隔离、联系和包容:探索学生对疫情期间虚拟艺术教育的看法

Q3 Social Sciences
Borim Song, Kyung-Soon Lim
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引用次数: 0

摘要

两位艺术教育工作者利用讲故事的方式,探讨了新冠肺炎爆发后,他们的本科生如何经历向在线教育的转变。基于学生的反思,研究了三个主题:(1)虚拟学习的新特征和体验,(2)孤立和联系,以及(3)融入和调整。参与的学生分享了他们的课程经历,包括由于突然过渡到在线教学而导致的课程设计和结构的变化。由于与世隔绝和保持社交距离,参与的学生感到有些孤独。他们通过学习社区、小组、学生配对和学生-教师交流,通过讨论板、电子邮件、群聊、个人网页以及Canvas消息和反馈,体验了有目的地建立的多层联系。我们建议,交流关于学生学习和艺术创作经历的叙述有助于教育工作者建立自己的教学社区,并作为一种策略,在充满变化和过渡的不确定时期克服挑战和培养韧性。©,课程和教育学小组。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Isolation, connection, and embracement: Exploring students’ perspectives on virtual art education during the pandemic
Utilizing storytelling, two art educators explore how their undergraduate students experienced the transition to online education after the outbreak of COVID-19. Three themes are examined based on the students’ reflections: (1) new characteristics of and experiences within virtual learning, (2) isolation and connection, and (3) embracement and adjustment. The participating students shared their course experiences, with regard to the changes in course design and structure made due to the abrupt transition to online instruction. The participating students felt some loneliness due to isolation and social distancing. They experienced multilayered connections purposefully made through learning communities, small groups, student pairs, and student-instructor communication using discussion boards, emails, group chat, personal webpages, and Canvas messages and feedback. We suggest that exchanging narratives about students’ learning and art making experiences helps educators build their own teaching communities and serves as a strategy to overcome challenges and develop resilience in uncertain times full of changes and transitions. ©, Curriculum and Pedagogy Group.
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来源期刊
Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy
Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
期刊介绍: The Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy is dedicated to the study of curriculum theory, educational inquiry, and pedagogical praxis. This leading international journal brings together scholars from a variety of disciplines to explore and critically examine diverse perspective on educational phenomena, from schools and cultural institutions to sites and concerns beyond institutional boundaries. The journal publishes articles that explore historical, philosophical, gendered, queer, racial, ethnic, indigenous, postcolonial, linguistic, autobiographical, aesthetic, theological, and/or international curriculum concerns and issues. The Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy aims to promote emergent scholarship that critiques and extends curriculum questions and education foundations that have relation to practice by embracing a plurality of critical, decolonizing education sciences that inform local struggles in universities, schools, classroom, and communities. This journal provides a platform for critical scholarship that will counter-narrate Eurocratic, whitened, instrumentalized, mainstream education. Submissions should be no more than 9,000 words (excluding references) and should be submitted in APA 6th edition format.
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