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Understanding How the Arts Can Enhance Learning

Susan H. Magsamen

Corresponding Author

Brain Science Institute

Susan H. Magsamen, Director of Interdisciplinary Partnerships, Johns Hopkins Medicine Brain Science Institute, John G. Rangos Building, 855 North Wolfe Street, 2nd floor, Rm 271, Baltimore, MD 21205; e‐mail:

smagsam1@jhu.edu

.
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First published: 21 February 2011
Cited by: 1

Abstract

Understanding how the arts can enhance learning has long been discussed and debated among educators, students, parents, artists, art historians, and philosophers. Many anecdotal examples reference the value and benefits of the arts in a range of fields and learning domains. Emerging methodologies in the brain sciences have added new perspectives and research‐based approaches to better understand the role the arts might play in learning. Psychologists, cognitive scientists, and now neuroscientists are approaching this topic by exploring memory, sensory systems, and other biological measures. The interdisciplinary and potentially interdependence of these fields to work together to identify the neurological mechanisms involved in the arts may offer educators, parents, and child care providers with important information about how we learning takes place. By bringing together uncommon and divergent thinking from a wide range of disciplines, there is an opportunity to change the way we teach, parent, and serve children using the arts to help enhance learning. This issue of Mind, Brain, and Education celebrates the range of approaches that are emerging to shed light and insight in this field.

Number of times cited: 1

  • , Arts-related pedagogies in preschool education: An Asian perspective, Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 10.1016/j.ecresq.2017.12.005, 45, (277-288), (2018).