Academic Programs

Art Program

Visual Arts
 In Early Learning, children use a wide variety of materials and methods to produce artwork. The program emphasizes the planning, preparation and process needed for the completion of artwork. Each child gains self-esteem and is able to grow in his or her imagination in a relaxed atmosphere.
 
Children ages three to ten are exposed to and experience many different mediums. Lessons may include tempera painting, finger-paint, drawing, clay, sculpture, charcoal, printing, papier-mâché and water color. These children are introduced to and incorporate problem solving through two-and three-dimensional crafts and projects with the basic concepts of line, shape, texture, color, and space.
 
As students progress through Middle and Upper Learning, they are introduced to a wider variety of art experiences. Students gain a working vocabulary for the tools and processes used in art. Lessons often provide interdisciplinary connections to their social studies and language arts curriculum.
 
Music
 
The Orff method, also known as Orff-Schulwerk or Music for Children, is an approach to music education conceived by the German composer Carl Orff (1895-1982). It was developed in the 1920s and 1930s while Orff was music director of the Günther-Schule, a school of dance and music in Munich. The guiding principles were contained in his publication Orff-Schulwerk (Mainz 1930-5), to which revisions came later. Orff's approach, developed for children but latterly used also with adults, was based on his belief that the easiest method of teaching music is to draw out the student's inherent affinities for rhythm and melody and allow these to develop in natural ways, leading the child by his or her intuition from primitive to more sophisticated expression through stages parallel to western music's evolution. Orff accomplishes this by means of a carefully planned program, beginning with speech patterns, rhythmic movement, and two-note tunes, then moving logically into pentatonic melody. Adult pressure and mechanical drill are discouraged. Improvisation is encouraged. Major and minor melody are introduced as the final stage of the program. Orff designed a special group of instruments, including glockenspiels, xylophones, metallophones, drums, and other percussion instruments to fulfill the requirements of the Schulwerk courses.
 
Map  |  11499 131st Street North, Largo, Florida 33774  |  727-596-1902  |  Fax 727-596-5479