Dear Colleagues,

Please see below for an announcement regarding a new peer reviewed
publication in the field.

My best, Michelle

Art History Teaching Resources (AHTR)
<http://arthistoryteachingresources.org/> is thrilled to release the
inaugural issue of *Art History Pedagogy and Practice (AHPP)*
<http://arthistorypp.org/>, the first academic journal dedicated to the
scholarship of teaching and learning in art history (SoTL-AH). The result
of a two year initiative, generously funded by the Samuel H. Kress
Foundation, *AHPP* responds to the need to support, collect, and
disseminate pedagogical research specific to the discipline. Published
biannually by AHTR in partnership with the Graduate Center for the City
University of New York and the CUNY Office of Library Services, *AHPP* is
available as an open access e-journal on Academic Works, CUNY’s Digital
Commons repository.

With its first issue, “What’s the problem with the introductory art history
survey?” *AHPP* seeks to advance a long-running conversation in art history
by exploring issues related to the introductory survey course. A robust
response to the initial call for papers revealed that discourse around this
topic has evolved in recent years to reflect current changes across the
educational landscape. Faculty today acknowledge a broader range of skills
and content to be foundational to art historical study and the significant
role of digital technology in instructional practice, but research is
necessary to examine the impact of new pedagogies when applied in the
classroom.

*The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Art History*

The scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) encourages scholars to
investigate their teaching practice with the same curiosity and
intellectual rigour used to approach key research questions in their
discipline. While SoTL research encompasses many interests, it generally
involves asking meaningful questions about student learning and how it can
be improved; conducting research into teaching and learning that is
systematic, analytical, evidence-based, and uses a variety of research
methods; and sharing the results of that inquiry to benefit colleagues and
contribute to a growing body of knowledge around teaching and learning.

As a peer-reviewed journal, *AHPP *developed as a natural outgrowth of the AHTR
Weekly <http://arthistoryteachingresources.org/journal/>, a lively and
wide-ranging blog series where diverse practitioners write about their
teaching ideas and experiences. Together, these forums offer a digital
model of publication where informal and formal SoTL exchange can complement
one another and foster public-facing discourse about education in the
humanities*. *The articles in first issue explore different models of
inquiry appropriate to SoTL in art history. They include case studies and
qualitative data in the form of student comments, personal reflections, and
observations in the classroom, and address quantifiable measurements around
learning outcomes, graded performance, and other methods used in education
and the learning sciences. Most importantly they ask questions that are
important to developing conceptual frameworks for pedagogical practice in
art history, and serve as a point of departure for future study in this
emerging area of the discipline.

*AHTR*

ArtHistoryTeachingResources.org
<http://arthistoryteachingresources.org/> (AHTR)
is a online platform that connects a diverse field of practitioners
teaching art history and visual culture. The site currently provides an
evolving repository of adaptable lesson plans; a weekly blog of shared
assignments, teaching ideas, and reflective essays; and biannual
publication of *Art History Pedagogy and Practice*
<http://arthistorypp.org/>. Founded on dual goals to raise the value of the
academic labor of teaching and to provide peer support across ranks of
tenured, tenure-track, and contingent instructors, AHTR began in 2011 as a
collaboration between Michelle Millar Fisher (CUNY, MOMA) and Karen Shelby
(Baruch College, CUNY), who created the arthistoryteachingresources.org website
with support from the New Media Lab at the CUNY Graduate Center. Since its
public launch in 2013, AHTR has grown an average of 120% each year and has
been viewed over 500,000 times by educators in K-12, post-secondary
institutions, and art museums, and academic support staff including
reference librarians and curriculum designers. AHTR’s administration
<http://arthistoryteachingresources.org/about/> has similarly expanded to a
leadership collective of art historians and an advisory network assembled
for expertise and leadership in art history, museum education, and digital
humanities.

AHTR believes that effective high-quality instruction is essential to the
future of art history. We are excited to contribute to this goal by
providing a platform for scholarly discourse and publication on teaching
and learning in art history, and look forward to the next issue of *AHPP*
<http://arthistoryteachingresources.org/e-journal/art-history-pedagogy-practice-cfp-issue-2-spring-2017/>
in
Spring 2017. We are grateful for the support, encouragement, and hard work
of so many people who have helped to realize this major initiative. In
addition to the authors and peer reviewers who contributed content to
*AHPP’s* inaugural issue, we wish to thank Jill Cirasella and Megan Wacha
at CUNY, Jillian Clark at bepress, Danielle Maestretti at Flexport, CHIPS,
Max Marmor, Lisa Schermerhorn, and Wyman Meers at the Kress Foundation,
*AHPP’s* Advisory Board
<http://arthistoryteachingresources.org/e-journal/ahpps-advisory-board-members/>,
and co-editors Renee McGarry and Virginia B. Spivey.


Michelle Millar Fisher
http://michellemillarfisher.com/

If you teach Art, Architecture, and/or Design History, take a look at
http://www.arthistoryteachingresources.org/. The related Kress
Foundation-funded and peer-reviewed journal, *Art History Pedagogy and
Practice* <http://arthistoryteachingresources.org/e-journal/>, is the first
of its kind devoted to the scholarship of teaching and learning in art
history.

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