Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Trimis & Savva Reading Questions
I enjoyed this reading about how a teacher can incorporate the outside world into a lesson that will not only teach students about their surrounding areas, but help them to understand mediums in more depth. It also gives students a chance to get out of the classroom and into their real world, showing that "learning takes place in real situations and is not limited to the classroom" (Trimis and Savva 2009). My one big problem with this article is that the teachers took the children out of the classroom... Not that taking them out is an issue, but field trips are rarely funded or approved in schools anymore. Are art teachers even allowed to take students on field trips? And if they can, are they even funded trips? Though an excursion out of the classroom is not technically a field trip, are teachers allowed to take students out of the classroom during the school day? Other concerns I have about this article are time to complete, and time constraints. It says about letting the project run as long as children are interested, but in a regular elementary art classroom, you may only have the students for 40 minutes, and by the next class, they may have lost interest. But then you have a half finished or hardly started project, and no where to go with it because students have lost interest. I did enjoy this article, and it has helped me to think about my place-based art education project a little more in depth.
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Studio Explorations Idea
I babysit after school everyday. My job is to get the kids off the bus at the end of the street. When we were younger, does anyone remember an adult having to "get them off the bus" everyday? The bus driver will not let them off the bus unless there is an adult there for them to go with. And not just any adult. Someone the child knows and the bus driver recognizes. Every. Single. Day. Daniel's bus driver asks him every day (it's been 6 days now) if I am the one who is supposed to be getting him. He's in fifth grade. In our paranoid and corrupt society today, it is an unfortunate necessity for someone to get their children directly off the bus. I think I want to further explore this concept of paranoia, fear, and crime that happens to children all over the world, but specifically in America. Their stop is on a road in the woods, so I might consider using this actual area, or just the feelings this place gives me, and the feelings of waiting for them to safely arrive home from school.
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
My Artwork
I am trying to grow as an artist and get my hands in a variety of mediums. I love to explore new mediums and see what I can do with them. Currently in my work, I am playing with the concepts of geometric and organic, and what those can do when they interact. These are just a small selection of the mediums I enjoy most.
Reflection of Group Work
I wish we had more time in our group to better discuss our articles in more depth. Three of our articles, mine included, were about teaching art education more effectively, while the other two seemed to be less concerned with art and more concerned with other issues facing education as a whole. I believe as an art teacher it is important not to be just the crazy artist whom the teachers send their students to for an hour a week. Students should not be learning about just art in art class. My article, about the Choice, Voice, and Challenge method of integrating creativity into not only art projects but into regular classroom projects as well, shows that art should not stop after art class is over, while educational learning should not stop when students enter art class. I believe this is a good method to have because it shows the importance of creativity in everything a child does. It can get students interested in learning things that are not always the easiest to digest because of how boring most teachers approach them. I do believe that art teachers should be artists themselves, as well as educators. I believe art teachers should be artists who have a passion for sharing their love of arts with others, and not educators who have taken a few art classes. It takes a real passion for art to light the spark in students to make them not only appreciate but enjoy art as well.
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