946 Art and Handicrafts 1

Introduction

Art and Handicrafts 1, 30 ECTS credits, is based on the national curricula, General Education Teacher Education and the Subject Teacher: Practical & Arts Subjects established by the Ministry of Education and Research on 3rd April 2003. Art and Handicrafts is an aesthetic subject where creative work forms a basis for the development of fundamental professional skills in teaching art and handicrafts in primary and lower secondary schools and music and art schools. This involves work processes that pose both theoretical and practical challenges to the students. The study programme consists of two modules, each of which are worth 15 ECTS credits. Art and Handicrafts 1 is a two-semester study programme which is made up of the courses/modules Art and Architecture. It emphasises images, applied-art forms and sculpture as they are expressed in various materials. By alternating between theory and practice, the students will develop personal skills and the ability to justify their professional choices. On this basis, the study programme will provide a platform for personal development and encourage an awareness of the field’s possibilities and values with respect to the individual, school and society. A multicultural approach will be stressed.

The current curriculum for primary/lower-secondary schools will be a vital tool in achieving the objectives of the study programme.

Target Group and Admission Requirements

The target group will include students in general teacher education study programmes who desire a basic education in crafts, design and working with arts and handicrafts, as well as teachers seeking specialisation or a refresher course in the subject as it is presented in LK06.

Students must meet general admission requirements or apply for admission on the basis of prior experiential learning.

The study programme may be studied as:

  • An obligatory course in the Subject Teacher: Practical & Arts Subjects study programme.
  • An elective course in the 3rd or 4th year of the general teacher education study programme.
  • A continuing education course for teachers.
  • Part of a multi-subject Bachelor’s degree.

Aim of the Programme

Arts and Handicrafts 1 is an arts and culture subject; a subject of expression, communication and skills in which practical, creative work is essential for the development of final competence. The study programme is intended to have a subject didactics profile related to teaching and instruction in primary, lower secondary, and music and arts schools. Students will develop their knowledge, experience and creative skills. In this way, understanding and experience of the aesthetic values expressed in a variety of materials; communication; function and didactics will be reinforced. The study programme will develop students’ awareness of the subject’s possibilities and values, in which man, learning, culture and the environment are central.
Students will learn to:

  • Increase their knowledge, awareness and ability to express themselves through aesthetic creative work using a variety of materials.
  • Master the use of creative processes in problem-solving, product development and aesthetic creative work.
  • Systematically develop the necessary fine motor skills and technical knowledge required in order to be able to realise ideas and produce concrete results.
  • Develop their ability to independently formulate and solve problems.
  • Develop basic skills in arts and architecture.
  • Be able to draw on theories of form, colour and composition in order to evaluate their own creative work and that of others.
  • Experience and acquire knowledge of art and design culture within the specialist subject field and develop active skills regarding our culture’s traditions and renewal.
  • Acquire knowledge and experience of relevant research and development work within the subject field.
  • Visualise and document the creative process from idea to finished product.
  • Acquire skills that involve subject didactics skills and the ability to reflect upon their own activities within the subject area. Students should be capable of organising and developing tasks suited to individual pupils.
  • Develop the ability to act and the ability to justify their professional practice.
  • Use their period of teaching practice as an arena for experimentation and reflection with regard to the study programme.

Further Education opportunities

  • Arts and Crafts 2. Design and Visual Communication.
  • In combination with Arts and Handicrafts 2 (30 ECTS) and completed General Teacher Education, candidates will be able to apply for admission to an MA Art & Design Education study programme.
  • Arts and Handicrafts 1 and 2 provide the basis for a wide range of further studies year-programmes in arts and handicrafts.
  • The study programme may be included as a part of a multidisciplinary Bachelor’s degree.

Curriculum and structure



Code Course title Credits O/V *) Credits pr. semester
  S1(A) S2(V)
Total: 30 0
*) O - Mandatory course, V - Optional course

The subject material from the target areas is organised into two topics.
1. Arts
2. Architecture
Selected and relevant didactic and theoretical subjects will be clarified and included as a natural part of the studies in the subject areas.

Teaching and Learning Methods

Students work mainly independently and under supervision of a teacher in the workshop. Through guidance in the workshop sessions, theory and reflection will be related to the student’s own creative work. Lectures, seminars and various types of externally-oriented activities will be included in the teaching and learning methods; this will include exhibitions and digital presentations.
Various group processes may be included as part of the learning methods.

The study programme will be characterised by alternation between practical creative work, theoretical orientation and didactic reflection. Visits to various exhibitions, collections, museums and galleries will be included in the study programme, and students will work with different kinds of exhibitions and other visual documentation; the presentations will be emphasised and integrated into every aspect of the study programme.
Active participation in, and responsibility for, various common projects, for example, “Open Door”, constitutes a mandatory part of the study programme.

Theory and Practical Training

Teaching practice in the primary or lower secondary school (2 - 4 weeks, depending on which study programme the students follow) is a mandatory part of the study programme. The composition of the practice groups may vary in number depending on the purpose and need.
Students should refer to the National Curriculum for primary and lower secondary schools when choosing teaching and learning methods.

  • Students who are taking the programme, as part of a bachelor’s degree will carry out an art or culture related dissemination project with students in the primary/lower-secondary school or with other relevant groups.

Assessment Methods

Students are responsible for keeping themselves informed about assignments, deadlines, programme requirements, etc. Work will be submitted in a portfolio, assessed and allocated a grade.

Lectures, seminars, introductions and reviews are considered within the rule of 80% compulsory attendance.
The assessment should be part of the learning processes and a means for the student to both develop understanding of the goal of the study programme, and to gain insight into their own suitability for the teaching profession.

Examination

Each course is evaluated separately on the basis of the contents of the portfolio with exhibited products.
Grades A-F will be awarded, where A is the highest and E is the lowest passing grade.

The grades from the grades transcript will be averaged and a single grade entered on the diploma.
For further information refer to Telemark University College’s examination regulations.


Minor adjustments may occur during the academic year, subject to the decision of the Dean

Publisert av / forfatter Frode Evenstad <Frode.EvenstadSPAMFILTER@hit.no>, last modified Ian Hector Harkness - 02/04/2011