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Aragon, Katherine; Hirschwerk, Rebecca – Journal of Museum Education, 2018
The Drawn to Nature program is a collaboration between the museum and a local school district that encourages first graders to explore the ponds, meadows, forests, and sculpture on the 145-acre nature preserve of the Nassau County Museum of Art in two seasons. Students engage in active, developmentally appropriate learning through movement across…
Descriptors: Museums, Arts Centers, Educational Cooperation, Grade 1
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Rosenfeld, Malke; Johnson, Marquetta; Plemons, Anna; Makol, Suzanne; Zanskas, Meghan; Dzula, Mark; Mahoney, Meg Robson – Teaching Artist Journal, 2014
Writing about the teaching artist practice should mean writing about art making. As both teacher and artist, the authors are required to be cognizant of their own art-making processes, both how it works and why it is important to them, in order to make this process visible to their students. They also need the same skills to write about how and…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Writing (Composition), After School Programs
Cunningham, Karen – Arts & Activities, 2010
Art educators are aware that one way to inspire students is to introduce them to prominent artists. They all know that many students have preconceived notions that artists only become well-known after death, or that a life of art means a life of poverty. To open the students' eyes, the author always tries to include lessons about successful,…
Descriptors: Artists, Sculpture, High School Students, Studio Art
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Song, Young Imm Kang – Art Education, 2009
A fairly common understanding among teachers is that the study of the arts opens up the study of cultures. Appreciating the artistic expressions of a culture enhances student understanding of that culture and its people. Beyond appreciation, when students make artworks, they create meaning and explore their perceptions of various cultural roles.…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Studio Art, Korean Americans, High School Students
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Chiariello, Michael S. – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2007
Carved from cedar trees by the Native people of the Northwest Coast, totems are outgrowths of the region's aboriginal art forms. Originally an important part of the pot-latch ceremony--a feast with deep meaning to coastal First Nations--totem poles were once raised to represent a family clan, its kinship system, dignity, accomplishments, prestige,…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Sculpture, Family Relationship, Special Needs Students
Samuels, Shirley S. – Junior Coll J, 1969
Descriptors: Environment, Fine Arts, Music Education, Painting (Visual Arts)
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Kuster, Deborah – Art Education, 2005
Students can be inspired as they examine the art and life of Clyde Connell (1901-1998). Connell was a woman who lived almost her whole life within a 50-mile radius of Shreveport, Louisiana, but traveled to New York City regularly for years. Connell was nearly 60 years old before she focused full attention on making art, and her most creative years…
Descriptors: Art Education, Artists, Art Products, Sculpture
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Asher, Rikki – Teaching Artist Journal, 2004
Abstract visual art is not for everybody. Some people find it threatening, uncomfortable, and often, inaccessible. Understandably, this can result in a lack of attention paid to nonrepresentational works of art in the visual arts curriculum. This article describes an experiential, hands-on, field trip that sought to demystify abstract sculpture,…
Descriptors: Sculpture, Art Education, Field Trips, Art Appreciation