art – THATCamp College Art Association (CAA) 2015 http://caa2015.thatcamp.org The Humanities and Technology Camp, College Art Association 2015 Fri, 19 Jan 2018 23:57:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 Reflection-THATCamp@CAA: Teaching Art Online http://caa2015.thatcamp.org/2015/02/12/teaching-art-online/ Thu, 12 Feb 2015 08:47:50 +0000 http://caa2015thatcamp.org/?p=1141

Nozomi Kato

THATCamp@CAA: Teaching Art Online

Google Doc Version is HERE.

Participants: Pam Stefanuca, Nathalie Hager, Chinghsin Wu, Tessa Fleming, L W Schermerhorn, Naraelle Hohensee, Peter Chanthanakone, Ian McDermott, Steven Zucker, Beth Harris, John Resig, Ellen Tani and Nozomi Kato (in the order of the email list that I received at the end).


I proposed my “baby session” because I wanted to discuss something small and local (innovative ways of using digital tools in CUNY/NYC art classrooms), but I chose to open up the topic to accommodate the larger audience at CAA. As a result, my session became more general and enjoyable for all participants. However, there were several points that I would have liked to address in my session, so I list them below.

Note 1: My friend in LaGuardia CC Library sent us the links below:

1) “History of Online Instructions” at CUNY.

2) University-wide “Hybrid Initiative” at CUNY.

#This is where NYC art students who attend city-funded universities stand right now in terms of online instructions.

“Going the Distance: Online Education in the United States, 2011.”

#This last link is something about online instruction in the U. S. more generally to start with.

Note 2: Lecture video production.
There are advantages and disadvantages of producing video lectures of the instructors themselves. Advantages: the videos can be used to promote themselves as art scholars, their study abroad programs and/or their future courses. Disadvantages: missing opportunities of diversifying their classroom instructions. In NYC, I assign video lectures of African American, Caucasian and Asian scholars to expose my students to different modes of information delivery. This is just an example, but those can add nuances to the contents covered in my art history survey courses. These nuances are valued in NYC/CUNY where I can be asked to teach foundation level courses from Eurocentric, Afrocentric, and/or Japan-centric perspectives. When I taught at CUNY Medgar Evers College in central Brooklyn, for instance, my students watched a video in which an African American priest was discussing Gothic Cathedrals. This is for an art history survey course that begins with ancient Egypt in Africa.

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