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Christen Cowley

PBS Arts - 0 views

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    PBS links to music, visual arts, dance, theatre, art from around the world and more.
David Pluck

Arts education | Culture professionals network | The Guardian - 0 views

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    cultural professionals share valuable thoughts regarding the arts and education. a lot of blogs and links to valuable info.
Christen Cowley

Art Education 2.0 - 0 views

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    Connects art teachers around the globe.
Christen Cowley

Artsonia - 0 views

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    Really cool site where you can look at children's art from around the world. If you are an art educator you can add your students work as well which I am sure the kids really enjoy.
Christen Cowley

Technology makes art education a bigger draw | eSchool News - 0 views

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    Very good article with some useful ways technology is being used in teaching art classes.
Christen Cowley

art.com artPad - 0 views

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    Really cool art/tech tool
Christen Cowley

ARTSEDGE: The Kennedy Center's Arts Education Network - 0 views

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    Great site a teacher gave me. She learned about it at a recent educators workshop in Cincinnati.
David Pluck

The Metropolitan Museum of Art - Learn - 0 views

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    Link to The Metropolitan Museum of Arts educator resources 
David Pluck

Akron Art Museum - 0 views

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    Awesome resource for educators containing valuable information on past  exhibitions from the Akron Art Museum.
Christen Cowley

Home * National Art Education Association - 0 views

    • Christen Cowley
       
      This has links to resources, available grants, teaching methods, research and literature, job searches....almost everything related to art education. If it isn't here, there's probably a start to locating it.
Anne Lackney

ArtLens | Cleveland Museum of Art - 0 views

  • Favorites (iPad) | You (iPhone) – Save favorite works of art and share through Facebook, Twitter, text and, email.  You can also create personalized tours which can be shared with other visitors.
  • Related Artworks –  Discover the hidden treasures in the collection from any object based on its collection, time period, and material, using the dynamic recommendation logic developed for the Collection Wall in Gallery One
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    Art Lens- Cleveland Museum of Art's interactive app
David Pluck

Education - 0 views

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    The Guggenheim New Yorks link to the educators event page
David Pluck

Learn | Cleveland Museum of Art - 0 views

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    Link to The Cleveland Museum of Art educator resources
David Pluck

Learning | MOCA Cleveland - 0 views

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    The Museum of Contemporary Art link to their education page
Christen Cowley

Welcome to Albright-Knox Artgames! - 0 views

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    Art games
Christen Cowley

Super Teacher Tools - 0 views

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    Another site shared with me by an elementary art teacher.
Christen Cowley

Biomimicry 3.8 - 0 views

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    Mimicing biology in technology. Very popular link through art and science, one Akron University is really interested in right now as well. Inspiration, education and general info on the subject"
David Pluck

Understanding Formal Analysis - 0 views

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    A great resource for introduction in to the Elements of Art
Christen Cowley

Crayola - 0 views

shared by Christen Cowley on 25 Sep 12 - Cached
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    This site for Crayola has a lot of resources for children and art educators.
Michael O'Connor

As Children's Freedom Has Declined, So Has Their Creativity | Psychology Today - 0 views

  • In Kim’s words, the data indicate that “children have become less emotionally expressive, less energetic, less talkative and verbally expressive, less humorous, less imaginative, less unconventional, less lively and passionate, less perceptive, less apt to connect seemingly irrelevant things, less synthesizing, and less likely to see things from a different angle.”
  • During the immediate post-Sputnik period, the U.S. government was concerned with identifying and fostering giftedness among American schoolchildren, so as to catch up with the Russians (whom we mistakenly thought were ahead of us in scientific innovation). 
  • creativity is the central variable underlying personal achievement and ability to adapt to unusual conditions.
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • The Torrance Tests were developed by E. Paul Torrance in the late 1950s, when he was an education professor at the University of Minnesota.
  • Well, surprise, surprise.  For several decades we as a society have been suppressing children’s freedom to ever-greater extents, and now we find that their creativity is declining.
  • Creativity is nurtured by freedom and stifled by the continuous monitoring, evaluation, adult-direction, and pressure to conform that restrict children’s lives today.  In the real world few questions have one right answer, few problems have one right solution; that’s why creativity is crucial to success in the real world.  But more and more we are subjecting children to an educational system that assumes one right answer to every question and one correct solution to every problem, a system that punishes children (and their teachers too) for daring to try different routes.  We are also, as I documented in a previous essay, increasingly depriving children of free time outside of school to play, explore, be bored, overcome boredom, fail, overcome failure—that is, to do all that they must do in order to develop their full creative potential.
    • Michael O'Connor
       
      I know of several local school districts that believe that their students cannot fail. How does this prepare a student for his/her real life? It does them great harm to continue to pass them on. They will never learn to overcome the impediments that occurs in life. You will also have an apathetic student on your hands! It is necessary to allow students to fail. Not to make them feel bad about themselves...but to allow them to understand there are second chances in life (sometimes) and that they are not beyond redemption.
  • In the next essay in this series, I will present research evidence that creativity really does bloom in the soil of freedom and die in the hands of overdirective, overprotective, ov
  • If anything makes Americans stand tall internationally it is creativity.  “American ingenuity” is admired everywhere. We are not the richest country (at least not as measured by smallest percentage in poverty), nor the healthiest (far from it), nor the country whose kids score highest on standardized tests (despite our politicians’ misguided intentions to get us there), but we are the most inventive country.  We are the great innovators, specialists in figuring out new ways of doing things and new things to do. Perhaps this derives from our frontier beginnings, or from our unique form of democracy with its emphasis on individual freedom and respect for nonconformity.  In the business world as well as in academia and the arts and elsewhere, creativity is our number one asset.  In a recent IBM poll, 1,500 CEOs acknowledged this when they identified creativity as the best predictor of future success.[1] 
  • judgmental teachers and parents.
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