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Hasio, Cindy; Chen, Wei – Art Education, 2018
In this era of rapid development in multimedia and technology, there is a growing awareness of the use of multiple semiotic resources in meaning-making (Fei, 2004). Music videos specifically harbor meaning within their semiotic features of visual communication. They also exert an enormous influence on the popularity of music (Fei, 2004). Music…
Descriptors: High School Students, Art Education, Music, Video Technology
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Bertling, Joy G. – Art Education, 2019
Dewey (1934) defined reflection as "the kind of thinking that consists in turning a subject over in the mind and giving it serious and consecutive consideration" and argued that reflective thought should be an educational aim. Today the importance of reflective thought for students, teachers, and teacher candidates is recognized. Within…
Descriptors: Art, Art Education, Reflection, Visual Learning
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Gainer, Ruth Straus; Child, Julia S. – Art Education, 1986
Maintains that scientific illustration helps students develop visual acuity and drawing proficiency. Demonstrates how intermediate-grade students can combine elements of science and art through various scientific illustration projects. (JDH)
Descriptors: Art Education, Freehand Drawing, Interdisciplinary Approach, Intermediate Grades
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Caston, Ellie – Art Education, 1980
The museum, unlike other educational systems, can rely on authentic objects, not words, as the chief educational tool. It is important to remember: to learn about objects can be educationally valid and interesting, but to learn from objects can stimulate even higher levels of learning. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Art Education, Educational Resources, Elementary Secondary Education, Institutional Characteristics
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Quan, Roy H. – Art Education, 1979
In this theoretical discussion, still photography is viewed as a tool which can be used in the creation of meaning and as a medium for social inquiry. Three specific functions of photographic inquiry are explored: the anthropological, the normative, and the intuitive. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Art Appreciation, Discovery Processes, Inquiry
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Clark, Gilbert A. – Art Education, 1975
Article described the use of kits, a packaged collection of related materials designed to teach the user a predetermined content specific to the arts in conceptual, historical, critical, or aesthetic dimensions, and caboodles, a variation of a kit, which present important visual arts concepts to students. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Art Education, Curriculum Development, Educational Improvement, Instructional Materials
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Eubanks, Paula – Art Education, 1999
Explains that looking at a picture book as a work of art entails that one explores the relationship between images, the combination and arrangement of images, style and story, use of color, the relationship between the meaning of the text and images, and the form of the book. (CMK)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Values, Art Criticism, Art Education, Art Expression
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Greh, Deborah – Art Education, 1984
Traditional skills of reading, writing, and arithmetic may not be adequate for preparing students to enter today's highly technological and visual society. The role of the art educator is crucial in developing the visual skills which are increasingly necessary in a world of visual communication. (IS)
Descriptors: Art Education, Back to Basics, Educational Objectives, Elementary Secondary Education
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Landor, R. A. – Art Education, 1973
Article considered the proper aims of an art education and the importance for the child to learn to express himself in the language of his art. (RK)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Expression, Communication (Thought Transfer), Educational Development
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Kaufman, Mabel – Art Education, 1983
A curriculum approach is suggested which joins art education and language arts in academic skills development. The works of Piaget, Langer, Arnheim, and Eisner provide a theoretical basis for this effort. Three content elements are suggested: the history and appreciation of books; writing the text; and books as art forms. (CS)
Descriptors: Art Education, Books, Child Development, Curriculum Development
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Holt, David K. – Art Education, 1983
Discusses the relationship between aesthetic value and the improvement of perception of visual artwork. Recent experiments have attempted to improve visual perception of school children, and to study their developmental preferences in art. But art has moral dimensions, and aesthetic education must also facilitate the appreciation of aesthetic…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art, Art Education, Child Development
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Vannatta, Bonnie – Art Education, 1979
It is suggested that the right hemisphere of the brain--the creative, visual, imaginative--is being ignored in today's classroom, and ways of correcting this are presented. It is in this way that humanistic qualities may be established in existing curriculum. (KC)
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Education, Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Processes