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The arts as a course of study in the Comprehensive High SchoolPenn, Gloria Jean Parker January 1964 (has links)
Thesis (M.M.)--Boston University / PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis or dissertation. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at open-help@bu.edu. Thank you. / Statement of the problen4 The purposes of this study were (1) to examine the concepts and recommendations underlying the organization of a comprehensive school and their implications for certain areas of the humanities; (2) to investigate the interrelationships in the arts of music, architecture, sculpture, and painting from philosophical and aesthetic viewpoints; and (3) to formulate a course of study for a comprehensive high school for developing understanding and appreciation of accomplishments in music and art.
Method of procedure. This study outlined an approach to a better understanding of the methods by which the interrelatedness of the arts can contribute to the needs and changes of society through the American comprehensive high school. It similarly presented the values of an interrelated art course for all students. Selected periodicals, publications of learned organizations, professional education texts, histories of music and art, and unpublished documents were essential in the development of this study.
The importance of the study was emphasized by a need for flexible and well-balanced school programs adapted to the needs of each individual student. It was found that such a well-balanced organization could be developed through the comprehensive high school, which endeavors to teach all children regardless of class or background the values of democracy and social integration. It further endeavors to broaden and develop the intellectual, emotional, and creative potentials of the student, through a cultural as well as a scientific background [TRUNCATED]. / 2999-01-01
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Promoting Equitable and Holistic Education: The Role of Arts Education and Whole Child Policy in Unleashing Potential and Advancing ProgressAlleyne, Collette Ain Williams 02 August 2024 (has links) (PDF)
Inclusive arts education policy considers the arts a viable entry point to a holistic educational experience. It encourages educators to engage with students on a social and emotional level. Several studies have explored challenges with policy implementation that identify educators' interpretation of policy or assimilation to existing policy as a barrier to the full actualization of policy. Through a rigorous convergent mixed-methods study using convenience sampling, I present a thorough analysis of data that reflects internalized values, beliefs, and ideas. Seven contributors, five educational leaders, and two alumni completed interviews, and twenty-one educational leaders completed surveys utilizing Qualtrics (www.qualtrics.com/), a web-based survey tool. The results identify contextual relationships and offer a comprehensive narrative encompassing knowledge and understanding, resource availability, beliefs, and psychological factors influencing the interpretation and implementation of whole-child arts inclusive policy. The results were: Insufficient policy awareness of federal and state policy, significant knowledge of teaching and general assessment practices, and remarkable administrative support coupled with resource limitations; challenges with structural design, prioritization of arts education despite financial challenges, students’ perspective reciprocates structure; and alignment with mission and past experiences in arts education.
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James P. Haney's Contribution to Industrial ArtsThompson, Jesse M. 08 1900 (has links)
The study of James Parton Haney is threefold in purpose. The first purpose is to study the life and educational background of Haney in order to gain an understanding of the man and his educational objectives. A second purpose is to gain an insight into Haney's philosophy of education, and the third purpose is to examine the available writings of Haney in an attempt to analyze his philosophy of industrial arts as a phase of general education.
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An Analytic-critical reflection on an integrated arts education curriculum in a multicultural South AfricaNevhutanda, Ntshengedzeni Alfred 12 1900 (has links)
The structure of an education system and its curricula reflects the influence of a specific
paradigm. Since the onset of colonial rule and apartheid in South Africa about
everything in the South African society, including the education system and curricular
issues in particular, have been shaped in accordance with the macro paradigm: the
modern Western paradigm.
The emergence of a new paradigm: the postmodern paradigm, created the possibility
of a new order of thinking which influenced all societal domains and aspects and
propelled the society into the new millennium. Since 1994 a new approach forms the
corner stone of all the new South African policy documents on education. It is for this
reason that the issue of an arts education curriculum is investigated from a
paradigmatic point of view with reference to the modern, the postmodern and the
African paradigms.
Various components, roles and dynamics of educational curricula cast in the modern
paradigm framework are compared with characteristics of their counterparts in the
postmodern paradigm framework, and how they can influence the design of curricula,
especially arts education. The contribution of an African paradigmatic perspective is
accounted for.
