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McClain, Martha B. – School Arts, 1989
Describes ways computers are used in the art education program of one elementary school. Illustrates how computers become centers where students learn to use the computer as a tool with which to experiment and make choices. The results of these experiments are then applied to their art work. (KO)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Education, Class Activities, Computer Assisted Instruction

Inglis, Alistair – British Journal of Educational Technology, 1998
Reports on providing visual feedback to art students by sending compressed digital video clips as attachments to e-mail messages. Concludes that, although bandwidth constraints of dial-up links and the time taken for compression limit the amount of video that can be transmitted, the transmission of video by e-mail is technically feasible. (PEN)
Descriptors: Art Education, Assignments, Computer Assisted Instruction, Distance Education
Barnhurst, Kevin G. – 1987
Since visual knowledge of the specialties within graphics and photography is difficult to pinpoint because it is nonverbal and intuitive, graphics educators fall back on teaching technical expertise--the procedures and equipment used for newspapers, magazines, and television stations. For centuries visual knowledge was the realm of the unlettered,…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Graphics, Higher Education

Rogers, Patricia L. – Art Education, 1995
Maintains that the computer is a new tool to link the concepts of information and art together. Asserts that electronic tools have a hidden point of view that is more complex than that included in a brush, printing press, or a camera. Concludes that there may be a move toward a reunion of art and science and of process and product. (CFR)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Products, Art Teachers, Classroom Techniques