Saturday, November 13, 2010
Gormley Comes to MassArt
Antony Gormley's work, both sculptural and interactive installations, challenge the viewer to embody their own role of being "on display" for others. His work reflects our own experience, subjecting us to our own gaze. The reciprocity of his work brings to mind many questions I face in my classroom interactions with students. In the special needs classroom, one is always evaluating and re-evaluating our own actions and directives, and Gormley's work makes this subconscious dance visible.
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Tongue in Cheek or Call to Action?
Powerpoint seems to have taken over as the educative medium of choice, but we can easily lose sight of the objective of any presentation. What is our foremost goal in presenting information? It's to convey the information.
Oyl Miller, writing for McSweeney's, in a piece called "I am the Orson Welles of Powerpoint," hits the nail on the head with her sarcastic (I think) take on our new addiction to the Microsoft Office Suite.
As an art teacher in the special needs classroom, this trend is particularly troubling. Yes, we're told to create visual presentations and avoid lectures, but is this truly "visual?" Or are we just adding a second layer of "lecture" to another lecture?
I hope others can be inspired by Miller's editorial, and take up the call to use Powerpoint for good and not for mediocrity.
Oyl Miller, writing for McSweeney's, in a piece called "I am the Orson Welles of Powerpoint," hits the nail on the head with her sarcastic (I think) take on our new addiction to the Microsoft Office Suite.
As an art teacher in the special needs classroom, this trend is particularly troubling. Yes, we're told to create visual presentations and avoid lectures, but is this truly "visual?" Or are we just adding a second layer of "lecture" to another lecture?
I hope others can be inspired by Miller's editorial, and take up the call to use Powerpoint for good and not for mediocrity.
Saturday, July 24, 2010
The Creativity Crisis
Newsweek covered this topic in a recent issue. Basically, the trends in American classrooms' creativity, and by extension, in the economy, have dipped drastically in the past few decades. Two notable thinking skills, Divergence and then Convergence, are cited as elemental to improving creative processes. Also, the article takes issue with the idea that creative thinking is primarily a right-brain function. It argues that innovation involves the whole brain, using logic and order to harness the abstract.
Sunday, May 30, 2010
The Artist is Present
This message was sent using the Picture and Video Messaging service from Verizon Wireless!
To learn how you can snap pictures and capture videos with your wireless phone visit www.verizonwireless.com/picture.
Note: To play video messages sent to email, QuickTime� 6.5 or higher is required.
Saturday, May 15, 2010
An Open Letter
This open letter, penned by Katie Schneider for McSweeney's, sheds some welcome light onto the experience of a parent of a child with AS. Enjoy!
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Friday, March 12, 2010
Hooked on Phonics...
A kind-hearted mistake reveals a search for empathy. If only it really were spelled how it sounds...
Friday, February 19, 2010
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
The Vaccine Verdict
There's a new book out, called Denialism, by Michael Specter, which outlines the country's irrational and obstinate denouncement of sound scientific theory in favor of accepted norms. We see it in the fight over global warming (termed "climate change" by those wanting it to sound less threatening) or the new battles over health care; and now I suspect that we'll continue to hear that vaccines are dangerous. Today, the British journal The Lancet retracted its publishing of Andrew Wakefield's findings on the connections between a common childhood vaccine and the onset of Autism. For years, Wakefield has preached his findings to anxious and caring parents of children with Autism worldwide, all the while hiding or downplaying his questionable and unethical research.
I speak, of course, from a non-parent of a child with autism, and I do not want to oversimplify the issues, but I can only imagine the difficulty in accepting one's being taken in by a charlatan like Wakefield. Is it unfair to liken his so-called science to the tonic hawkers of old?
I speak, of course, from a non-parent of a child with autism, and I do not want to oversimplify the issues, but I can only imagine the difficulty in accepting one's being taken in by a charlatan like Wakefield. Is it unfair to liken his so-called science to the tonic hawkers of old?
Monday, January 25, 2010
Mmm, what a Delicious Typo
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Why, this IS a great idea!
This concept of the anti-ad is quite the test for having eyes in the back of your head. You know there's something fishy going on, but you can't prove it. Seems it relies upon our cooperation with others to make it 'work.'
Here's the link to the "Idea"
Here's the link to the "Idea"
Monday, January 4, 2010
Overheard at the art store...
"He's AR-tistic, not AU-tistic!"
An overheard phone conversation as I was browsing the aisles for some art supplies. It made me smile to imagine the instantaneous reassessment happening at the other end of the line, when, really, the idea that they're mutually exclusive descriptors is absurd.
An overheard phone conversation as I was browsing the aisles for some art supplies. It made me smile to imagine the instantaneous reassessment happening at the other end of the line, when, really, the idea that they're mutually exclusive descriptors is absurd.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)