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Anderson, Gary; Simic, Lena; Haley, David; Svendsen, Zoe; Neal, Lucy; Samba, Emelda Ngufor – Research in Drama Education, 2012
In this "RiDE" themed edition on environmentalism, some short pieces are chosen where practitioners describe their own specific environmental practices. Zoe Svendsen and Lucy Neal point to the positives in two commissioned works ("The Trashcatchers' Carnival" and "3rd Ring Out"), underlining the importance of…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Foreign Countries, Conservation (Environment), Teacher Participation
Alford, Joanna – Arts & Activities, 2012
James Rosenquist's giant Pop-art panels included realistic renderings of well-known contemporary foods and objects, juxtaposed with famous people in the news--largely from the 1960s, '70s and '80s--and really serve as visual time capsules. In this article, eighth-graders focus on the style of James Rosenquist to create their own Pop-art panel that…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Art Expression, Artists
Peace, Suze – Arts & Activities, 2012
In this article, students create a "faux" cake sculpture. It is a three-dimensional artwork made of paper, colored with markers, and decorated with old marker caps and polystyrene packing peanuts for icing swirls.
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Sculpture, Elementary School Students
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Venola, Penelope – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2012
Popular culture is a relatively new area of study in the artroom, and combining it with the demands of a rigorous curriculum requires some thought. Combining threads from several sources was the key to an exciting exploration of pattern inspired by a newspaper headline. In 2006, a landmark case was settled in Austria, which repatriated five famous…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Popular Culture, Artists
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Valenti, Karla – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2012
Empowering children to make a difference is not only an important way of fostering positive interactions among people, but it promotes children's growth as bright, competent, and independent individuals. One of the most effective ways of empowering children is by teaching them how to engage their multiple intelligences and imaginations to better…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Student Empowerment, Story Telling
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Pembleton, Matthew; LaJevic, Lisa – Art Education, 2014
What does an introduction to and engagement in performance art offer K-12 students? In this article, we respond to this question by proposing a lesson inspired by the artmaking practices of the contemporary artist Erwin Wurm. Performance art can be defined as any form of work that combines the artist's body and a live-action event with or…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Classroom Environment, Theater Arts, Sculpture
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Mohr, Elizabeth – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2014
Evidence that posttraumatic growth is a potential outcome in the process of recovery from trauma and natural disaster highlights the importance of social environmental factors that encourage a growth response in survivors. This art-based research project followed up on a group of youth survivors (N = 11) of the 2007 earthquake in the Ica region of…
Descriptors: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Trauma, Natural Disasters, Social Environment
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Meszaros, Bonnie T.; Suiter, Mary C. – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2014
At an early age, young children often wonder why they must go to school. They may see the connection between practice and their ability to kick a soccer ball or to play a musical instrument, but seldom know the answer to the question, "Why is school important?" Elementary teachers can give young children the opportunity to learn that…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Young Children, Human Capital, Role of Education
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Allan, Julie – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2014
This paper addresses the troubled, problematic and contested field of inclusive education, characterised by antagonisms between so-called inclusionists and special educationists; frustration, particularly among disability activists caused by the abstraction of the social model of disability and the expansion of the special educational needs…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Special Education, Special Needs Students, Art Activities
Dewhurst, Marit – Harvard Education Press, 2014
In this lively and groundbreaking book, arts educator Marit Dewhurst examines why art is an effective way to engage students in thinking about the role they might play in addressing social injustice. Based on interviews and observations of sixteen high schoolers participating in an activist arts class at a New York City museum, Dewhurst identifies…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Activism, Art Activities, Interviews
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Ivon, Hicela; Kušcevic, Dubravka – Center for Educational Policy Studies Journal, 2013
The present paper explores the idea that learning, both in and out of school, is a cultural act, and that school and its cultural-heritage environment stamp their own characteristics on pupils. This implies that pupils gradually, with the help of teachers and other relevant adults from their close social environment, develop and adjust their…
Descriptors: Heritage Education, Cultural Enrichment, Cultural Capital, Social Environment
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Adams, Jeff – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2013
This article explores contemporary forms of creative practices and their survival under siege from what Stuart Hall (2011) describes as the neoliberal revolution, in the context of the tightly policed education system in the United Kingdom. The fragility and importance of the democratic struggle is discussed with reference to Chantal Mouffe's work…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Creativity, Resistance (Psychology)
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Tremblay, Gail – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2013
In this article, I examine strategies for teaching students to make socially conscious art using a variety of media that emphasizes installation work. I present issues of social justice in the contemporary art world and include concerns of censorship that artists sometimes confront. I offer examples of team taught coordinated studies programs…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Art Activities, Art Education, Art Materials
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Bertling, Joy – Art Education, 2013
The ecological realities of many communities are desperate but not determined. As teachers inevitably encounter these realities in their communities, they can respond by activating students' imaginations to conceive of better alternatives. Greene (1995) outlined how the imagination has the power to envision alternative realities and better…
Descriptors: Art Education, Place Based Education, Artists, Middle School Students
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Waitt, Gordon; Gibson, Chris – Journal of Rural Studies, 2013
This paper seeks to explore creative practice in an Australian country town, and in so doing, to unsettle market-orientated interpretations of creativity that privilege the urban. Instead of focusing on creative practice as a means to develop industries, we focus on how creativity is a means to establish a cooperative gallery space that helps to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Activities, Creativity, Municipalities
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