Teaching the arts--forms vs. aesthetics
As a teaching artist, which do you emphasize in your teaching--forms, or aesthetics? How do you balance these two aspects of learning in the arts?
--Forms, principles & elements: skill sets needed to create and interpret particular art forms
--Aesthetics: ways of looking at oneself and the world artistically
Chicago Teaching Artists --
Are you aware that there is currently a debate throughout our city among arts organizations on how best to approach arts in education? Tensions exist between those who believe strongly in a pure "aesthetic education" perspective versus those who defend "arts integration" at various levels of depth and complexity. Others believe that the two are one in the same or that one does not exist without the other. At any rate, we need to have a national conversation about this -- or at least a "city wide" forum on issues in arts in education -- from a TEACHING ARTISTS' PERSPECTIVE.
What do you really know, believe or think about...
1. aesthetic education
2. arts integration
3. notions of "transfer"
Why do you teach in the specific way you do? Do you teach differently for different organizations, or is what you do the same regardless of your partnering organizations?
It's important for us to truly understand debates within our field and to dialogue about the nuances and subtlties of this work -- from research to theory to practice -- instead of letting these conversations go on without us. We are experts in this field simply by LVING THE WORK.
We've talked for some time about a city wide series of dialogues around these issues and I believe that teaching artists FROM ALL ARTS ORGANIZATIONS -- REGARDLESS OF PHILOSOPHY OR MISSION -- should attend these conversations.
What do you all think?
I just feel like while arts educators and leaders in this field debate the big issues, so, too, should teaching artists become more aware of the questions that arise out of our work in schools and communities.
PLEASE RESPOND TO THIS EMAIL in whatever way you want. I'm curious to know what you think.
ALL MY BEST,
Amanda
NEW CONTACT INFORMATION!
Amanda Leigh Lichtenstein
2120 W. Concord Place, #1
Chicago, IL 60647
773.263.7517
alichtenstein@hotmail.com
alichtenstein@gmail.com
Posted by: Amanda Leigh Lichtenstein | November 05, 2005 at 11:58 AM