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Smilan, Cathy – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2016
Visual literacy and the ability to think creatively are critical skills requisite to full participation and communication in the twenty-first century. Learning experiences that integrate studio-based inquiry and other academic concepts can develop discipline skills as well as communication skills of deciphering visual cues and de/re-constructing…
Descriptors: Visual Literacy, Creative Thinking, Inquiry, Art
Dambekalns, Lydia; Medina-Jerez, William – Science Scope, 2012
All too often, subjects in schools present disjointed phenomena as a compilation of data or facts that seem isolated from students' lives. However, current science education pedagogy clearly emphasizes integration of knowledge and skills in real-world settings (NRC 2007). This integrated instructional approach addresses fundamental process skills…
Descriptors: Science Education, Art Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Science Instruction

Anderson, Tom – Art Education, 1986
Guidelines for talking about art with elementary students are presented. A critical factor in developing children's art talk experiences is an organized, well rounded, and well developed plan that recognizes the differences between talk about student art and more general talk about professional art. (RM)
Descriptors: Art, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Discussion
Smith, Peter – 1996
Past uses of art reproductions in schools and mass media publications are described, along with political, economic, and aesthetic issues raised by such usage. The presentation focuses on concerns associated with present and future educational use of reproductions, whether electronic or some other form. Issues of selectivity and aesthetics are…
Descriptors: Art, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Critical Viewing

Zeller, Terry – Art Education, 1983
Though reproductions are a necessary teaching tool, they are not substitutes for the original work of art. Through museum visits, students can be provided with the knowledge needed to experience art. By describing, analyzing, and evaluating the works of art, students become aware of the differences between originals and reproductions. (CS)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art, Art Appreciation, Art Education
Bryan, Sandra L. – 1999
Aesthetic value enhances personal and professional lives and contributes to people's environment. If one defines the aesthetic sense as the faculty that enables one to modify the quality of his or her environment, then it follows that aesthetic education should be a means to achieve this end. In order for that to happen, there must be changes both…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Aesthetic Values, Art, Art Education
Singer, Carla Michalove – 1994
Line, shape, color and texture have always been the universal components of visual expression. Together these elements form a visual language. This packet is designed to be used as part of the Thematic Tour "First Look" offered by the Georgia Department of Education. The material explores some of the ways people use pictorial language;…
Descriptors: Art, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
Hollingsworth, Patricia; Hollingsworth, Stephen F. – 1989
The first step in learning to appreciate art is learning to classify a work according to its primary purpose. The artist creates art for one of three reasons: to recreate the physical world (Imitationalism); to express an idea or feeling (Emotionalism); or to create an interesting design (Formalism). A classified work may then be critiqued by: (1)…
Descriptors: Art, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
Mittler, Gene A. – 1997
Art reflects the ideas, experiences, spirit, and hopes of those who create it. It is through art works that students can see a visual record of how men and women lived and thought throughout history and across cultures. This instructional resource includes 52 transparencies, accompanying teaching strategies, and student worksheets which are…
Descriptors: Art, Art Criticism, Art Education, Art History

Feldman, Edmund Burke – Art Education, 1978
Throughout European history, artists have celebrated the values of their patrons. Today, the schools are the largest employer of artists. To justify art education according to current Back-to-Basics values, art teachers should explain visual art as a language, which they can teach students to read and use. (SJL)
Descriptors: Art, Art Education, Art History, Artists

Doornek, Richard R. – School Arts, 1990
Presents a lesson plan developed around the work of architectural muralist Richard Haas. Discusses the significance of mural painting and gives key concepts for the lesson. Lists class activities for the elementary and secondary grades. Provides a photograph of the Haas mural on the Fountainbleau Hilton Hotel, 1986. (GG)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art, Art Activities, Art Education
Sullivan, Kathryn C. – 1988
In 1899, the Committee of Ten on Drawing, organized by the National Education Association, proposed that one of the main goals of art education should be "to offer a consistent development in the faculty of sight." Art appreciation was centered on the literal translation of the painting. Importance was placed on connecting the painter's…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Aesthetic Values, Art, Art Appreciation
Balfe, Judith H., Ed.; Heine, Joni Cherbo, Ed. – 1988
The 13 seminar papers presented in this collection discuss various avenues used for educating adults in the arts in order to enrich existing arts audiences and to educate the widest possible adult population in the practice and history of art and aesthetics. These efforts will ensure that the quality and quantity of arts participation and support…
Descriptors: Adults, Art, Art Activities, Art Appreciation
Green, Julie Taylor – 1992
An examination of 19th century U.S. art and literature reveals the country's strong identification with nature, the ideals of individual freedom and pioneer courage, and the faith in human nature embraced by the immigrants who expanded the country. In the 17th and 18th centuries, U.S. painting reflected the styles and standards of English art. By…
Descriptors: Art, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education

Haskell, Francis – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1985
Since the eighteenth century, both artists and art historians have received educational benefits from public art museums. The main function of public museums, however, has usually been the improvement or refinement of public taste. But in addition to education and pleasure, another museum objective is that of moral improvement. (RM)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Aesthetic Education, Art, Art Education
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