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Maine Learning Results |
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Visual and Performing Arts |
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The arts include dance, music, theater and visual art. In
an increasingly technological world, the arts help all students to develop
multiple capabilities for creating, understanding, deciphering, and appreciating
an image- and symbol-laden world. The arts are concerned with intellectual,
emotional, and physical faculties and, in combination, can be used to present
issues and ideas, teach or persuade, entertain, plan, beautify, and design
both functional and expressive works. Experiencing and creating art brings
lifelong enjoyment to students and an array of expressive, analytical,
and developmental tools to use in their daily lives. |
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The arts play a valued role in creating cultures and developing
and documenting civilizations. Students of the arts gain powerful tools
for:
- communicating through creative expression;
- understanding human experiences,
past and present;
- adapting to and respecting the ways others think,
work, and express themselves;
- using artistic modes of problem solving,
which, in turn, bring an array of expressive, analytical, and development
tools to every
human situation;
- understanding the power of the arts to create
and reflect cultures;
- understanding the impact of design on virtually
all we use in daily life;
- understanding the interdependence of work
in the arts and the worlds of ideas and events;
- making decisions
in situations where there are no standard answers;
analyzing nonverbal communication and making informed judgments
about cultural products and issues; and for
- communicating
thoughts and feelings in a variety of modes, thereby providing a
more powerful repertoire of self-expression.
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Because each arts discipline appeals to different senses
and expresses itself through different media, each adds a special richness
to the learning environment. Arts education helps students learn to identify,
appreciate, and participate in the traditional and non-traditional art
forms of their own communities and the communities of others. As students
imagine, create, and reflect, they are developing the verbal and non-verbal
abilities necessary for life-long learning. The intellectual demands of
the arts help students develop problem-solving abilities and such powerful
thinking skills as analyzing, synthesizing, and evaluating. Numerous studies
point toward a consistent and positive correlation between substantive
education in the arts and student achievement in other subjects. A comprehensive,
well-designed arts education program also engages students in a process
that helps them develop the self-esteem, self-discipline, cooperation,
and self-motivation necessary for success in life. Most importantly, the
arts should be experienced and studied for their own intrinsic value. |
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A. Creative Expression:
Students will
create and/or perform to express ideas and feelings. Students communicate
through
their
works,
revise and problem-solve, use a variety of processes, and integrate their
works with other disciplines.
- Each art form has specific vocabulary, elements, principles, and
structures that allow for communication of ideas, feelings, and moods.
- Problem-solving skills, reflection, self-evaluation, revising, and
refinement
are part of the process used in the creation and development of art works.
- The development and creation of work in the arts use a variety of
approaches, styles, media, and performance modes, including electronic
technology.
- Students will understand that the roles, skills, relationships,
and differences among the arts are transferable from one arts discipline
to another as
well as to other disciplines.
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B. Cultural Heritage:
Students
will understand the cultural contributions (social, ethical, political,
religious dimensions)
of the
arts, how the arts shape and are shaped by prevailing cultural and social
beliefs and values, and recognize exemplary works from a variety of cultures
and historical periods. The arts are the record of our diverse world cultures
and provide understanding of who we are, where we've been, and possible
directions for our future. |
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C. Criticism and Aesthetics.
Students
will reflect upon and assess the characteristics and merits of art works.
An
understanding
of
how the senses are used to make artistic choices in daily life, together
with an understanding of how these choices affect feelings, moods, and
emotions, helps us to make judgments about the merits and meaning of work
in the arts. The elements, principles, and structures of art forms can
be composed in ways which enrich, persuade, and influence society, either
directly, through performances, original works and exhibits or indirectly,
through electronic and printed media. |
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A. Creative Expression
Students will create and/or perform to express ideas and feelings. Students
will be able to:
Elementary Grades Pre-K-2
- Investigate the characteristics and purposes of each of the arts
to communicate ideas, feelings, and meaning.
- Experiment with art forms.
