About viz. | viz. - 0 views
Dunne & Raby - 0 views
Task Force Releases Report on the Arts - The Harvard University Gazette - 0 views
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This page as a link to the Report of the Task Force on the Arts, which makes a case for making the arts more central to core of the educational mission of the University. It is an example of how the ways artists and designers know and understand the world will be increasingly taught as a new literacy in the liberal arts.
live|work - 0 views
Liberal Education | Winter 2009 | Liberal Education & Effective Practice - 0 views
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The most prominent attempt to introduce practical activity into liberal education is the civic engagement movement, through which students are encouraged to participate in off-campus community service, sometimes in connection with credit-bearing service-learning courses, sometimes outside the formal curriculum. Such programs aim to cultivate habits of “active citizenship” and build problem-solving skills in community settings.
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Though important in its own right, the civic engagement movement is also a specific instance of the broader effort to link liberal education with action and practice.
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The Carnegie Foundation has sponsored an effort to enrich the “thinking” orientation of liberal education with the “doing” emphasis of professional studies by incorporating practice-oriented pedagogies, such as simulations and case studies, in liberal arts courses. Many colleges offer interdisciplinary, problem-focused minors like urban studies or international relations through which students learn to think about complex, real-world problems. These programs often provide platforms for community-based research projects, internships and service opportunities, and Model UN–type simulations.
The Boom Is Over. Long Live the Art! - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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Why not make studio training an interdisciplinary experience, crossing over into sociology, anthropology, psychology, philosophy, poetry and theology? Why not build into your graduate program a work-study semester that takes students out of the art world entirely and places them in hospitals, schools and prisons, sometimes in-extremis environments, i.e. real life? My guess is that if you did, American art would look very different than it does today.
Trace Evidence: How New Media Can Change What We Know About Student Learning | Academic... - 0 views
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Seven Types of Discussion Questions
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Part of moving from novice, to intermediate, to expert learner is understanding the types of questions can be asked and answered. T
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the first part about clickers is not that relevant, but after that there is a good discussion about TYPES OF DISCUSSION QUESTION Participants were encouraged to think through what might happen to their practice of art history if: --they had easy access to high-quality, copyright-cleared material in all media; --they could share research and teaching with whomever they wanted; --they had unrestricted access to instructional technologists who could assist with technical problems, inspire with teaching ideas and suggest resources they might not otherwise have known about.
From Looking to Seeing: Student Learning in the Visual Turn | Academic Commons - 0 views
The Future of Art History: Roundtable | Academic Commons - 0 views
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Participants were encouraged to think through what might happen to their practice of art history if: --they had easy access to high-quality, copyright-cleared material in all media; --they could share research and teaching with whomever they wanted; --they had unrestricted access to instructional technologists who could assist with technical problems, inspire with teaching ideas and suggest resources they might not otherwise have known about.
January 2009 | Academic Commons - 0 views
Making Common Cause: Electronic Portfolios, Learning, and the Power of Community | Acad... - 0 views
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Barbara Cambridge
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How Eportfolios Help Us All Learn
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