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Revisiting the Aesthetic education in art, architecture and design From teaching to enabling knowledge creation From conditioning to awakening My recent experience at a design institute is the basis for this article which is a culmination of years of exploration on how not to teach but yet learning, which means knowledge creation, should take place. I offered this in such a way that I enabled the students themselves to articulate which are the elements and principles that constitute beauty. I have been practicing this 'no-teaching' pedagogy from the time I began to work with artisans where I have been able to produce very original and authentic products which the artisans themselves had made. I then extended this to children from the potter's community in Aruvacode, students from various schools, and finally with design and architecture students.
Educare - vetenskapliga skrifter
In this paper I wish to focus on the importance of an education of our senses and body through sensorial elements for the improvement of our sensibility for situations and our faculty of judgement. This was the key focus of aesthetics in its classical form from antiquity until early 19th century when aesthetics was, to a large degree, a matter of aesthetic education and communication. Important were arts and letters, which still are important but now very much on the defensive also because aesthetics often is a about criticism rather than about the sensorial and bodily aspect of cultural products. I suggest we can learn from the early generations within aesthetics not least from Kant when we keep in mind that his investigation of the aesthetic judgement was for the sake of judgement as such, thus for our ability to chose the right conduct of behaviour. The aesthetic judgement is a judgement about our relation to a specific cultural context and our acquisition of it comes from being acquainted with cultural products. Aesthetics is thus closely related to hermeneutics, to how we interpret specific situations we find ourselves in.
The term “aesthetic education” admits many interpretations. Various viewpoints prescribe differing approaches to the teaching of the arts, set diverse priorities in the preparation of teachers, and differ in the ways they relate theory to action in educational practice. All, however, pay homage to the fact that music, drama and visual arts education are all, in one way or another, ruled by a common type of perception. There is an assertion, growing in popularity, that the rules and philosophy of the arts exist in a common space that may be taken as the foundation of aesthetic education. Aesthetic learning is intuitive, is informed by the senses, and is important in the growth of human consciousness. In holistic methodological approaches, artificial divisions between the different fields are abolished, while the various aspects of an analytic programme interact in the creation of meaningful inter-relationships. The learners' bodies, senses, knowledge, thoughts, emotions and intuitions are all engaged by holistic curricula; they progress calmly through their learning experiences. In this paper we present both the theoretical underpinnings and the mainstays of application of a holistic/integrated curriculum for aesthetic education for primary schools. The central aim of the curriculum is to induce children to communicate and to express themselves through art, taking advantage, in combination or as alternatives, of materials and techniques from the visual arts, drama, dance and music, as well as providing them with the knowledge and the means necessary for them to progress to creative processes. The higher aim is to set the foundations of a good, sound, substantial and productive relationship between the child and the fine arts, which, becoming an autonomous and permanent need in the child, will have every reason to evolve elsewhere too, beyond the confines of the school and the aesthetic education lesson.
Re imagining beauty includes even asking fundamental questions like what is beauty? what role does it play in life? Is it universal? natural? It is clear that befor instituionalised education came in to existanance people kept alive context based aesthetic sensibilities. Distinct from each other yet integrating aptly as and when exposure happens.Cultural diversity was kept alive. Almost every 5o miles change took place- in language, food and habitat keeping in line with the enviornment. What institutionalized education did was to homogenize all this. Thus architects, designers and every one responsible for the making of habitat and artifacts began to respond with this standardized, conditioned and engineered sense of beauty. All cities have begun to look alike. Let us come together and engage in this explorations and reflections.
AESTHETIC EDUCATION, 2023
Every child needs planned, aesthetic education in order to influence the experiencing, feeling and enjoyment of beautiful things as a counterbalance to our currently rationalized world. Since the contemporary school strives for the development of professional knowledge and skills on the basis of intellectual actions, while (at the same time) neglecting other dimensions of the child's personality (emotions, feelings, etc.), it is one of the most important tasks of the education of children and young people to develop the ability to enjoy art and beauty, and in one's inner and outer life, to act in accordance with a sense of proportion, harmony and beauty. The purpose of this article is to highlight the significance of aesthetic education in the development of the human personality as a whole, to shed light on the aims of aesthetic education, to define the aesthetic dimension of experience and to ascertain the reasons for the neglect of aesthetic education in theory and practice.
1979
Chapter 5 THE-DEVELOPMENT OF AN EMOTIONAL RESPONSE TO A WORK OF ART .... 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Considerations for Aesthetic Education 5.3 The Emotions of the Aesthetic Experiencer 6 CONCLUSION: TOWARD A PEDAGOGY FOR AESTHETIC EDUCATION 6.1 Introduction .. 6.2 Parsons and Objectivism 6.3 Expression Theory 6.4 Review of Educational Considerations 6.5 Conclusion BIBLIOGRAPHY 166 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I am grateful to the following for all the help given me in the preparation of this thesis: my teachers in the Department of Educational Foundations, Michael Parsons, and the members of the Supervisory Committee, especially, Roi Daniels. I am also grateful to my wife, Vernie, for her patience, understanding and support. 1. evaluation of the questions Parsons' developmental thesis deals with and the implications they have for aesthetic education. This, I believe, is the distinctive contribution which a philosophical critique should make, and my criticisms of the theory are made in three areas: the theory's aesthetic assumptions, its developmental aspects and its educational implications.
Journal of Transformative Education, 2010
The purpose of this article is to portray the importance of aesthetic experience (a notion understood as the systematic observation and critical analysis of artworks) within the framework of transformative learning. The article includes an extended literature review vis-à-vis the contribution of aesthetic experience in unearthing the integrated knowing, encompassing critically reflective, affective and imaginative dimensions of learning. The ideas of Eisner, Broudy, Gardner, Perkins, Kant, Dewey, Sartre, Efland, Frankfurt School and Palo Alto Mental Research Institute are examined as well as the contributions of the scholars of transformative learning theory to the issue at hand. In the final part, a method is presented, which is constructed synthetically resting on the aforementioned theoretical views and regards the utilization of aesthetic experience in the processes of transformative learning.
2019
This study attempts an in-depth exploration into the educational possibilities of art. Initially, through an attempt at a bibliographic investigation, an analysis is made of the way in which, through works of art, we understand the world around us and we perceive reality. Subsequently, the criteria that important theoreticians raise for the educational exploitation of art, are explored. Then, based on this theoretical framework, through a longitudinal research, we investigate the reflective opportunities offered by the aesthetic experience in education. This research, took place in a pedagogical department of the University of Patras and consists of two phases: a) an initial research involving the systematic application of the 'Transformative Learning through Aesthetic Experience' method during their studies; and (b) a second survey of the same participants, six years after their graduation, through semi-structure interviews. The findings of the research not only reveal impo...
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