Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Part I: Art in Public Places and Alternative Museum
Sites
1. Service Places
2. Transportation
3. Food and Art
Part II: Community as Art Treasures
4. Exploring Alternative Museum Sites in your Backyard
5. Parks and Playgrounds as Extensions to Art Classrooms and Home
Studios
6. Personal Connections
Part III: Community Art Projects
7. Community Art
Conclusion
References
Index
An exuberant, theoretically underpinned guide to support teacher educators to develop engaging, relatable programmes, building connection in diverse classrooms
Ilona Szekely is Assistant Professor in the Department of Art and Design at Eastern Kentucky University, USA. She is Past President of the Kentucky Art Education Association (KyAEA), co-founder of the Center for Creative Art Teaching (CCAT) and co-sponsor of the Play Based Art Teaching movement.
This book offers to expand learning by adding the world outside of
the art classroom—from the school’s hallways and staircases to the
world outside the building. Big city settings, neighbourhoods,
small towns and countryside are rich with images, histories and
treasures to collect. Sparking students’ attentiveness encourages
artistic thinking and making. Adaptable to preK-16, Szekely offers
detailed approaches and questions to consider in advance.
*Katherine Douglas, Co-founder of Teaching for Artistic Behaviour
and Choice Based Art Education, USA*
Where is WONDER? Sadly, classrooms (even art classrooms) rarely
spark wonder, curiosity and questioning – the necessary fuel for
play and experimentation. Ilona Szkely opens the door to visual
magic in the most unlikely of spaces. This book takes the reader on
a journey to not only find wonder for learners but also for
ourselves.
*Cindy Foley, Executive Deputy Director for Learning and
Experience, Columbus Museum of Art, Ohio, USA*
Szekely opens the door for students and art educators to seeing
possibilities in public spaces for inspiring lessons in design,
environmental art and even art activism. This book is loaded with
possibilities to ferret out good and bad design from the common
place of Wal-Mart, hotels or favorite local eateries, to the
hallowed halls of universities and civic buildings. Among the many
possibilities, she notes travel offers opportunities to find
curated art and artifacts in places such as subways, buses and
airport art collections. I recommend this book for anyone looking
to link local sources and global visual culture to relevant art
lessons.
*Liz Langdon, Professor of Visual Art Education, University of
Kansas, USA*
An excellent primer for preservice and current art teachers to
think about ways to approach community engagement. The text is well
written and accessible so readers from a range of backgrounds can
build off of the great ideas shared in this text in their
classrooms.
*Allison Rowe, Clinical Assistant Professor of Art Education,
University of Iowa, USA*
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