Title: Approaches to teaching in the arts art and music
1Approaches to teaching in the artsart and
music
2- Your examples of the arts
3What purposes might the arts serve, now and in
the future? What purposes might primary arts
education serve?What understandings/beliefs/defi
nitions do I have about the arts, and how will
this inform my teaching?
4Kids comments
Part of life guided by understanding.K.F. grade
6
Your imagination on the outside.K. H. grade 6
The world around us. E. S. grade 6
A way to express yourself. J. S. grade 6
5At Primary level the Arts provide a means
- to develop, share and affirm practical,
creative, motor and cognitive skills personal,
social and historical meanings and the use of
specific language systems including
symbols/metaphors
- to engage in sensory, imaginative, spiritual,
linguistic, emotional and cognitive exploration
and expression in many forms (including pleasure)
- to document, categorise and communicate
experience in non-written forms
- activate, develop and acknowledge the diverse
abilities, inclinations and cultural traditions
of students
6- At primary level students are developing the
foundational knowledge, skills and interests that
will ultimately shape, colour and engage them in
the world they live in.
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9 Too few adults engage in art and so miss out
on a powerful means of expression and engagement.
This applies to both the consumption and
production of art. Art is too often viewed as a
closed message rather than as an open invitation
to interpret and relate it to the self and those
around you. Samuel Jones, Demos Source
www.art-works.org.uk
103 approaches evident in contemporary
Arts/Education
- Mastery to observe/reproduce/learn/excell
materials/techniques/traditions/skills - Aimed toward end product (expert/teacher
focus) - Creativity/play/innovation to re-imagine
creativity/self-expression/critique - Concerned with process (child/artist focus)
- Interpretation/context to understandmeaning/mean
ing making (individual/society focus) - Concerned with social/individual
value/purposes
11Mastery (Traditions/Artisans)
- Focus on skills/observation, reproduction,
tradition, aesthetics, technique, crafting,
specialisation, excellence. - High Art disciplines. Other approaches
amateur, naïve, popular, not real art - Aesthetic principles eg. harmony, beauty
- Service Mastery of specialist technique/
materials, patronage, value of end product.
Continue tradition. - Traditional teaching approach
- Increasing mastery of materials, changes,
technique assessed. Likeness to master/original. - VELS Structure of learning levels, domains,
development of skills, aesthetics
12Creativity/Play (Art for Arts Sake)
- Individual creative expression, ongoing
exploration of ideas, concepts, processes. - Unconventional. Innovative. Inspired.
- Service Art/Individual. originality, play,
imagination, emotion, individual
expression/ideas, energy. - Mingling of specialist areas (VELS domains)
- Value of artistic process/struggle
- Not seeking popular acclaim/consumption often
criticalof art market/social values. Eg Street
art, ephemeral art - Alternative galleries, including cyberspace,
experimental theatre/dance/film/music
13Creativity cont
- Mastery of traditional technique sometimes
impediment. Too structured, perfect. - Creativity cannot be taught (talent) and
should not be assessed??? - VELS imagination/creativity pivotal to the
arts, broader curriculum
14Art as individual, community and cultural
capital or wealth (local/global)
- Meaningful/meaning making/ whos meanings?
- Mingling of arts domains, involvement of
popular/low art eg. circus skills, cinema. Visual
culture/media. - Can take place across a range of sites including
cyberspace - Service Has a range of purposes/value within
individual lives/communities but also globally.
Historical/social value. - Everyone has creative potential diverse
purposes/ expressions/abilities valued.
Process/product valued Communication - Purpose, processes, understandings, criteria,
outcomes can be defined, critiqued, assessed - VELS Arts pivotal socially, economically,
culturally. Prepare for roles in post-industrial
economy. Communication. Cultural diversity,
visual culture. Indigenous cultures of Australia,
cultures of nearest neighbours
15As generalist teachers you need willingness
- to engage with the arts in y/our classrooms
- to be an advocate on some level at least for the
arts - as individuals and professionals to take whatever
opportunities and engage in whatever processes
you can, to further understandings and skills
within the arts.
16- Think about own philosophy (may change over time,
but a clear starting point helps) - Understand basic terms and concepts (refresh
before teaching) Glossaries, Artlex - Adopting inquiry approach allows you to learn
alongside students - Purpose of activities/units what is its value
to student? - Be aware of where to go for resources (community,
internet, TRC, professional bodies) - Awareness of how basics can be made more complex
- look at what other teachers are doing in
schools/via internet - Adapt units of work from VELS and other
curriculum bodies - NSW, NZ and British Columbia
have useful examples including assessment
17- References
- Jones, S. (2005) How Old Do You Have To Be To Be
An Artist? London The Clore Duffield
Foundation/DEMOwww.art-works.org.uk - Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority
(2005) VELS (ARTS)lthttp//vels.vcaa.vic.edu.au/e
ssential/discipline/arts/index.htmlgt - Wright, S. (ed). (2003) Children, meaning-making
and the Arts. Frenchs Forest Pearson
18Big A Specialist Arts
Orchestra, choir, recording stars and groups,
musicians, opera Conductors, soloists, sound
technicians, recording studios, support staff -
publicity, management, wardrobe, production
assistants
Painters, sculptors, drawers, ceramicists,
printmakers, photographers, filmmakers,
multimedia, installation, performance,
environmental artists
19Big A little a?
Little a Music in everyday life TV, radio
jingles, movie soundtracks, mob ring tones,
openings/events, hymns/chants, play,
advertising, creating atmosphere (shopping
plazas, self amusement/ expression, karaoke,
lullabies, sing-a-longs, work chants/rhythms,
anthems, sports chants,raps, skipping
songs,pipe bands
Little a Visual/tactile arts in everyday
lifecrafts, urban, landscape, industrial
domestic, interior design, fashion, floristry,
food presentation, display, architecture, events,
illustrators, tattooists, self amusement/expressio
n magazine editors, so called amateur artists
Big A Specialist Arts