Steam as Social Practice: Cultivating Creativity in Transdisciplinary Spaces

Recently there have been calls to expandSTEM education to include the arts and design, transforming STEM into STEAM in the K-20 classroom (Maeda, 2013). Like STEM, STEAM education stresses making connections between disciplines that were previously perceived as disparate. This has been conceptualize...

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Veröffentlicht in:Art education (Reston) 2014-11, Vol.67 (6), p.12-19
Hauptverfasser: Guyotte, Kelly W., Sochacka, Nicki W., Costantino, Tracie E., Walther, Joachim, Kellam, Nadia N.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recently there have been calls to expandSTEM education to include the arts and design, transforming STEM into STEAM in the K-20 classroom (Maeda, 2013). Like STEM, STEAM education stresses making connections between disciplines that were previously perceived as disparate. This has been conceptualized in different ways, such as: focusing on the creative design process that is fundamental to engineering and art (Bequette & Bequette, 2012); emphasizing the role of creative and synthetic thinking to enhance student interest and learning in science and mathematics; and showing the value in exploring the science and mathematics that underpin different artistic techniques (Wynn & Harris, 2012). In this article, the authors describe how a collaboration between art education, engineering, and landscape architecture led them to conceptualize STEAM as a social practice that reflects concerns for community engagement and ecological sustainability.
ISSN:0004-3125
2325-5161
DOI:10.1080/00043125.2014.11519293