- Demonstrate an understanding of the differences
in the materials and techniques used to produce selected art works
(e.g., the differences
among musical instruments,
the differences among a variety of materials used for sculpture or the
differences in techniques used to performances such as singing,
pantomime, etc.).
- Recognize the functions and the expressive
qualities of the elements and principles of each art form (visual
art, music, dance, drama)
and incorporate
them into
their own creative works.
- Use improvisation to solve problems in the
performing arts.
- Perform and/or listen to a number of pieces on a
given theme and create a variation.
- Differentiate simple expressive
forms within each arts discipline.
- Use appropriate vocabulary to
explain ideas in the arts.
- Identify the use of the arts in daily
experiences.
- Demonstrate ways in which the arts can be used in interdisciplinary
activities.
- Understand and demonstrate acceptable rules
of behavior when attending arts events (e.g., museums, galleries,
plays, and
concerts).
- Recognize musical symbols.
- Demonstrate ability to recreate an existing
work alone and with others.
- Use materials and tools in a safe and
responsible manner.
- Understand that the success of musical, theatrical,
and dance groups depends on collaboration
Examples
- Draw a self-portrait.
- Improvise a short piece of music using a given
set of notes.
- Use space, costumes, and props to create a suitable environment
in a scene or dance.
- Differentiate between a "verse" and
a "refrain" in
a song.
- Sing with a group, on pitch and together, following a conductor.
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Elementary Grades 3-4
- Develop personal expression in works in each of the visual (2-D and
3-D) and performing arts (music, theater, and dance).
- Apply previously
learned principles to perform, create, revise, and/or refine works.
- Refine and develop improvisations into completed works.
- Create original
works using different media, techniques, and processes to communicate
ideas, feelings, and meaning.
- Demonstrate awareness that there are
a variety of careers in the arts.
- Read simple musical compositions.
- Listen to and/or view a dramatic,
musical, dance, or visual art work and provide feedback to the artist
(peer).
- Begin to develop skill in playing a musical instrument and/or
singing and performing simple compositions.
Examples
- Create a song from a poem or to accompany a dance.
- Show development
of personal style by drawing a series of illustrations on a given
theme.
- Use puppets to create characters and short scenes with a beginning,
middle, and end.
- Play an instrument from a musical score or sing
in two-part harmony.
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Middle Grades 5-8
- Explain how the arts originate from human experience, are a communal
experience, and encourage kinship with others.
- Use the expressive qualities
of the elements and principles of each art form to explore a variety
of styles in their work.
- Discriminate among the qualities and characteristics
of art media, techniques, and processes for the purposes of selecting
appropriate
media to communicate
artistic ideas.
- Use a variety of resources, materials, and techniques
to design and execute art works.
- Investigate the work of a professional
who has an arts component within his/her work environment.
- Demonstrate
an understanding of how achievement in the arts can support achievement
in other disciplines.
- Demonstrate an understanding of how we make
personal aesthetic choices in daily decisions.
- Perform a variety
of styles and types of music, dance, and theatre.
- Develop skill in
playing an instrument and/or singing and reading music.
Examples
- Create a series of ceramic pieces showing variations in personal
style.
- Select a musical instrument for expressing a chosen emotion
in an original composition.
- Identify the components of dance in a
gymnastics or ice-skating routine.
- Develop three story boards for
a video sequence; then tape and edit the best into a completed piece.
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Secondary Grades 9 - 12
- Create a visual or performance piece to communicate an idea, feeling,
or meaning using:
a distinct style; imagination and technical skill; and the creative process,
reflection, and self-evaluation (problem-solving skills).
- Compare various
classical and contemporary visual and/or performing arts techniques and
methods and demonstrate the use of these in their own works.
- Create
a piece in one art form which complements one of the other art forms
(e.g., music to complement poetry).
- Use the elements and principles of
design to demonstrate multiple solutions to specific visual or performing
arts problems.
- Create a portfolio of work that communicates new ideas,
feelings, and moods using different media, techniques, and processes.
