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Metsapelto, Riitta-Leena; Pulkkinen, Lea – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2012
This 3-year longitudinal study investigated the associations of student (aged 9 to 10 years at the beginning of the study; n = 281; 51% girls) participation in extracurricular activities with teacher-rated socioemotional behavior and school achievement. MANOVA results showed that, after controlling for the grade level and the initial level of the…
Descriptors: Extracurricular Activities, Team Sports, Music Activities, Academic Achievement
McNally, Ellen – Arts & Activities, 2009
The Maya civilization developed from about 300 B.C., predating the Aztecs who flourished in the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries. One of the challenges of this lesson is to present a cohesive history of the Maya to fourth- and fifth-graders within the context of an art lesson. A glyph is a symbol. A symbol is something that represents something else,…
Descriptors: Maya (People), Studio Art, Art Activities, Freehand Drawing
Bennett, S. A.; Phillips, Claire; Moore, Natalie – Arts & Activities, 2009
The original Moko Jumbie was a spirit dancer from West Africa. "Moko" is a West African word that refers to gods and "Jumbie" means ghost. In West Africa, Moko Jumbies are known to kidnap and eat disobedient children, steal dreams and see into evildoers' hearts and terrorize them. They walk through villages on 10- to…
Descriptors: African Culture, Latin American Culture, Art Activities, Studio Art
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Riddett-Moore, Karinna – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2009
This paper demonstrates how aesthetic engagement can encourage empathy and caring in the art classroom. As artful inquiry, this hybrid form of arts-based educational research and teacher research examines my own classroom practice and pedagogy exploring how aesthetics can become a philosophy of care. Part 1 outlines the "Living Compositions…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Empathy, Caring, Studio Art
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Santa, Debra Dalla – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2009
Art studio experiences can meaningfully integrate multiple curricular discipline areas. Through a study of public visual expression, from historic labyrinths to contemporary graffiti, connections can be made to art forms related to spiritual realms and ceremonial rituals. Such activities can also serve as a springboard for writing. In this…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Elementary School Students, Grade 3, Painting (Visual Arts)
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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
Vize, Anne – Arts & Activities, 2009
Australian Aboriginal culture is rich, complex and fascinating. The art of Aboriginal Australians shows a great understanding of the earth and its creatures. This article presents an activity which has been designed as a multi-age project. The learning outcomes have been written to suit both younger and older students. Aspects of the project could…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Culture, Art Activities, Studio Art
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Ellyn, Tracy – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2008
Art education is unique because it is driven far more by experiential involvement than by a predetermined curriculum. When a group of students creates a masterpiece, there are several outcomes. Each student contributes based on his or her strengths. Partial solutions placed into the learning pot by each student result in whole solutions. Because…
Descriptors: Art Education, Arts Centers, Art Products, Art Activities
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Nelken, Miranda – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2008
People know little about the non-domesticated animals that live around them. Somehow, they seem remote. In stories they hear about them, animals are often acting, speaking, and dressing like people. This article presents a lesson where students learn about the native species of their area while exploring the concept of interdependence through…
Descriptors: Animals, Art Education, Art Activities, Grade 3
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Hinshaw, Craig – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2009
Machu Picchu, the lost city of the Incas in Peru, was recently voted one of the new Seven Wonders of the World. Also in Peru are the mysterious Nazca Lines--a humming bird, a spider, and trapezoids--which are etched in the desert so large they can only be seen from an airplane. The author experienced some of these places recently when he and his…
Descriptors: Historic Sites, Foreign Countries, Latin American Culture, Studio Art
Shmulsky, Lucinda – Arts & Activities, 2009
In July 2004, The National Endowment for the Arts released the results of a survey entitled "Reading at Risk." The survey covered a 20-year period from 1982 to 2002 and documented a dramatic decline in the reading of literary works by all age groups during that period. The steepest decline of 28 percent was found among the youngest age group of…
Descriptors: School Libraries, Grade 1, Art Activities, Integrated Curriculum
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Lehrer, Joanne Shari; Petrakos, Hariclia Harriet – Exceptionality Education International, 2011
The transition from kindergarten to Grade 1 is marked by a sudden decrease in children's play time (Brostrom, 2005; Hartmann & Rollett, 1994). This study sought to examine 69 Montreal-area Grade 1 children's beliefs about out of school play, as well as their parents' (N = 56) perceptions of their play. Findings indicate that parents value play…
Descriptors: Siblings, Play, Grade 1, Parent Attitudes
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Haanstra, Folkert – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2010
This article deals with the forms and contents of self-initiated art works: the kind of learning that takes place in the production of self-initiated art works as well as the relationships with school art. We interviewed 52 Dutch students (aged between 10 and 14) from different schools of primary and secondary education, and their art teachers.…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Art Education, Intentional Learning, Experiential Learning
Goebel, Kim – Arts & Activities, 2009
During each of the holiday seasons, the author tries to come up with a lesson that will incorporate art history and have a holiday theme. One recent winter-holiday season, the author was thumbing through a catalog and saw a picture of note cards that had famous artists' stockings hanging on a mantel. This triggered an idea for the author's…
Descriptors: Holidays, Art History, Studio Art, Art Activities
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Haley, Sheean T.; Dyhrman, Sonya T. – Science and Children, 2009
The Artistic Oceanographer Program (AOP) was designed to engage elementary school students in ocean sciences and to illustrate basic fifth-grade science and art standards with ocean-based examples. The program combines short science lessons, hands-on observational science, and art, and focuses on phytoplankton, the tiny marine organisms that form…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Art Education, Grade 5, Oceanography
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