2023-2024 Cal Poly Humboldt Catalog 
    
    Nov 23, 2024  
2023-2024 Cal Poly Humboldt Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Art, Art Education Concentration, B.A.


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The art education program at Cal Poly Humboldt gives students the tools they need to help others create and appreciate art. Our art education curriculum provides the foundation to successfully teach art in grades K-12 and prepares students to enter California’s mandatory fifth-year, single-subject teaching credential program. The Department of Art offers an approved subject matter waiver program through the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing.

The art education curriculum is a combination of service learning experiences, studio art courses, and art history. The lower division core classes give students a working facility with a wide range of art media, styles, and equipment. This strong foundation is critical for effectively teaching a range of arts. Upper division courses provide students with the opportunity to concentrate in a particular studio area and master the pedagogical skills needed to develop art curricula that engage an increasingly diverse student body.

Art education students learn about the California Visual and Performing Arts Framework, as well as the California Content Standards, in order to help them develop strategies for teaching and lessons for instruction. We also have a service-learning component built into the art education classes. Students have the opportunity to develop curriculum and teach art at the Studio School for children and teens located on campus, as well as in local area schools. Art education students also help to prepare local high school students to serve as docents at local galleries and museums.

Students who enter our fifth-year credentialing program are immersed in education classes and have opportunities to teach with excellent master teachers in Humboldt County. Students must apply for this program and pass a competency assessment of subject matter during the spring semester of their senior year.

Please note: Degree requirements listed here do not include the professional education courses required for the credential. Students earning this degree may waive CSET assessments before entering the credential program. Before applying to the secondary education credential program, students must meet the prerequisite of 45-hours early field experience or enroll in SED 210 /SED 410 . Please notify your advisor at least two semesters prior to applying to the credential program, so that you can clarify state requirement for acceptance.  

Requirements for the Bachelor’s Degree


A bachelor’s degree requires a total of 120 units. Students must fulfill General Education & All-University Requirements , residency, unit, and GPA requirements as outlined in the Bachelor’s Degree Requirements . This major includes a Graduation Writing Assessment Requirement (GWAR) certified course.

Requirements for the Major (58 Units)


The Art major with a concentration in Art Education requires a total of 58 units, consisting of 31 units of core coursework and 27 units of concentration specific courses. Students must earn a minimum grade of C- in any major course for it to count toward the major.

Concentration: Lower Division (15 Units)


Core: Art History Elective (Complete one)


Students in the Art Education or Art Studio Concentrations may select any course from the following list. Students in the Art History and Museum Studies Concentration must take ART 305 to meet the major core requirements. (Students in this concentration will take additional lower and upper division art history courses to meet concentration specific requirements.)

Core: Art Studio Elective (Complete two)


Students in the Art Education and Art Studio Concentrations may select any two courses from the following list to meet the major core requirements. (Students in these concentrations will take additional lower and upper division art studio courses to meet concentration specific requirements.) Students in the Art History and Museum Studies Concentration must take ART 356 and ART 482.

Core: Capstone (3-4 Units)


Complete one course.

Program Learning Outcomes


Upon completion of this program, students will be able  to: 

  1. Examine the relationship and influence of the visual arts in a historical and cultural context.
  2. Recognize and evaluate critical and aesthetic issues within the history of art and contemporary studio practice.
  3. Apply aesthetic judgment, perceptual sensitivity, and critical thinking skills to arts related issues.
  4. Demonstrate mastery of specific technical, conceptual and/or critical abilities within each concentration area.
  5. Communicate effectively, in both written and oral formats, on research and creative issues.
  6. Present a portfolio that demonstrates perceptual acuity, conceptual understanding, and technical facility at a professional entry level in their chosen field. 
  7. Assess and address environmental and social justice context and develop responsive curriculum for equitable and sustainable arts education curriculum.

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