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Showing all 13 results Save | Export
Lori Anne Palmer – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Art Appreciation is often a course that undergraduate students take to meet their general education requirements. However, many students have little interest or value of art due to a lack of previous art experiences and often choose the course because they feel it will be relatively easy. This qualitative, naturalistic inquiry focused on students'…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Appreciation, Teaching Methods, Aesthetics
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Bae, Michelle; Dimitriadis, Greg – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2015
Contemporary discussions of globalisation (in general) and postcolonialism (more specifically) have largely remained wed to critiques of the West, including around its outsized role in the proliferation of neoliberal economic logics. As Chen argues in "Asia as Method," these discussions have precluded other kinds of discussions about…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Art, Art Education, Art Appreciation
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Feinberg, Walter – International Journal of Progressive Education, 2013
This paper examines the progressive understanding of art advanced by Albert Barnes, and asks how the educational vision for his large collection of art might be preserved as it has now moves from its location in the idyllic suburban setting in Merion, PA to the hustle and bustle of central Philadelphia. I submit that the vision will be endangered…
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Museums, Geographic Location, Change
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Nelson, Cindy – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2008
This article describes a lesson, designed for second graders, that begins with the teacher showing and talking about a few landscape fundamentals: horizon line, depth, and the mood or feeling that a work of art inspires. A class discussion ensues about how an artist's images can make one feel, how they can convey calmness, warmth, anxiety, or a…
Descriptors: Art Education, National Standards, Grade 2, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
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Kelin, Dan A., II – Teaching Artist Journal, 2008
A teaching artist reflects on his travels and work across the South Pacific and India. He concludes that American culture views art as a commodity appreciated mostly for its personal entertainment value, and therefore judges the outcome of artistic endeavors rather than appreciate the purpose of such endeavors. His teaching experiences have…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Artists, Cultural Influences, Aesthetics
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Fisher, Stacy – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2007
In this article, the author profiles Pierre-Auguste Renoir and describes Renoir's work of art, "Woman with Parrot". Renoir gained a reputation among peers for taking exceptional pleasure in painting, and his style was said to celebrate beauty and sensuality. He is recognized for showing significant empathy for the sitters in his portraits, and for…
Descriptors: Empathy, Art Education, Artists, Aesthetics
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Moore, Michael – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2007
In past years, teachers without professional training in the arts have often been able to avail themselves of summer institutes that introduced them to specific works of art and followed up with artists in the classroom, performance, or trips to an art museum. But what happens when such support is no longer available and teachers have to function…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Education, Aesthetics, Art Appreciation
Fogg, Piper – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
When the nearest metropolis is hundreds of miles away, cultural enrichment is not always easy to come by. Arts programs have evolved to reflect the needs of such regions, providing a rich diet for culture-starved residents. Some colleges have created choirs or theater groups that welcome local participation, while others have developed elaborate…
Descriptors: Cultural Enrichment, Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Music Activities
Diket, Read M., Ed. – 1996
This booklet contains the abstracts of nearly 100 conference sessions presented at the National Art Education Association Conference in 1996. The topics ranged across multiple contexts for art education, explored development issues in art, and included computer usages in art teacher education and the art classroom. Research presentations also…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism
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Cunliffe, Leslie – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2001
Ludwig Wittgenstein's thought embraces two complementary projects: what he called his therapeutic work which was aimed at treating philosophical questions as though they were an illness, and his reconstructive work which emerges from this therapeutic endeavor. Wittgenstein describes his therapeutic work as an exercise that involves destroying…
Descriptors: Art Education, Aesthetics, Visual Arts, Art Therapy
Manifold, Marjorie Cohee – 1995
This digest discusses the symbiotic relationship between art and social studies and suggests ways to integrate the two in the curriculum. The document advocates the study of art in context as a way to help students better understand the historical past by the values reflected in artwork, as well as recognize the power and potential of art for…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Aesthetics, Art, Art Activities
High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA. – 1996
This curriculum handbook uses a discipline based art education (DBAE) approach, and includes lessons appropriate for use with students in grades 3-12. Five units address themes of universally experienced emotions: love, anguish, awe, triumph, and joy. Art exemplars are draw from among the international cultures represented in the High Museum of…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Art, Art Activities, Art Appreciation
Bailey, Henry Turner – United States Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1909
Art instruction aims to raise the standard of taste. It includes instruction in seeing and interpreting the beautiful in nature and the arts, in drawing, both free-hand and instrumental, in designing, coloring, and modeling, in manipulating paper, cloth, leather, wood, metal, or other materials, to produce a result having elements of beauty. Art…
Descriptors: Partnerships in Education, Art Education, Fine Arts, Institutional Characteristics