03755nam a2200253 a 4500999001700000001001400017003000900031005001700040008004100057020001500098040002800113245007300141260005600214300001600270490005300286520177700339595101602116700003803132700003003170830006103200942000803261952011603269952011603385 c38689d38689vtls000000303ES-BaOER20180820143220.0130626r1992 xxk|||||| 0|| ||eng|d a0916690261 aES-BaOERbcatcES-BaOER00aArts as Education /cedited by Merryl Ruth Goldberg and Ann Phillips aCambridge :bHarvard Educational Review,ccop. 1992 avii, 167 p.1 aHarvard Educational Review. Reprint series ;v24 aThe publication of Arts as Education celebrates our belief that the arts are an essential aspect of human development - that is, of knowing and being in the world - and, further, that the arts are fundamental to education. With a reminder to the educational community that it is inclined to sweep aside the arts, we want to begin a new conversation about the importance of the arts in education with the aim of facilitating and changing public discussion about the arts. To achieve that aim, we present the voices of practitioners who view the arts as central to their teaching. For both teachers and students, the arts can be a form of expression, communication, imagination, observation, perception, and thought. The arts are integral to the development of cognitive skills such as listening, thinking, problem-solving, matching form to function, and decisionmaking. They inspire discipline, dedication, and creativity. The arts give rise to many voices. They can nurture a sense of belonging, of community; or, they can foster a sense of being apart, of being an individual. The arts also provide a vehicle for individuals, communities, and cultures to explore their own world and journey to new ones, thus enriching their understanding of the varied peoples and cultures that exist on our planet. We believe this is particularly important during this period of global change. All the contributors to this book are dedicated to the arts' essential role in teaching and learning. As editors, our hope is that this book will serve to be a resource and inspiration for artists, teachers, learners, policymakers, researchers, philosophers, and theorists, so that the arts will become an integral aspect of ongoing educational practice and debate. (Font: Introducció) aIntroduction -- Merryl Ruth Goldberg, Ann Phillips -- Texts and Margins / Maxine Greene -- Arts as Epistemology : Enabling Children to Know What They Know -- Karen Gallas -- To Arrive in Another World : Poetry, Language Development, and Culture / Judith Wolinsky Steinbergh -- The Uses of Folk Music and Songwriting in the Classroom / Victor Cockburn -- Tribal Rhythms: A Thematic Approach to Integrating the Arts into the Curriculum / Barbara Beckwith, W. Thompson Garfield, Charles M. Holley, J. Curtis Jones, Susan E. Porter -- Working from the Inside Out : A Practical Approach to Expression / Margot Grallert -- Computer-Aided Collaborative Music Instruction / James A. Hoffmann -- And Practice Drives Me Mad; or, the Drudgery of Drill / V. A. Howard -- Essay Review: Progressive journeying / Kathleen Murphey, Gary DeCoker -- Book Review: Music, Mind, and Education by Keith Swanwick / Marie F. McCarthy -- Book Notes / Merryl Ruth Goldberg -- Resource Guide -- About the Editors -- About the Contributors1 aGoldberg, Merryl Ruth,eed.919081 aPhillips, Ann,eed.91909 0aHarvard Educational Review.pReprint series ;v24915751 cMON 00104050718GaCERCbCERCcSd2015-09-11eCl0oS 02588p1900003278r2015-09-11 00:00:00t1w2015-09-11yMON 00104050708GaCERCbCERCcSd2015-09-11eCl0oS 02589p1900000893r2015-09-11 00:00:00t2w2015-09-11yMON