Art Is Fundamental: Teaching the Elements and Principles of Art in Ele

This entry was posted by Wednesday, 22 December, 2010
Read the rest of this entry »

DIVDIVDIVThis comprehensive art curriculum can easily be integrated into any teacher’s existing instruction and provides thrilling and rewarding projects for elementary art students, including printmaking techniques, tessellations, watercolors, calligraphic lines, organic form sculptures, and value collages. Detailed lessons—developed and tested in classrooms over many years—build on one another in a logical progression and explore the elements of texture, color, shape, line, form, and value, and principles such as balance (formal, informal and radial,) unity, contrast, movement, distortion, emphasis, pattern and rhythm. Each lesson also represents an interdisciplinary approach that improves general vocabulary and supports science, math, social studies, and language arts. Though written for elementary school teachers, it can be easily condensed and adapted for middle or even high school students. A beautiful eight-page color insert demonstrates just how sophisticated young children’s art can be when kids are given the opportunity to develop their skills./DIV/DIV/DIVDIVP style=MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; mso-layout-grid-align: noneThe art curriculum detailed in this book can be easily integrated into your existing curriculum. —ILearning/I/P/DIVDIVDIVSomething here for every reader . . . will be inspired. —INaea News/I/DIV/DIVDIVDIVMany wonderful hands-on projects . . . successful . . . will inspire current teachers in the field . . . indispensible for new art teachers. —ISchoolArts/I/DIV/DIVDIVDIVBEileen S. Prince/B/Bhas been an art specialist in the Indianapolis-area schools since 1970 and is the author of the bestsellingIArt Matters/I./DIV/DIV

 

Comments are closed.