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Selig, Lauren – Art Education, 2009
Numerous forms of visual culture have not been addressed as valid content in traditional high school curricula until recently, resulting in missed opportunities for engagement in meaningful learning. To understand better the aesthetic responses of urban adolescents, the author conducted a qualitative case study with the high school students in her…
Descriptors: Art Education, Aesthetics, High Schools, Urban Schools
Martinez, Ulyssa – Art Education, 2012
Does the person become the name or does the name become the person? This question was asked by a participant of my culture jam entitled, "What's my name?" In this culture jam, I asked people to discern the name of a person based solely on their appearance and a list of possible names below their picture. This article aims to show how culture jams…
Descriptors: Art Education, Misconceptions, Culturally Relevant Education, Naming
Briggs, Judith – Art Education, 2009
Films are multimodal, often memorable, and change one's way of thinking. Films provide narratives and visual metaphors that function as tools for one's imagination and learning. No other film has amplified this phenomenon in the United States more than the "Star Wars" Cycle. "Star Wars" exemplifies the multidimensionality of…
Descriptors: Films, Art Education, Film Study, Grade 7
Ward, Amber E. – Art Education, 2010
The author has been deeply committed to shaping an art curriculum that offers students a more meaningful and authentic experience. In addition, she has been interested in the notion of students as victims of their popular culture. She questioned the ways in which cultural sources might impact their aesthetic choices with regard to personal…
Descriptors: Sculpture, Portraiture, Popular Culture, Aesthetics
Hubbard, Kathy – Art Education, 2010
In this article, the author describes how high school and university students in Georgia and members of a small weaving pueblo in Oaxaca, Mexico, collaborated in designing and creating a mural in the central market ("mercado") of the pueblo. A number of lessons emerged from this multi-cultural collaboration. First they learned that using…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Painting (Visual Arts), Cooperation, High School Students
Stokrocki, Mary; Eldridge, Laurie – Art Education, 2009
Students, during the ages 11 years old to 13 years old ("tweens"), experience a growing desire to think and act independently while caring deeply about being accepted by the group. Tweens may feel vulnerable and self-conscious during the many changes that occur during puberty. These feelings can lead tweens to doubt their abilities and disengage…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Art Education, Puberty, Educational Opportunities
Bae, Jaehan – Art Education, 2012
Murals have become a powerful art form for portraying antiwar, human rights, social justice, and human dignity issues. Educators and artists have conducted mural workshops with adolescents in international settings to educate them about peace, human rights, and cultural tolerance. Learning with murals has been shown to be pedagogically meaningful…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Cooperative Learning, Peace, Workshops
Chung, Sheng Kuan; Kirby, Michael S. – Art Education, 2009
Critical media literacy art education teaches students to: (1) appreciate the aesthetic qualities of media; (2) critically negotiate meanings and analyze media culture as products of social struggle; and (3) use media technologies as instruments of creative expression and social activism. In concert with art education practices oriented toward…
Descriptors: Obesity, Homeless People, Child Abuse, Activism
Sakatani, Ken; Pistolesi, Edie – Art Education, 2009
Every once in a while, stray fragments from art or popular culture spark one's imaginations and trigger an idea for developing an art curriculum project. In this article, the authors begin with the interior world of extraterrestrial aliens within the Grand Central Station locker from "Men in Black II," and led eventually to the authors' students…
Descriptors: Personal Space, Popular Culture, Imagination, Space Exploration
Blair, Lorrie – Art Education, 2007
For many North Americans, tattoos reflect hopes, values, or beliefs and act as vehicles to communicate those beliefs to others. For some, tattoos offer a means to reclaim a sense of ownership and control over their body. Tattoos are particularly popular with teenagers who explore their identity through experimentation with their outward…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Adolescents, Popular Culture, Art Education
Efland, Arthur D. – Art Education, 2005
A new movement has appeared recommending, in part, that the field of art education should lessen its traditional ties to drawing, painting, and the study of masterpieces to become the study of visual culture. Visual cultural study refers to an all-encompassing category of cultural practice that includes the fine arts but also deals with the study…
Descriptors: Art Education, Popular Culture, Postmodernism, Fine Arts
Tavin, Kevin; Hausman, Jerome – Art Education, 2004
The term globalization has come into popular use in many areas of discourse. For the most part, it refers to the development of global financial markets, the growth of transnational corporations, and their increasing domination over national and local economies. As the authors use the term in this article, the meaning and significance of…
Descriptors: Art Education, Visual Arts, Popular Culture, Global Approach
Eckhoff, Angela; Guberman, Steven – Art Education, 2006
In contemporary society, what, why, and how students come to gain knowledge and understandings of art defies traditional boundaries. In part, this is because of the prevalence of many forms of popular visual culture. In this article, the authors present three vignettes that demonstrate the ways in which three young children created connections…
Descriptors: Fine Arts, Interaction, Young Children, Popular Culture
Marshall, Julia – Art Education, 2006
It is time for new ideas and models for art education. Current developments in contemporary art, learning theory and in art education itself demand new approaches and provide inspiration and guidance for change. Each area brings particular components to the table but they all have one primary element in common: a call for art education that is…
Descriptors: Art Education, Constructivism (Learning), Integrated Curriculum, Interdisciplinary Approach

Forman, Bernard I. – Art Education, 1981
Within the sister fields of art and art education, we seem to be equally at sea in our efforts to establish priorities, reassess our values, and redirect our energies. (Author)
Descriptors: Art, Art Education, Educational Objectives, Educational Practices