|
Type of Document Dissertation Author Price, Audra E URN etd-11132007-180957 Title Blogging and Identity: An Examination of an Elementary Preservice Art Education Curriculum Degree Doctor of Philosophy Department Art Education, Department of Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title Tom Anderson Committee Chair Pat Villeneuve Committee Member Penny Orr Committee Member Susan Wood Committee Member Keywords
- Gender
- Culture
- Media
- Virtual Space
- Arts Methods
- Museum Education
Date of Defense 2007-09-19 Availability unrestricted Abstract This study focused on the need for an increased understanding of the experiencesof preservice elementary educators and their respective abilities to define culture,
identity, and the politics of representation in a technologically centered world by
responding to culturally challenging and politically laden images and media. The
experience under study focused on pre-service elementary educators enrolled in an arts
methods class and understanding their abilities to perceive, process, and respond to visual
media on a blog. Throughout this process, I assessed the individual’s understanding of
multicultural concerns as it related to the Internet, museum, and online discussions, with
implications for teaching and learning in art and museum education. I utilized Anderson
and Milbrandt’s (2005) analytic critical model with Banks’ (1991) value-inquiry model in
order to assess students’ abilities to critically analyze challenging material while
investigating blogging and asynchronous methods of communication as a strategy for
addressing these issues.
In this study, I reveal how students negotiated, shared, and constructed multiple
aspects of their identities in order to understand their roles in addressing diversity in their
future classrooms. Students completed a curriculum designed to help them describe,
analyze, interpret, and judge material that highlights aspects of their classmates’ cultural
identities. Students first created a personal blog that revealed their cultural identity,
posted and responded to a classroom communal blog that reflected material that
challenged an aspect of their cultural identity, and then responded to online surveys that
revealed various aspects of their cultural identity while reflecting on the meanings they
generated throughout this study. What I found was that students developed a greater
awareness of their personal value systems as a student, friend, and/or family member.
They focused on the beliefs they thought they needed in order to address culturally
challenging material in their future classrooms. This study also helped students
understand the process of transformation: where they came from, where they are
presently, and how they see their beliefs impacting the type of learning environment they
will create for their students in the future.
Files
Filename Size Approximate Download Time (Hours:Minutes:Seconds)
28.8 Modem 56K Modem ISDN (64 Kb) ISDN (128 Kb) Higher-speed Access AEPDissertation.pdf 7.87 Mb 00:36:25 00:18:44 00:16:23 00:08:11 00:00:41