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The North Texas Institute for Educators on
the Visual Arts (NTIEVA) at the University
of North Texas has received a grant from the Getty
Center for Education in the Arts to establish as its
specialty program a National Center for Art Museum/School
Collaborations (NCAMSC). The Center focuses on collaborative
programming between art museums and schools in a comprehensive
approach to art education.
It serves as a clearinghouse for information about successful
programs and practices by conducting and collecting research,
maintaining a database of information, and creating electronic
and/or print networks for information retrieval. The Center
also will organize regional and national conferences to
bring together art museum and school educators, and will
develop a program of publications on the subject of art
museum/school collaborations.
Leadership for the Center is provided by D. Jack Davis and
Dr. Jacqueline Chanda, co-directors of NTIEVA, and Nancy
Berry, Assistant Professor of Art History and Art Education,
who serves as program director.
UNT graduate students in art education and art history working
on the certificate in art museum education serve as research
assistants and interns, making significant contributions
to research, development, and dissemination of information
through networks and publications.
In November 1994, members of the first national advisory
board for the Center met in Denton to review goals, objectives,
and research and development activities proposed for the
first year. Their analysis and recommendations helped guide
the Center's activities during a formative period. Members
of the first advisory board were Amelia Arenas, Museum
of Modern Art, New York; Dana Baldwin, Portland
(Maine) Art Museum ; Schroeder Cherry, Baltimore Museum
of Art; Anne El-Omami, Cincinnati Art Museum; Susan Hazelroth,
Ringling Museum of Art; Allison Perkins, Amon Carter
Museum; Kathleen Walsh-Piper, Dallas
Museum of Art and Ray Williams, Ackland
Art Museum, University of North Carolina.
A series of focus groups was conducted during the summer
of 1995 to assist the Center in targeting the needs of its
users, and an extensive survey is being sent to school and
museum art educators during the fall of 1995. This preliminary
research will shape the Center's organization and form the
basis for its information retrieval system.
The Center is viewed as a three-pronged resource to the
fields of art and art museum education. It will store information
about museum/school collaborations in an easily accessible
format so that museum, university, and school users can
find examples to aid in their program design. In its networking
function, the Center will offer opportunities for interaction
between school, museum, and university educators and administrators.
As a research center, NCAMSC will be a site for visiting
and resident researchers from art and art museum education
fields, and serve as vehicle for the publication of advances
in theory and practice. The services offered by the National
Center for Art Museum/School Collaborations will address
growing national concerns among art museums, art museum
educators, school administrators, teachers, and universities.
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