Art
and
Cognition. Integrating the Visual Arts in the Curriculum Language and Literacy Series

Welcome to Education by Design's Online store. We have brought to you a selection of products like Books : Art and Cognition. Integrating the Visual Arts in the Curriculum Language and Literacy Series along with it's reviews, pictures and related products. All sales from these pages goes towards the creation and maintenance of our educational online activities, articles and resources. We have over 40,000 online stories submitted by kids around the world.

Books: Art and Cognition. Integrating the Visual Arts in the Curriculum  Language and Literacy Series

Art and Cognition. Integrating the Visual Arts in the Curriculum Language and Literacy Series

Normal Price:$21.95
Our Price:$19.75
Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours

... For more information or Buy from Amazon.com ...


Manufacturer: Teachers College Press
Author: Arthur D. Efland
Binding: Paperback
Publication Date: 2002-06
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Label: Teachers College Press
Number Of Pages: 216

NEW!!
Enjoy drawing this product with our drawing board.
Drawing Activity for this product
Features for Art and Cognition. Integrating the Visual Arts in the Curriculum Language and Literacy Series :

Small Picture
Medium Picture

Editorial Review

Cached date: AWS Called=true
Similar Products
Customer Reviews

Concisely written, very informative 2008-02-26
It's a must have for everyone who is interested in arteducation.
Art and cognition are complicated subjects. The combination of the two is even more complex. Efland writes very crisp about it without any simplification. The book opened my eyes in several ways. I learned a lot.
The chapters are informative, the summary and diagrams adequate.


Art builds a curriculum architecture 2003-04-17
This is an important book that has already been a great help to me in my development as an educator. Efland builds a rationale for the necessary integration of arts learning in general education curriculum. Efland's effort stems from his belief that works of art require a particular rigor of intellectual inquiry to make meaningful sense, and become of value to the learner first and foremost because they are context-bound creations. Consequently, works of art may be understood as personally relevant artifacts only when they are understood in their interconnectedness with social forms and personal experience.

Efland boldly takes us then to where the positivist bias in the human sciences will not allow us to go-toward the proposition that reductivist and scientific methodology is not `the only way to procure reliable knowledge' (p. 5). Efland's aim draws upon an architectural metaphor: to `build a foundation for lifelong learning inclusive of the arts' (p. 6).

According to Efland's thesis, this all becomes possible assuming that one pictures the mind as more than a hierarchical repository of logical-scientific symbolic structures, more than reservoir of enculturated symbols mediated by parents, peers, and knowledgeable adults. Rather, Efland portrays a mind flexible enough to employ different strategies appropriate to the mastery of understanding in pre-packaged, generalizable, and well-structured domains of knowledge as well as ill-structured, broad and complexly fragmented arrays of knowledge. The mind is able to integrate the variety of knowledge domains and arrays into coherent and purposeful maps and models of the world.

Ultimately, the book purports the mind's imagination to be the most flexible and integrative of all the symbol-processing tools at our disposal, powerfully formative and capable of `creating new ideas or images through the combination and reorganization of previous experiences' (p. 133). The imagination can acquire other cultural tools such as language, mathematics and works of art and then utilize them in continually reshaping an individual's lifeworld in accommodation to the dispositions of the learner, also described as the learner's `habits of mind' (p. 118). Learning and the creation of new knowledge may thus be preceded by imaginative, even artistic, purpose and development.

Efland's point is that through the arts, learners discover that irregular and ad hoc transferences between a work of art and one's lifeworld are both conceivable and tenable as an extension of knowledge. A mind can thus made, remade, unmade, and made over; it is never finished. It has no certain form and every possibility.

Not relying upon conventional curriculum architecture, Efland seeks a fresh approach to general education born of a process melding conventional learning exercises with the sculptural sensibilities, the dialogic engagement of the senses and materials that is inherent to aesthetic experience. Efland's suggests that educators utilize key works of art as landmarks for cross-disciplinary and cross-social learning, that we recognize the role of metaphor and narrative in providing the basis for `an imaginative reality', and that we understand the purpose of the arts as contributive to the embodiment of `the myths that bind human social systems together' (p. 171), all for the furtherance of the exercise of human development. It is a bold integration and a great read!

... For more information from Amazon.com about Art and Cognition. Integrating the Visual Arts in the Curriculum Language and Literacy Series ...
null
In association with Amazon.com. Please support our site by doing your online shopping here.
Search