New Hampshire Frameworks Correlations

Art Images for College Teaching
You will find hundred of images of art from ancient art and architecture to 20th century art at this site designed to enhance art history courses at the college level. You will also find correlations to the major undergraduate art history survey textbooks.
Intended Audience: Teachers Reading Level: N/A Teacher Section: No Searchable: No

The Arts: Visual Art

  Curriculum Standard 4
Students will analyze the visual arts in relation to history and culture.

Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade four students will be able to:

  • Know that the visual arts have both a history and a specific relationship to various cultures.
  • Identify specific works of art in particular cultures, times, and places.
  • Describe how history, culture, and visual arts influence each other.
  • Create a work of art that reflects an understanding of how history or culture can influence visual art.

Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade eight students will be able to:

  • Compare the characteristics of works of art representing various cultures, historical periods, and artists.
  • Describe and place a variety of art objects by style and artist, and by historical and cultural contexts.
  • Describe how a given work of art can be interpreted differently in various cultures and time.
  • Analyze, describe, and demonstrate how factors of time and place influence visual characteristics that give meaning and value to a work of art.

Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade twelve students will be able to:

  • Differentiate among a variety of historical and cultural contexts in terms of characteristics and purposes of works of art.
  • Analyze relationships among works of art in terms of history, aesthetics, and culture, using their observations to inform their own art making.
  • Understand various critical models of interpreting works from several historical periods and cultures.
  • Analyze common characteristics of visual arts evident across time and among cultural/ethnic groups to formulate analyses, evaluations, and interpretations of meaning.
  Curriculum Standard 5
Analyze, interpret and evaluate their own and others’ artwork.

Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade four students will be able to:
  • Identify various purposes for creating works of art.
  • Describe how people’s experiences influence the development of specific art works.
  • Understand that people may respond in different and equally valid ways to specific art works.
  • Describe their personal responses to specific works of art using visual art terminology.

Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade eight students will be able to:

  • Compare multiple purposes for creating works of art.
  • Analyze the meanings of contemporary and historic artworks.
  • Evaluate the quality and effectiveness of their own and others’ work by using specific criteria.
  • Compare a variety of individual responses to their own art works.
  • Describe their own responses to, and interpretation of, specific works of art.

Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade twelve students will be able to:

  • Research and analyze historic meaning and purpose in various works of art.
  • Defend personal interpretations to better understand specific works of art.
  • Reflect critically on various interpretations to better understand specific works of art.

Social Studies: History

  Curriculum Standard 16
Students will demonstrate the ability to employ historical analysis, interpretation, and comprehension to make reasoned judgments and to gain an understanding, perspective, and appreciation of history and its uses in contemporary situations.

Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade six students will be able to:

  • Demonstrate an understanding that people, artifacts, and documents represent links to the past and that they are sources of data from which historical accounts are constructed.
  • Display historical perspective by describing the past through the eyes and experiences of those who were there, as related through their memories, literature, diaries, letters, debates, arts, maps, and artifacts.
  Curriculum Standard 18
Students will demonstrate a knowledge of the chronology and significant developments of world history including the study of ancient, medieval, and modern Europe (Western civilization) with particular emphasis on those developments that have shaped the experience of the entire globe over the last 500 years and those ideas, institutions, and cultural legacies that have directly influenced American thought, culture, and politics.

Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade six students will be able to:

  • Demonstrate a basic understanding of the origin, development, and distinctive characteristics of major ancient, classical, and agrarian civilizations including the Mesopotamian, Ancient Hebrew, Egyptian, Nubian (Kush), Greek, Roman, Gupta Indian, Han Chinese, Islamic, Byzantine, Olmec, Mayan, Aztec, and Incan Civilizations.
  • Demonstrate a basic understanding of the distinctive characteristics of major contemporary societies and cultures of Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East.

Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade twelve students will be able to:

  • Compare the origin, central ideas, institutions, and worldwide influence of major religious and philosophical traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, Hinduism, Islam, and Judaism.