Author/Authors :
Kalin، Nadine نويسنده , , Grauer، Kit نويسنده , , Baird، Jill نويسنده , , Meszaros، Cheryl نويسنده ,
Abstract :
This article outlines art education courses undertaken
in museum and gallery contexts as a
component of the Certificate Programme in
Visual and Material Culture within the University
of British Columbia’s Department of Curriculum
Studies. With the creation of this programme and
through the forging of relationships with area
museums, unique ways have evolved for graduate
students from diverse areas of education and
art teacher education candidates to interact with
works of art, museum professionals, artists, and
the museum space itself. The purpose of these
courses is to use museum and gallery settings as
sites to test ideas, critique educational
programmes, and advance new approaches for
teachers to use museums in more creative and
integrated ways in their teaching while expanding
theoretical knowledge and interpretive repertoires.
Through participating in this collaborative
venture we have learned that when you invite
teachers into museums, make efforts to increase
their comfort within these spaces, while recognising
what interpretive insights they offer as
active participants in museum discourses, points
of convergence between teachers, universities,
and museums are formed.
Over the past five years, a collaborative venture
between the University of British Columbia (UBC)
art education programme, the Vancouver Art
Gallery, and the UBC Museum of Anthropology
has been under way. In 2001, Kit Grauer, chair of
art education at UBC, originated the Certificate
Programme in Visual and Material Culture within
UBC’s Department of Curriculum Studies.
Through the creation of this programme and
through the forging of relationships with these
museums, unique ways evolved for graduate
students from diverse areas of education and art
teacher education candidates to interact with
works of art, museum professionals, artists, and
the museum space itself. The purpose of these
courses is to use museum and gallery settings as
sites to test ideas, critique educational
programmes, and advance new approaches for
teachers to use museums in more creative and
integrated ways while expanding theoretical
knowledge and interpretive repertoires.