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Greene, Maxine – Journal of Education, 1980
Moralistic and utilitarian emphases have long made imaginative activity seem suspect in American schools. Students must be freed in order to become conscious of their various interpretive undertakings and to reflect upon the various ways that experiences may be ordered. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Creative Thinking, Fine Arts
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Greene, Maxine – Educational Forum, 1994
Standards in art education contradict the nature of art: the unexpected, the imagined, the explorations and creative discoveries. What must be communicated is the importance of the arts and aesthetic education, the nurture of informed understanding of art, and meaningful standards that emerge intrinsically and are not imposed extrinsically (SK)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Education, Creativity, Cultural Context
Greene, Maxine – Phi Delta Kappan, 1995
The existential contexts of education reach far beyond the conceptions of Goals 2000 or the appalling actualities of family breakdown, homelessness, violence, and other "savage inequalities." Classroom encounters with the arts can move the young to imagine, extend, and renew. If the arts' significance for growth, inventiveness, and…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Existentialism
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Greene, Maxine – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2000
Articulates two cornerstones of a vision of public education in the United States: (1) the need for community and for a coming together with something to pursue; and (2) the importance of the imaginative voice of the artists in human conversation. (CMK)
Descriptors: Art Education, Artists, Community, Educational Trends