Contents contributed and discussions participated by Hrobjartur Arnason
These 27 Questions Will Help You (Really) Know Your Learners - 0 views
Større krav om inklusion til VUC-lærerenøger behovet for fælles didaktisk ref... - 0 views
Haefni - 0 views
If It's Important, Learn It Repeatedly - 0 views
Toolkit « Design Thinking for Educators - 0 views
Skýrslur og kannanir - Fræðslumiðstöð atvinnulífsins - 0 views
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Skýrsluna um færni í atvinnulífinu er kjörið að lesa í tengslum við bakrgrunn námskeiðsins Skipulagning og framkvæmd fræðslu... Stór hluti fullorðinsfræðslu snýst um að auka færni fólks á vinnumarkaði, bæði á sérstökum námskeiðum í alls konar fræðslustofnunum en einnig innan fyrirtækja og stofnana með formlegu, óformlegu og jafnvel formlausu námi
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Applying Learning Theories to Online Instructional Design - 0 views
infed.org | Elliot W. Eisner, connoisseurship, criticism and the art of education - 0 views
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Elliot W. Eisner has deepened our appreciation of education in a number of areas. Here we examine his argument that education involves the exercise of artistry and the development of connoisseurship and criticism.
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Uhrmacher (2001: 248) comments that Eisner ‘stressed that environment shapes artistic attitudes and that art education has unique contributions to make to growing children’. Eisner was also to argue strongly for a concern for the critical and aesthetic in art education (see below) – and for a better exploration of historical context. He was later to argue that approaches which simply gave children arts materials in the hope that their creativity might flow resulted in programmes ‘with little or no structure, limited artistic content, , and few meaningful aims’ (Eisner 1988). Uhrmacher judges that ‘in large measure due to Eisner’s advocacy, art education has become a content-oriented discipline.