Integrated arts

Integrated arts practice refers to inter-disciplinary art, art research, development, production, presentation, or artistic creation of work that fully uses two or more art disciplines to create a work for a specific audience.

Description

The Integrated Arts is defined as an activity which induces in the learner an emotional or kinesthetic state which is in some way analogous to the concept being taught, and which occurs through heightened sensory awareness on the part of the learner. The term integrated is used to denote the integration of the arts experience into the learning process. The Integrated Arts Experience provides opportunities for the following processes to occur:

  1. perceptual cognition
  2. metaphorical modes of thinking
  3. use of alternative forms of communication.[1]

Implementation

In many schools integrated arts has been implemented and widely used to teach subjects that retain the attention of students. The rationale for implementing the integration of arts in the education system has been discussed by many of the art educators and others concerned with completeness of general education.[2] Approaches include taking the students to a museum, describing them about the paintings and telling them the background of that painting and then asking the students to write an essay on their visit to museum in English. Another example of teaching the students with the help of arts is making them to first read a chapter of history and then asking them to create a summary of the chapter through painting. Teaching of history can also be done by role play method where the students enact the characters in the class. One other method which can be used for students of first grade or below that for teaching about animals, can be done by making them hear the sounds of different animals and asking them to recognize.

Claimed advantages

Integration of arts in a classroom helps students to connect with the world they live in. The fundamental principle for integrating arts can be thought as follows:

  • there is a similarity across arts and other subjects.
  • incorporating arts into other subjects helps in accelerating and facilitating the learning process.
  • art promotes creativity.
  • integrated arts program are more economical than separate instruction in each area.[2]

The claim for this type of curriculum is that the students who were taught by the integration of arts method had more knowledge and understanding of the inter-relationships among the arts and also developed an appreciation for the arts.[3]

It is also claimed integrated art activities is it will help the child to connect his knowledge with the world outside and help him in transferring his learning about arts to many of his other subjects.[4]

Integrated arts often also refers to hybrid art forms in which new practices are invented and/or combined.

Integrated arts practice is related to new media art, computer-based art, and web-based art.

While new media is more computer-centric, integrated media (integrated arts) often involves computers plus some other discipline. An example of integrated art that involves new media might be a musical performance done on a computerized interactive multimedia sculpture like WWE.

In public media, integrated media and media meshing also refer to the use of multiple orthogonal and perhaps interactive forms, such as news releases, websites, polls, wikis, blogs or forum sources, rather than just a single broadcast mode.

gollark: So... "intel" SHA extensions?
gollark: *is on AMD*
gollark: You should use less precise search terms.
gollark: Riducklous. Complain at lemmmy.
gollark: Or, of course, `killdan200`, but whatever.

References

  1. Messina, Frank John; Stankiewicz, Mary Ann. "A CRITIQUE OF THE INTEGRATED ARTS EXPERIENCE: ITS RELATION TO LEARNING THEORY AND ITS PEDAGOGICAL VALUE". Review of Research in Visual Arts Education. 6: 45–50. JSTOR 20715280.
  2. Kindler, Anna M. "A Review of Rationales for Integrated Arts Programs". Studies in Art Education. 29: 52–60. JSTOR 1320456.
  3. Davis, Olive B. "An Integrated Arts Program for the Gifted". Educational Theatre Journal. 15: 327–331. JSTOR 320851.
  4. Clark, Gilbert. "Integrated Art Education". Art Education. 38: 4. JSTOR 3192867.
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