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Nov 29, 2024
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ART 306 - Art Education: Elementary Schools (3 units) Theoretical foundations of art education including a planned program of media investigation and experience in areas suitable for elementary school and beginning middle school programming.
Prerequisite(s): Junior or Senior standing.
Units of Laboratory/Studio: 3 Offered: Every Fall and Spring
Student Learning Outcomes Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: 1. recognize that all students cannot, do not and will not learn in the same way and develop via written lesson plans via Goals and Objectives a number of ways of teaching the same concept in at least three different manners. 2. recognize that there is a major difference between GOALS [dispositional/”student will be able”] and OBJECTIVES [measurable/”students will] and plan accordingly. 3. recognize that there are those who are unable to recognize the abstractions necessary in traditional learning situations [such as reading and math] and provide alternatives to the traditional “I teach-you learn” model [lecture followed by processing followed by test]. 4. develop units and lessons in Art which cross disciplines [such as understanding the Horizon Concept as it relates to linear understanding and to reading at the Elementary level] and the logical narrative thread to continue these understanding through the various primary and elementary grade levels. 5. recognize that Art instruction in the public schools goal is not to produce “visual artists”, but rather to engage those parts of our student’s brains not engaged by academic subjects and to promote bridges between all segments of the brain to encourage and strengthen abilities in problem solving and creative, analytical and critical thinking abilities to formulate alternative scenarios, etc. 6. develop alternate scenarios which allow students to recognize that “play” is an integral part of education, that operating off the “what if” approach is what makes Art and Science function in much the same way and that “playing around with ideas” is many times far more valuable than coming up with what may occasionally be the “correct” answer.
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