Expanding the Canvas for Art Class
Expanding the Canvas for Art Class
As the director of education and research in learning for Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Arkansas, Anne Kraybill gets to appreciate seminal works of American art every day. She’s determined to make sure that more students around the country—regardless of location or economic status—have the same opportunity.
“Museums have usually been seen as a peripheral experience to traditional K–12 classrooms,” says Kraybill. “But with online learning, we have a big opportunity now to shape what courses there are, who is teaching them, and what materials students have access to. We have to step it up.”
Working with EDC’s EdTech Leaders Online (ETLO) team, Kraybill and Crystal Bridges have developed high-quality, immersive online courses to extend the museum’s resources to students across Arkansas and the rest of the country. The partnership is both improving arts education in the state and reshaping the traditional relationship between schools and art museums.
At the center of this collaboration are two for-credit online art courses that are currently delivered by Virtual Arkansas, the state’s virtual school, which reaches tens of thousands of students in close to 200 districts. The courses draw heavily on the Crystal Bridges collections to engage students in what it means to make, understand, and discuss works of art:
- In Art Appreciation and American Identity, students consider how the identity of the United States is represented in the art during different periods in history. As a final project, students curate a virtual exhibit using some of Crystal Bridges’ most famous pieces.
- In Art + Process: Creating a Body of Work, students meet contemporary artists and explore the importance of artistic process. They create their own works of art and share them using an online portfolio tool developed by EDC.
“They are making a difference for teachers who want to bring art into their classrooms,” says Kirsten Peterson, director of ETLO. “In the end, the best online learning still comes down to a teacher connecting with students around a piece of content.”