- Demonstrate an understanding that the arts are a means of renewal
and recreation, as well as an occupational opportunity.
- Identify the
value of participating in the arts and summarize possible involvement
in personal and community arts.
- Use arts knowledge and vocabulary
to critique their own work.
- Use skills and knowledge of arts elements
and principles, whenever applicable, to solve problems or enhance
meaning in other disciplines.
Examples
- Create a number of art works that represent their best work in a
range of media they select.
- Create a character in a number of different
acting styles and videotape the
performances.
- Choreograph dances that interpret various other media such
as poetry or visual art.
- Create a musical composition in their choice
of media which may include the computer.
- Intern or apprentice with
a professional in field of choice for a specific project.
- Use knowledge
of color and design to create mathematical patterns.
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B. Cultural Heritage
Students will understand the cultural contributions (social, ethical,
political, religious dimensions) of the arts, how the arts shape and
are shaped by prevailing cultural and social beliefs and values, and
recognize exemplary works from a variety of cultures and historical periods.
Students will be able to:
Elementary Grades Pre-K-2
- Recognize samples of major styles and techniques of the arts from
different cultural or ethnic groups.
- Recognize common subjects and
central ideas in works from different cultures.
Interpret or perform simple visual and performance pieces from different
cultures and/or times.
- Experiment with works exhibiting variety in
style/technique, trends, and culture.
- Create original works that
integrate one or more of the characteristics and purposes of artworks
from different cultures (include own community
and culture).
Examples
- Use the rhythms from the music of other cultures in music to demonstrate
different movements in dance.
- Perform dances based on Native American
work.
- Use dramatic activities to explore a variety of occupations.
- Identify
the common characteristics in art works which show nighttime scenes.
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Elementary Grades 3-4
- Recognize selected major periods of the visual arts and performing
arts and identify major artists and their work.
- Explain how cultural
values are shown through the arts.
- Demonstrate an understanding of
the roles of visual and performing artists in various settings and
cultures.
- Compare the characteristics of works in two or more visual
and performing art forms that share a similar subject matter, historical
period, or
cultural context.
Examples
- Identify musical works of different genres such as classical or contemporary.
- Describe the role of artists in ancient Egypt.
- Identify origins of
popular dance forms as either European or African.
- Explain the differences
between an Indonesian Shadow Puppets performance and a
- Muppet puppet
performance.
- Identify different kinds of music used in Maine such
as sea chanteys or the music of the Abenaki, the lumbermen, or the
textile
mills, etc.
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Middle Grades 5-8
- Classify art works, which represent various cultures, by genre and
style, identifying their distinguishing characteristics.
- Compare and
contrast the characteristics and purposes of the arts from various
cultures, historical periods, and social groups.
- Compare and contrast cultural
values as expressed in works and explain how these values may differ
from those of their own daily experience.
- Compare the characteristics
and purposes of works, in two or more arts forms, that share similar
subject matter, historical periods,
ethics, or
cultural
context.
- Identify how the factors of time and place (such as climate,
resources, ideas, and technology) are reflected in visual and performing
arts.
- Demonstrate an understanding of the ways various arts activities
enrich people's artistic, intellectual, social, and emotional responses.
Examples
- Describe the social values expressed in modern dance as it grew out
of ballet.
- Contrast the daily life of a Renaissance art student and
a present day art student.
- Describe the value of theatre experience
for self-development.
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Secondary Grades 9 - 12
- Compare two or more visual and/or performing arts by identifying
the genre, style, historical period and conditions, probable artist,
and
cultural source.
- Compare and contrast characteristics of visual and/or
performing arts within a particular historical period or style with
concepts about the period or style
from other content areas.
- Analyze common characteristics and purposes of
various visual and/or performing art works across time and among
cultural and social groups, and explain
how these characteristics and purposes fulfill social, religious, or
ceremonial functions in a particular cultural and historical context.
- Create works that reflect concepts, theories, approaches, and styles
from their own and other cultures.