A new approach to curriculum development based on the ideals of a learner-centred
education approach, an outcomes-based education approach and the integration of
subjects into specific learning areas has officially been adopted as the approach for
transforming education and curricular issues, resulting in the present Curriculum 2005.
Within the context of the Arts and Culture learning area of this Curriculum, the study
concentrates on and emphasises the integration of the four art forms of dance, drama,
music and visual art in order to overcome the legacy of fragmentation of a curriculum.
The study culminates in a proposed integrated arts education outline for curriculum
development that defines the rationale and vision for South African arts education. The
researcher contends that there is sufficient scope for arts education to contribute its
unique aesthetic values to the new national curriculum in South Africa and that
integration of these art forms does not in any way diminish the unique character of
each. / Didactics / D. Ed. (Didactics)
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The Public Image of Industrial Arts in Dallas, TexasJones, Marley C. 12 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to determine the public image of industrial arts education in Dallas, Texas.
Information sought is obtained from interview schedules using random sampling techniques.
The results of the study indicate that the public is not generally informed about industrial arts education.
It is recommended that the public be informed as to the difference between industrial arts and vocational education.
It is also recommended that more girls be introduced to industrial arts.
It is further recommended that the world of construction and world of manufacturing be expanded.
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L’éducation artistique dans les politiques éducatives de la Chine contemporaine : Quelles raisons, quels rôles et quelles fonctions ? / Art education in educational policies of contemporary China : roles, functions and reasons?Peng, Lei 04 July 2018 (has links)
Dans une situation d’important développement économique porté par les efforts de plusieurs générations au cours des années qui ont suivi la politique de la réforme et de l’ouverture en Chine, l’éducation esthétique s’inscrit à nouveau dans la politique éducative chinoise, après avoir été supprimée par Mao en 1958. De ce fait, l’éducation artistique, que la conception chinoise distingue de l’éducation artistique proprement dite, a connu également un développement d’ampleur. De nos jours, l’éducation artistique retient de plus en plus l’attention du gouvernement chinois, en raison de ses effets dans le processus de l’édificationet de la modernisation socialiste, ainsi que dans le renforcement de l’influence de la Chine dans le monde. A travers les analyses des politiques éducatives et des textes officiels, notre recherche consiste à dégager les rôles et les fonctions de l’éducation artistique dans la Chine contemporaine et à chercher à comprendre les raisons pour lesquelles le gouvernementchinois met l’accent sur ce type d’éducation. Ce travail nous conduit à dégager et à analyser les principaux facteurs qui influencent et expliquent son développement en Chine. / In a situation of important economic development carried by the efforts of several generations during the years which followed the reform policy and the opening in China, the esthetic education joins again in the Chinese education policy, having been eliminated by Mao in 1958. Therefore, the arts education, which the Chinese conception distinguishes from the esthetic education itself, also knew a development of scale. Nowadays, the arts education holds more and more the attention of the Chinese government, because of its effects in the process of the construction and the socialist modernization, as well as in the strengthening of the influence of China in the world. Through the analyses of education policies and official texts, our search consists in clearing the roles and the functions of the arts education in contemporary China and in trying to understand reasons why the Chinese government puts the accent on this educational type. This work leads us to clear and to analyze the main factors which influence and explain its development in China.
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An Analytic-critical reflection on an integrated arts education curriculum in a multicultural South AfricaNevhutanda, Ntshengedzeni Alfred 12 1900 (has links)
The structure of an education system and its curricula reflects the influence of a specific
paradigm. Since the onset of colonial rule and apartheid in South Africa about
everything in the South African society, including the education system and curricular
issues in particular, have been shaped in accordance with the macro paradigm: the
modern Western paradigm.
The emergence of a new paradigm: the postmodern paradigm, created the possibility
of a new order of thinking which influenced all societal domains and aspects and
propelled the society into the new millennium. Since 1994 a new approach forms the
corner stone of all the new South African policy documents on education. It is for this
reason that the issue of an arts education curriculum is investigated from a
paradigmatic point of view with reference to the modern, the postmodern and the
African paradigms.
