With art programs facing budget cuts – or being totally cut – in school systems around the country, it becomes more important for school administrators, teachers and the community to understand the role the creative arts and art play in overall learning. That link will be explored thoroughly at the Art of Science Learning Conference at the California Institute of Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2), University of California San Diego, on June 14-15, 2011.
Part of a National Science Foundation-funded initiative exploring how the arts can strengthen science education and spark creativity in the 21st-Century American workforce, the conference brings together scientists, educators, teaching artists, business leaders and policymakers from across the country. The event will showcase arts-based educational methodologies that develop collaborative and critical thinkers for the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Math) workforce; share the latest neuroscientific and educational research on arts-based learning; and explore the connection between the arts, innovation and economic competitiveness.
Conference highlights will include keynotes by Qualcomm co-founder Harvey White and Larry Rosenstock, founding CEO of High Tech High, and remarks by Calit2 Founding Director Larry Smarr. Dr. Todd Siler will lead a Metaphorming Workshop where participants collaboratively model ideas using hands-on arts and science-based techniques. The Reuben H. Fleet Science Center will host a special Art of Science Learning event in Balboa Park, sponsored by Life Technologies.
Post-conference working groups will develop an online knowledge base for science educators, a research agenda for future quantitative impact studies, and a workforce development report with actionable policy recommendations.
The San Diego conference builds on Art of Science Learning conferences held earlier this year at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. and the Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago.
The conference is open to all and anyone can register at www.artofsciencelearning.org.
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