- Develop visual and/or performing
art work in response to a historical, social or cultural condition
using a variety of forms.
Examples
- Create and explain a time and theme line using several chosen works
from different cultures.
- Create visual or performing art in the style
of a particular artist.
- Create a musical fanfare that will be used
during the lighting of the Olympic flame.
- Explain the relationship
between the social climate of the 1960's and the social dances of
the time.
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C. Criticism and Aesthetics
Students will reflect upon and assess the characteristics and merits
of art works. Students will be able to:
Elementary Grades Pre-K-2
- Explain likes and dislikes of a work of art, music, dance, drama.
- Describe the qualities of works of art, music, dance, and drama in
relation to the senses of sight, hearing, movement, and feeling.
- Attend exhibitions and performances (live, or film, or video if live
not available locally).
- Recognize visual and performing art work
that attempts to influence and persuade.
Examples
- Describe how a performance of "The Stars and Stripes Forever" by
Sousa makes them feel.
- Identify their favorite advertisement from printed
or electronic media and explain why they like it.
- Explain likes and
dislikes after viewing a play.
- Create a movement sequence using specific
elements from Laban's theories of movement.
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Elementary Grades 3-4
- Demonstrate an understanding of how the senses are used in daily
life to make choices about purchases.
- Provide rationale for personal
feelings about works in the arts.
- Listen to and/or view a dramatic,
musical, dance, or visual art work and provide feedback to the artist
(peer).
- Explore and analyze content and styles in various art forms.
- Use
knowledge of the elements and principles of each art form to express
opinions of the meaning of works.
- Examine the effect of artistic
choices on others and on the environment.
- Investigate how the elements,
principles, and structures of the arts can be manipulated by communication
media to persuade
and to influence.
Examples
- Explain why one choice of public sculpture design is more appropriate
for a given site than another.
- Recognize how design, spatial relationship,
gender, movement, and sound are used by advertisers to sell products.
- Explain why an individual chooses to buy a particular CD.
- Create
a movement sequence for three dancers in which they use various arrangements
of forms in space.
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Middle Grades 5-8
- Articulate and justify personal perceptions of meaning in works of
visual art, music, dance, and drama.
- Evaluate written reviews of visual
and performing works of art.
- Demonstrate an understanding of the
difference between a personal opinion and an educated judgment about
the meaning of various works.
- Compare and contrast the effectiveness
of selected media, techniques, and processes in communicating ideas.
- Evaluate work, from their own and other cultures and historical periods,
that uses arts elements and principles to persuade and influence.
- Critique their own work and the work of others based upon an aesthetic
criterion.
Examples
- Explain the difference between their views on whether they like or
dislike a Sandy Skoglund work, and their views on the work's aesthetic
value.
- Discuss characteristics common to political commercials from
several campaigns.
- Read and analyze a written review of an exhibit,
play, concert, or dance performance.
- Create a commercial using movement,
sound, and visual art.
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Secondary Grades 9 - 12
- Explain and justify personal aesthetic criteria for critiquing works
of visual and performing art, texts, and events.
- Research the work
of critics, historians, aestheticians, and artists to analyze and
interpret works and compare differing critiques of the same visual
and
performing art works.
- Analyze, interpret, and evaluate subtle and complex
meaning in visual and/or performing arts intended to persuade and
influence (as in electronic media,
theater, commercial, and political advertising).
- Create visual and/or
performing art work that is used to influence and persuade and explain
how the design accomplishes its purpose.
Examples
- Write a review of an artistic performance and compare it to one written
by a professional critic.
- Interpret meanings in works by political
artists in several cultures and/or historical periods.
- Research and
use the written works of critics and historians to analyze works
by a particular composer, artist, choreographer, or playwright.
- Create
a public service announcement opposing the use of illegal drugs and
explain why you think it is successful or unsuccessful.
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Back to Winslow Music Directory |
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Go to High School Band Curriculum |
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Back to the Reflections Page |
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Back to Musical CritiquePage |
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