Various components, roles and dynamics of educational curricula cast in the modern
paradigm framework are compared with characteristics of their counterparts in the
postmodern paradigm framework, and how they can influence the design of curricula,
especially arts education. The contribution of an African paradigmatic perspective is
accounted for.
A new approach to curriculum development based on the ideals of a learner-centred
education approach, an outcomes-based education approach and the integration of
subjects into specific learning areas has officially been adopted as the approach for
transforming education and curricular issues, resulting in the present Curriculum 2005.
Within the context of the Arts and Culture learning area of this Curriculum, the study
concentrates on and emphasises the integration of the four art forms of dance, drama,
music and visual art in order to overcome the legacy of fragmentation of a curriculum.
The study culminates in a proposed integrated arts education outline for curriculum
development that defines the rationale and vision for South African arts education. The
researcher contends that there is sufficient scope for arts education to contribute its
unique aesthetic values to the new national curriculum in South Africa and that
integration of these art forms does not in any way diminish the unique character of
each. / Didactics / D. Ed. (Didactics)
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Implementing music in an integrated arts curriculum for South African primary schoolsVermeulen, Dorette 17 October 2009 (has links)
Music Education as part of the learning area Arts and Culture is far from satisfactory in South African schools. Reasons for this include a highly sophisticated and complex curriculum (the revised National Curriculum Statement, 2002); the integration of four discrete arts forms into one learning area; and teacher training which is not always reflective of the teaching profession’s demands. The study was based on a mixed method design, investigating how teachers in best scenario schools implement music as part of the integrated learning area Arts and Culture. Interviews were held with various stakeholders in Music Education, including teachers currently involved with the presentation of the Arts and Culture learning area, lecturers at universities training students for Music Education, and policy makers such as subject advisors in the Arts and Culture learning area. Data was also collected by analysing commercially available resources for this learning area. Analysis of the data obtained revealed that few teachers in the Arts and Culture learning area are qualified in more than one art form. A major concern is that music is often omitted from regular classroom activities in the Foundation Phase due to teachers feeling pressurised by multiple assessment standards in learning areas such as Literacy and Numeracy. Another finding in all primary school phases was that the time spent on Music Education was far less than that spent on Visual Arts. Learners are often involved in projects collecting knowledge about music, but seldom involved in active music making experiences. Aspects such as different ways to integrate the arts into one learning area, generalist/specialist teacher training, as well as issues concerning product, process and performance during the delivery of the arts, were also investigated. The researcher drew from all the data to design a course for teacher training in Music Education as part of the learning area Arts and Culture. Recommendations include regular in-service teacher training courses; nationwide co-ordination of teacher training programmes and the establishment of a national council for Music Education. An urgent need for appropriate lesson material in Arts and Culture was also identified, including CDs with songs and backtracks. / Thesis (DMus)--University of Pretoria, 2009. / Music / unrestricted
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Digitalisering i bildämnet / Digitalisation in arts educationSerrander, Agnes, Larsson, Isabelle January 2021 (has links)
This study aims to explore how today's digitalization looks in art specific educational research, bylooking at how teaching and teachers act towards digital techniques and tools to developstudents’ knowledge and abilities in arts education. The overview is constructed by a systematicsearch on two different databases. The presentation of the articles is done through three thematicdivisions: (i)The effects of teachers' view on digitalisations’ role in arts education, (ii)Teachers design of digitalarts educationand (iii)Students learning in relation to design of digital arts education. After thethematization of the eight articles a discussion is made in relation to the chosen problem area andtwo related questions “What kind of impact does teachers' attitudes on technology have onteaching?” and “How can different ways of working with technology change how students evolvetheir skills and competence?” have been asked. The results show that there are two main viewson digitalisation’s role in education, the ones that are against it and are for the traditional ways ofthe art subject and the teachers who are for the use of digital tools and can see the knowledgethat students develop
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Developing Confidence in Late Adolescents: A New Theatre CurriculumHorne, Courtney Ayana January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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