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Stokrocki, Mary – 1991
This articles explores authoritive problems in interpreting art education in research, namely authorization and authorship. Authorization rites and rights are now under institutional surveillance. A researcher should proceed with ethical fairness. The process of authorship is one of the negotiation of conflicting meanings, and at times subject to…
Descriptors: Art Education, Cultural Awareness, Data Interpretation, Ethics
Stokrocki, Mary – 1991
The purpose of this study is to describe, analyze, and interpret through participant observation the teaching of art to Amish eighth graders in a public school. The description of what and how art is taught by a non-Amish art teacher raises questions of appropriate content, patterning of instruction, strategies for developing perceptual awareness…
Descriptors: Amish, Art Activities, Art Education, Communication Skills
Stokrocki, Mary – 1990
This participant observation study describes how one beginning, bi-lingual, Puerto Rican, elementary art teacher instructs a class of Puerto Rican, inner-city children. The study concentrates on the types and frequency of teaching behaviors that occur for a beginning teacher; cultural perspectives that affect instruction, content selection, and…
Descriptors: Art Education, Communication Skills, Cultural Activities, Elementary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Stokrocki, Mary – Art Education, 1994
Maintains that storytelling is an ancient instructional method that can be used effectively by contemporary art educators. Presents a narrative by a six-year-old Navajo girl that describes a typical school day. Includes suggestions for using the story to teach about cultural differences and cultural change. (CFR)
Descriptors: American Indians, Art Education, Art Products, Educational Strategies
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Stokrocki, Mary; Yazzie, Elmer – Canadian Review of Art Education: Research and Issues, 1997
Describes, analyzes, and interprets the cultural values communicated by a Navajo art teacher in a K-12 boarding school in New Mexico. Much of the Navajo world view is expressed through content, instruction, and demonstration. This view emphasizes spirituality, harmonious living, and the process of seeing and drawing as a way of honoring and…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, Art Education, Art Teachers