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Doonan, Jane – Children's Literature in Education, 2000
Discusses a small group of picture books that display two of Quentin Blake's great strengths: (1) the inventiveness of his concept and design; and (2) the representation of his own view that a children's book can be a place where adults and children meet on equal footing. (NH)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Illustrations, Literary Awards
Patterson, Berniece – Arts and Activities, 1998
Argues that students should be competent in creating original art on the computer. Presents a lesson using "ClarisWorks" for the Macintosh computer that asks student to create original portrayals of a landmark in a cubist style. Profiles the work of Marc Chagall and his contributions to cubism. (DSK)
Descriptors: Art Education, Computer Graphics, Computer Uses in Education, Elementary Secondary Education
Hubbard, Guy – Arts and Activities, 1998
Observes that Western traditions of artistic realism create problems in school art programs, as students tend to equate realism with quality. Argues that the use of sculpture from other cultures or from contemporary Western artists who do not employ the realist idiom can help move students away from this bias. (DSK)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Values, Art Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Realism

Whitelaw, Jessica; Wolf, Shelby A. – New Advocate, 2001
Encourages students to slow down and to reflect upon what they had read. Focuses on the visual arts, particularly for their capacity to help move students from the concrete to the abstract. Notes that Lowry's (1993) novel "The Giver" particularly lent itself to this approach because its powerful visual imagery encourages readers to return to and…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Reader Text Relationship

Garrett-Petts, W. F. – Children's Literature in Education, 2000
Considers the role of visual literacy in the reading experience. Discusses an assumption among readers, publishers, and many educators that the visual elements in a text may be safely ignored, marginalized, or simply edited out. Argues for the important role of visual arts in literature. (SC)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Illustrations, Picture Books

King, Judith – School Arts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2004
John Singleton Copley was virtually self-taught yet became the greatest painter in eighteenth-century America. By the age of eighteen he had become a highly sought portrait painter. His paintings held a good likeness and a pleasing reflection of his sitters' wealth and social aspirations. Copley's dazzling technique and his knowledge of the latest…
Descriptors: Artists, Biographies, Painting (Visual Arts), Portraiture

Silvers, Anita – Arts Education Policy Review, 2004
Proponents of expanding art education to address visual culture sometimes mean by this no more than the idea that unconventional kinds of imagery may productively be treated as art. Sometimes, however, the goal is to replace the appreciative and interpretive stances that are conventional in teaching and learning about art with a polemical…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Teachers, Teacher Qualifications, Knowledge Base for Teaching

Young, Anne – School Arts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2005
This brief article describes how a Anne Young taught her students to make a monoprint out of a coffee filter. A monoprint is a one-of-a-kind picture. This lesson taught students to use art materials and tools in a safe and responsible manner.
Descriptors: Studio Art, Visual Arts, Art Materials, Art Activities
Anderson, Mark Alan – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2005
In this article, the author relates how he and his class outlined a plan for a public artwork project to be displayed in their community. The author discusses how he asked his students during the course of making the project to reflect on the following: (1) Who am I?; (2) Who are middle-school students?; and (3) What does collaboration look like?…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Teaching Methods, Visual Arts

Nelken, Miranda – School Arts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2004
In this article, the author describes a classroom lesson relating to still life and the artist, Ralph Goings. While students painted, they discussed about how Ralph Goings shows that everyday, household items can be visually appealing. To give everyday objects a new, unintended purpose is a powerful way to rediscover the world. In younger…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Education, Painting (Visual Arts), Freehand Drawing

Graziano, Jane – School Arts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2004
In this article, the author describes one classroom's experience engaging in a lesson on aboriginal painting. Aboriginal painting has a particular allure to middle school students. As this age group crosses the threshold from concrete knowing to conceptual understanding, they are ready to re-frame their perspective of the artist's intent. Learning…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Middle School Students, Art Education, Indigenous Populations
Latta, Margaret MacIntyre – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2001
In this article, the author relates how she has developed an acute sensitivity to the nuances of movement through her sojourns in the beach. The author shares that the beach became her "determining ground" for her aesthetic experiences. As an artist, her artworks explore the many patterns and textures found through her attentiveness to landscapes.…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Art Expression, Art Products, Experience
Jay, Martin – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2002
Perhaps no twentieth-century philosopher was as favorably inclined towards the role of aesthetic experience in building a democratic culture as was John Dewey, the preeminent public intellectual in America during the first half of the twentieth century. His vision of democracy necessitated a robust commitment not only to an open-ended process of…
Descriptors: Self Actualization, Democracy, Museums, Aesthetics
Cosenza, Glenda – General Music Today, 2006
The article presents activities that tap into elementary and middle school children's multiple ways of knowing by having them visually express impressions and thoughts about music, and conversely, express their impressions of visual art by creating music. Because most children learn through both visual and auditory senses, they may foster deeper…
Descriptors: Music Education, Art Education, Visual Arts, Music Activities
Wall, Sharon – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2006
Whether referring to psychologist Stanley Milgram's intriguing theory, John Guare's successful play and film, or Kevin Bacon's party game, six degrees of separation may also be used as a way to help students make visual connections. The six degrees of separation is the concept that everyone is connected to everyone else in the world by only six…
Descriptors: Visual Arts, Studio Art, Relationship, Aesthetics