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Sanderson, Patricia; Savva, Andri – Music Education Research, 2004
Musicians and visual artists are appointed to work as specialist teachers in Cypriot primary schools because of their artistic expertise. However, little information is available concerning these artists and their work in schools, including the perceptions of the pupils. This paper reports on an investigation into the nature of the pupils'…
Descriptors: Artists, Elementary Education, Specialists, Musicians
Yarker, Patrick – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2006
The content of many school lessons is increasingly determined by the requirement to "cover" what is laid down in England's National Curriculum. In this situation transmission or "delivery" models of teaching all too often become the norm. This article records aspects of a very different kind of teaching and learning, and…
Descriptors: Grade 8, National Curriculum, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods
Soganci, Ismail Ozgur – Art Education, 2005
Images can be and have been used in various ways, and by their man-made nature they cannot be considered independent of their providers' intentions. Yet, identifying such intentions is complex, and requires a critical look supported by relevant information on what is being represented, how, and why. In this article, the author illustrates some of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Criticism, Visual Arts, Art Education
You Can Hide but You Can't Run: Interdisciplinary and Culturally Sensitive Approaches to Mask Making
Ballengee-Morris, Christine – Art Education, 2005
From papier mache to plaster and paper to moulage, making masks is a popular activity for both art educators and students around the world. Masks have been and are currently used by many cultures/societies for specific cultural rituals and spiritual, metaphorical, role-playing, and theatrical reasons. In short, their use and their creation are…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Art Education, Art Teachers, Teaching Methods
Chung, Sheng Kuan – Art Education, 2006
The importance of multicultural art education has been addressed by art educators over the past 15 years. Art educators maintain that art is capable of empowering mutual respect and appreciation for people, objects, and ideas among diverse groups. Although many educators/teachers use non-Western artworks or artifacts to enrich their art programs,…
Descriptors: Asian Culture, Religious Factors, Art Education, Aesthetics
Louis, Linda L. – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2005
This article examines the process of graphic representational development in paint in the context of the theoretical assumptions of traditional developmental stage theory. Consistent with current theory and research in art education and cognitive psychology, a model of painting development is proposed that is multidimensional rather than unitary,…
Descriptors: Children, Painting (Visual Arts), Art Education, Cognitive Psychology
Brisco, Nicole D. – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2005
In this article, the author describes how she conducts her art classes. She relates that she begins all of her classes by asking prompting questions and presenting basic information such as a definitions of art terminologies to her students. The author believes in brainstorming with her students, an effective way for creating a dialog with her…
Descriptors: Portraiture, Teaching Methods, Art Education, Painting (Visual Arts)
Duran, Jane – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2001
In this essay, the author furthers the argument that critical commentary on the Rajput and Muslim miniatures of India has focused on a rather odd use of labels and categories, perhaps to an even greater extent than has been the case with much of the rest of the criticism of the art of South Asia. She first examines the use of the term…
Descriptors: Indians, Criticism, Foreign Countries, Philosophy
Snider, Lindsay – History Teacher, 2001
During its own time, French Impressionism was viewed as a sweeping revolution in painting, a radical departure from the existing traditions of European art. Today, Impressionism is recognized as a major frontier in art history and the threshold of the modern art movement. In this article, the author discusses the development of the Impressionism…
Descriptors: Art History, Art Expression, Foreign Countries, Intellectual History
Hubard, Olga M. – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2006
This article explores the way young people's responses to an image evolve when they engage with it repeatedly. An analysis of the sequential encounters of six adolescents with a Renaissance painting reveals that, as they gained experience with the picture, the youngsters probed for increasingly deeper layers of meaning in the work. Specifically,…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Art Education, Art Products, Art Criticism
Mehta, Shital – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2006
The author of this article, an art teacher, describes a lesson in which her elementary school students used acrylics to paint a cityscape of Bombay, India. After seeing huge canvas paintings at an art gallery, the students wanted to paint their own. They performed an exercise in which they closed their eyes, thought about the city, and listed all…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Art Education, Foreign Countries, Art Teachers
Cowan, Kay; Albers, Peggy – Reading Teacher, 2006
Learning to write well often proves to be one of the most difficult areas in the English language arts for young children. However, in these fourth- and fifth-grade language arts classrooms, children are offered opportunities to explore, think through, and express meaning across and within sign systems--in particular, using art, drama, and…
Descriptors: Poetry, Semiotics, Literacy, Art
McMenamin, Paul G. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2008
The teaching of human anatomy has had to respond to significant changes in medical curricula, and it behooves anatomists to devise alternative strategies to effectively facilitate learning of the discipline by medical students in an integrated, applied, relevant, and contextual framework. In many medical schools, the lack of cadaver dissection as…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Students, Anatomy, Clinical Experience
Schroeder-Yu, Gigi – Teaching Artist Journal, 2008
Teachers of the visual arts have long considered the importance of how to collect and display their students' work. Throughout history, bulletin boards have covered classrooms and school hallways neatly displaying children's art work. This article briefly summarizes how documentation functions within the Reggio Emilia approach and then discusses…
Descriptors: Childrens Art, Bulletin Boards, Art, Kindergarten
Gardner, Howard E. – 1971
Harvard Project Zero provides a series of technical research reports which study artistic creation and comprehension as a means toward better art education. The emphasis of the research is to improve art education through a better psychological understanding of symbol systems and media of art and through better understanding of the perceptual,…
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art Expression, Behavioral Science Research

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