Anyway, I mention a few of the benefits of Pinterest along with Theresa McGee from The Teaching Palette in an article that we were interview for in Education World. I don't know if I agree that it is 'taking over education', but its a good article about the inclusion of the website in the art classroom.
One of the things that I've used Pinterest extensively for is putting together images that help describe Nick Rouke's synectic trigger mechanisms from Art Synectics. This has been in service of the Student Creative's Surrealistic Me project which is featured in this months digital edition of School Arts Magazine. You can download the article here, and once you are sufficiently enraptured with our nefarious plan for globalized art projects, register your class for the project here.
Now, just because I'm on the topic of articles about art education, and feel like indulging in a mini rant, here's an article from Edutopia that I have a few misgivings about. While I appreciate any effort to stress the importance of art education in the school curriculum, I can't help but become sad and frustrated when its explained in terms of its importance of bolstering other subjects. I've never heard the argument that students should take social studies because it bolsters the critical thinking skills necessary for art making, or math because it helps with compositional skills.
Paul Gaugin said that art was either plagiarism or revolution. Art class, to me, is where we teach students to reach for that transformational energy in their own lives.
If it also helps their math scores, great - but they have awesome math teachers who can do a much better job with that than I ever could. I didn't become an art teacher to help my students with their geometry homework.
