翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Smartfood
・ SmartForm
・ Smartfren
・ SmartFresh
・ SmartFrog
・ SmartFTP
・ SmartGate
・ SmartGeometry Group
・ Smartglasses
・ SmartGlobe
・ SmartGov
・ Smartgun
・ SmartGuy
・ Smarthavicharam
・ SmarThink
Smarthistory
・ Smartican
・ Smartie Mine
・ Smarties
・ Smarties (disambiguation)
・ Smarties (wafer candy)
・ Smarties Candy Company
・ Smartisan
・ Smartisan OS
・ Smartish Pace
・ SmartKey
・ Smartlabs
・ SmartLink
・ SmartLink (smart card)
・ SmartLink (television)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Smarthistory : ウィキペディア英語版
Smarthistory

Smarthistory (now part of the Khan Academy since October 2011〔(About Smarthistory )〕) is a free multimedia web-book for art history created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker which are also main editors. Started in 2005 as a blog of audio guides for use in the Metropolitan Museum of Art〔("Podcasts for the Metropolitan Museum of Art" )〕 and the Museum of Modern Art in New York City,〔("E-Learning: Smarthistory.org" )〕 Smarthistory has grown to include video, annotated slide shows, images, mobile apps, social media and written content created by the original creators as well as contributing art historians. Smarthistory is a not-for-profit corporation.〔(www.smarthistory.khanacademy.org ) About. Retrieved 2013-10-12.〕
According to the Smarthistory about page:
Smarthistory won a Webby Award for Education in 2009.〔("Webby Award Winners 2009" )〕 The Samuel H. Kress Foundation gave them a $25,000 grant for development in 2008 and a $38,000 partnership development grant with the Portland Art Museum in 2009.〔("About the partnership with Smarthistory" )〕
Smarthistory joined Khan Academy in October 2011. After the merge, Beth Harris and Steven Zucker have worked full-time for Smarthistory.
In an article in the Brooklyn ''New York Daily News'', staff writer Elizabeth Lazarowitz quotes Steven Zucker, "Art can be really intimidating for people", said Zucker. "If we can make art feel exciting and interesting and very much relevant to a historical moment...art can have real meaning." Unlike reading about art in a book, "the idea of the audio was to keep a student's eyes on the image", he explained. "It helped students to learn the material a lot better."〔("Brooklyn-based art historians launch website with videos of masterpieces" New York Daily News, 2/25/2011 )〕
In a collaborative article by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker, the founders explain the value of the resource for teachers, students, and informal learners: "Smarthistory is helping teachers who are not specialists in art history find strategies to make the subject accessible and meaningful to students who might otherwise not have cultural resources available to them. And for college students, the site is fast becoming an attractive alternative to the commercial textbook whose short life cycle and $100+ price tag has increasingly become a barrier."〔("Conversation is Key: A Short History of Smarthistory.org" )〕
In a ''Chronicle for Higher Education'' article, Beth Harris is quoted on the ambitions and goals of Smarthistory: "We really just wanted to re-embed the objects in our world", says Harris, who is the founder and executive editor of Smarthistory as well as the director of digital learning at a New York City museum. "We thought that that would make them more relevant and more engaging for students."〔("'Smarthistory' rethinks the art history textbook online" )〕
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Smarthistory」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.