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What Is So Important About Art Education

Why is art important in education?

Art builds creativity, and creative minds create. Artist create music, paintings, architecture, philosophy, books, movies, and computer design. Engineers have to be half mathematicians and half artist.

learning art form a historical perspective helps us understand our ancestry and the history and culture people once lived in. We can visually see how art has evolved from paintings, architecture, music, to even the evolution from the abacus to the computer.

Visual literacy is important because this is the direction our education is moving. People today are visual learners, we watch more TV then read books or listen to the radio. Our kids today will not really understand what a newspaper is or what text books are for. Todays students don't use the dewy decimal system, or the card catalog when searching for a book or journal in the library like our parents did. We don't need encyclopedias in book form anymore.

Children can develop aesthetic awareness the same way they can develop any skill, with practice. The more they are exposed to art in a visual form the more likely they are to gain from their perceptions.

How important is a liberal arts education?

I have a Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics and Physics from Bowdoin College, which is a liberal arts institution. For me, personally, I think that was pretty much the ideal degree.Don’t get me wrong: I love the STEM fields. I took so many math courses in college that I was one credit short of qualifying for the math major twice. (I should clarify, though, that the math major at Bowdoin, at least when I was there, was pretty much designed to be a double major, so this is actually a significantly less impressive achievement than it sounds.) However, taking courses in photography, education, philosophy, and the like helped broaden my horizons. It gave me a much more nuanced perspective than I might have otherwise, and it helped improve my writing and communication skills. I think this is actually of prime importance in my successes as a mathematician, because the average quality of mathematical talks and papers is startlingly low. Many people spend ages learning how to craft a semi-decent technical paper. In contrast, I picked it up with minimal effort. I would also argue that I am a better educator than I would be otherwise, for essentially the same reasons.There are other differences that are somewhat incidental to the core philosophy of liberal arts; as a general rule, liberal arts colleges tend to be much smaller than research-oriented institutions, and courses are almost always taught by professors, and not TAs. This has the benefit of giving a much more personal experience, which I know I benefited from enormously. (A large part of why I became a mathematician is because I had excellent teachers in mathematics.) It does, however, have the downside that there is usually no opportunity to get graduate-level training, which has to be a consideration for anyone looking to obtain a masters or PhD.Is a liberal arts education what everyone needs? No, obviously not. There are plenty of people who would be better served by vocational training, for instance. For some, being in a focused STEM program is perhaps better. There are no “one-size-fits-all” approaches when it comes to education (particularly higher education); you need to figure out what you want out of life, what your own strengths are, and how you want to pursue this accordingly.

Why is art education not important?

As with many questions here, particularly related to art, the context is assumed by the questioner but is the unknown core of the question. The obvious first missing piece of info here is “not important to whom?” The second is “not important for what purpose?”I assume that this idea arises from instructors, career counselors, and personnel department folks saying that all an employer or contracting agent looks at is your portfolio, body of work, and references. Maybe the asker is just not willing to consider the commitment and hard work of an education. Art education is not particularly important for participants in a community art program or retirement home. Or is it just that the questioner needs to get on with some activity to bring in a bit of money today?This short-sighted when considering education planning and commitment.Consider these thoughts:School is a place to make mistakes safely and get feedback without your guessing “what is wrong with my work”?The education process is aimed at you learning to consider options over a range of approaches rather than just do your one “trick”.Having some idea of alternative approaches and tools helps reduce stress when making decisions at the macro and micro level. You avoid wasting time “reinventing the wheel”.You save time, energy, and stress when you can derive ideas from the work and results of others.An educated artist can communicate better in general with more experienced artists and art director.If you want to teach art (and teaching is very satisfying) art education is an absolute necessity.In general, there is a lot more to art education than learning to paint, draw, model, or animate.Also, the answer that many neophyte and experienced artists don’t want to hear - many educated artists (particularly in university art departments) prefer to deal with artists who have “paid their dues” and “speak the language of art” and therefore are “members of the club” - i.e. the snob factor.

Do you think that Liberal Arts education is important?

I'm not American, but I am aware of the Liberal Arts College System in the US.

I kind of half agree with you. I think a broad education is very important. Education should produce fully-rounded individuals, rather than merely people who are prepared for the career they plan to enter.

However, I think the time to gain a strong, broad general education is in high school. In European countries, students leave high school with a much higher standard of education and a much broader one. Therefore, even though they may study engineering in college and nothing else, they still speak three or more languages, have a serious knowledge of world history and geography, can write structured essays, etc.

Why is music and fine arts education so important? ?

http://sitemaker.umich.edu/356.murphy/be...

Why is drawing and painting important in art education?

Drawing is a fundamental part of creative processes ranging from math to theater. It connects your brain to your body like no other activity and triggers cognitive developement you might not otherwise get. Painting does this too, but since drawing underlies painting, it was the best starting point for this answer.The cognitive developement associated with spatial and aesthetic reasoning is well documented and important for all students regardless of artistic merit in their work. It's the excersise that contains the benefit. Kids who skip art ed are probably not realizing the full potenial of their brains.

Why do art advocates believe that arts education is important?

Arts education is extremely important. Painting, sculpture, music composition, music performance, stage performance, creative writing, dance, clothes design, are vital parts of our culture. Of course there many more of all kinds of arts: baking, cooking, gardening that are not considered “fine arts” that are equally important. I am sure I have missed a few.It opens up our minds to news ways of thinking and seeing the world. Through painting and sculpture we can see history. Through music we can hear it.It allows us to find solutions outside of the box. It allows us to have a hobby or pastime that can help us be less stressed in our busy stressful lives.Learning these things creates a flexibility in our brains and minds that allows us to be better thinkers. The arts inspire us.I took art for all four years of high school and two years in college. I studied theatre and philosophy in college.I still paint for myself to this day and create different little crafts. I make jewelry. I read about new art exhibits and visit museums whenever I have the chance. I feel that because of my arts education I have become a more open minded person and more accepting of different viewpoints and perspectives.This to me is why arts education is important.

Do you feel that the importance of art education is suppressed /ignored by the burden of science, maths and other subjects in schools in India?

Yes.I do feel. Most of the people in India think that,send children to science field. Make him doctor or engineer. He will practice as a doctor or will get a well paid package from MNC. But rather than making students more innovative and creative they force them. In school we need good marks in science and maths. It don't matter to anyone that a student who has get A grade in Arts. If education system in India is not focusing on Arts then how we will get good artist. So I personally feel that importance of Art is ignored in schools in India.Thank you and sorry for grammatical mistakes.

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