r
Education
477-
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Designs for Learning: Art
REGULAR SUMMER SEMESTER 1983
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INSTRUCTOR: Kit Grauer
Wednesdays
1
:3 0
- 5:20 ?
LOCATION: on campus
This course is designed to introduce students to concepts and practices in
art education at both the elementary and secondary levels. Readings,
discussions and studio activities will focus on current theory and practice
from designing and participating in classroom lessons to understanding the
newly revised art curriculum guides used in the schools in British Columbia.
Students should be prepared to be active critics and creators of art.
OUTLINE OF TOPICS
2.. Goals and purposes of art in education.
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- Overview of goals and objectives
- Provincial and local goals
Integration with other curriculum areas
2.
Approaches to teaching art
THEMES
- topics chosen from the curriculum or students interests
BASICS
- Elements and Principal of Design (such as line, shape, colour, texture,
etc.)
TECHNIQUES AND MATERIALS
- Painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, fabric
THOUGHTFUL OPINIONS
- thinking, talking and making judgements about art
IMAGINATION AND FEELINGS
- creative expression and aesthetic response
3. Translating theory into practice
- long range planning
- stages of children's development
- approaches to evaluation
- management in an art classroom
TYPICAL REQUIREMENTS
1.
Participation in discussion and activities and completion of assigned readings
2.
A visual/verbal notebook to record the experience of the course and to
further your own thinking about art education.
3.
Development of appropriate lesson plans,
S
Education
477-4
Designs for Learning: Art
SUMMER SESSION 1983
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INSTRUCTOR: Hinda Avery
Mondays
&
Thursdays 1:00 -
4:50
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LOCATION: on campus
This course is an introduction to teaching art to grades K - 12. The course
will include seminars, discussions, and workshop activities. Through
the use of imagery development exercises, and a variety of materials
and techniques, participants will develop their own skills so that they
may help to foster creativity and growth in school age children.
The importance of the creative process to the development of the whole
person will be examined, as well as the place and purpose of art
within the school curriculum.
The purpose of this course is "threefold":
1.
to familiarize the participant with the philosophy under-
lying inclusion of creative art experiences for school-
age children;
2.
to encourage the participant to believe in her/himself as an
artist-educator;
3.
to reawaken the participant's sense of personal responsibility
towards the arts - personal responsibility for assuring
the continuity of this aspect of our culture.
"Through the visual experiences of personal statements, humor and beauty,
we will enrich our lives as well as the lives of our students. We
will open eyes, and fill them with the will to see"
I. ?
OUTLINE OF TOPICS:
1.
The Creative Process: the relationship between creative activities
and healthy development.
2. Place and purpose of an art program.
3.
Roles and responsibilities of the art teacher.
1+. ?
Activities and their values:
(a)
visual expression in design;
(b)
visual expressin in drawing and painting;
(c)
visual expression in sculpture;
(d)
visual expression in performance art;
(e) visual expression in graphic art;
(f)
visual expression in media.
II. ?
REQUIREMENTS:
1. A collection of visual aids:
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charts, slides, photographs, illustrations.
2.
A lab book containing methods, lesson plans, curriculum outlines,
and readings.
3.
A sketch book/journal containing thoughts, feelings, images.
14.
Completed projects from at least four of the visual expressions.
5. ?
A display of visual aids.