabeth – Visual Arts Research, 1990
Reviews two curriculum frameworks--one developed by Elliot Eisner and Elizabeth Vallance and the second by Henry A. Giroux, Anthony N. Penna, and William F. Pinar--as a context for reconsidering conflicting notions about nature and purpose of art teaching. Discusses discipline-based art education (DBAE), suggesting that controversies over…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art History, Critical Theory, Curriculum Design
Molinaro, Julia A. – 1989
Efforts to renew cultural literacy and reform arts education sponsored by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Getty Center for Education in the Arts suggest fundamental changes relating to the scope of art curricula. The single greatest drawback of existing art curricula and the guides that teachers use is the emphasis on skill development…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Annotated Bibliographies, Art Activities, Art Education
Hamblen, Karen A. – 1989
The character of art criticism, both how it naturally occurs and how it is academically constructed, is reflective of social and aesthetic value orientations--much as the art object itself has been found to be a clue to the values of the society in which it is practiced, used, and appreciated. The belief that the art object possesses…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Aesthetic Values, Art, Art Appreciation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Boehm, Gottfried – Zeitschrift fur Padagogik, 1990
Explores the difficulties of combining aesthetic experience and educational settings. Postulates this is due to the nature of aesthetic experience as well as the art object itself. Argues that art metaphorically discusses not what is, but what develops and implies a relativistic, adaptive, temporal concept of truth. (CH)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Aesthetic Values, Art History, Art Products
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Stinespring, John A; Steele, Brian D. – Art Education, 1993
Recommends using an activity-based approach to art history similar to that of the "new social studies" movement of the 1960s. Provides suggestions for activities related to art criticism, style, and inductive learning. Concludes that student activities can help integrate art history and studio art in art education programs. (CFR)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Covey, Preston – Journal of Computing in Higher Education, 1990
The evolution and design of a videodisk recording for classroom use in teaching aesthetics at the college level are described. The program presents an internationally notorious case study in art forgery. It facilitates three crucial tasks in visual art study: access to art and related information; detail; and analysis. (MSE)
Descriptors: Access to Information, Aesthetic Education, Art History, Case Studies
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Parks, 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 reviewed Peer reviewed
Hilson, Muriel – Studies in Art Education, 1991
Addresses issues that might be raised in the study of art history from a critical theory perspective. Suggests that, in view of contemporary environmental and social concerns, Neolithic art would be of particular interest to students as would the possibility of having a society in which neither sex was dominant. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art History, College Curriculum, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hagaman, Sally – Studies in Art Education, 1990
Traces major directions of feminist inquiry in the disciplines of art history, art criticism, and aesthetics. Explores how first- and second-generation feminist scholars have challenged the canon of each discipline and the understanding of art traditionally produced. Draws implications for art education in curriculum development and teacher…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Criticism, Art Education, Art History
Dietrich, Linnea; Hurd, Diane Smith – 1997
This essay examines the ways in which art and art history, as disciplines, have been influenced by feminist scholarship and research into the areas of gender, sexuality, and race. It explains that before the interventions of feminist art historians and theorists of art, beginning in the 1970s, the history of art was conceived of and taught as a…
Descriptors: Art, Art Education, Art History, College Curriculum
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