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Cambridge Journal of Education

Volume 37, Issue 4, 2007

Learning in the visual arts and the worldviews of young children

Learning in the visual arts and the worldviews of young children

DOI:
10.1080/03057640701705898
James S. Catteralla* & Kylie A. Pepplera

pages 543-560

Available online: 02 Sep 2010

Abstract

This paper reports a research study into the effects of rich, sustained visual arts instruction on 103 inner city 9‐year‐olds in two major US cities. We use the lenses of social learning theory, theories of motivation and self‐efficacy, and recent research on artistic thinking to investigate the programs' effects on children's self‐beliefs and creative thinking. The study enlisted a pre–post measure, treatment‐comparison group design along with structured observations of participant and comparison group classrooms. The arts students made significant comparative gains on a self‐efficacy scale and on an ‘originality’ subscale of a standard creativity test. These effects are attributed to children's engagement in art and to the social organization of instruction including reinforcing peer and student–adult relationships. Relationships between self‐efficacy beliefs and tendencies to think originally are explored.

 

Details

  • Available online: 02 Sep 2010

Author affiliations

  • a University of California, Los Angeles, USA

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group