Black Mountain College Case Study

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Black mountain college was an educational establishment that was founded in 1933 in Asheville, North Carolina, and was a school unlink any other college or university of its time. The curriculum for the college was primarily centered on the ethical development of its students, as well the belief that the study of the arts should be paramount to a liberal arts education. The school did not administer any grades, degrees, or have course requirements, and personal freedom and creative thinking was promoted as the school’s core values for its students. The school itself was experimental by nature in how it was operated and ran, and the philosophy of John Dewey’s principles of education is what played a key role in making the college so influential …show more content…

Black Mountain College was founded back in 1933 by John Andrew Rice, Theodore Dreier, and multiple other members of Rollins College. The founders sought to form a liberal arts college based on the social theorist John Dewey’s principles of progressive education; which believed that students learned better through personal experience rather than through delivered knowledge in a formal classroom setting. John Andrew Rice strove to ensure that he created an environment that placed an equal weight on academia, the arts, and manual labor shared by all who attended his establishment based on equal rights and a fair democracy. The intuition was run not by administrators, but by the campuses professors and students who formed a community that not only learned together but also worked and lived as one whole group for a common goal. There was no social class distinction between the faculty and student body. All members of the college community participated in its operations which included farm work, construction projects, and kitchen duty for the campus. Rice believed that his students would become “complete people” through this balanced curriculum of the arts, academics, and manual labor in the Black Mountain College …show more content…

During World War II, many refugee artists were attracted to Black Mountain College as a means of escape from the persecution of artists during Hitler’s rule in Europe. Some of the refugees found their way to Black Mountain College as either enrolling as students or applying as professors, and they were all attracted to Black Mountain College because of its reputation as an experimental artistic environment. With the closing of the Bauhaus school in Germany, Rice recruited Josef Albers as Black Mountain College’s first art teacher to form the arts curriculum for the college. Albers had fled with his wife away from the turmoil that had begun to overtake Germany during Hitler’s reign to come teach and seek retreat at Black Mountain College. Without knowing little to no English, Albers incorporated the Bauhaus’ interdisciplinary approach to the arts, combining fine and decorate arts with craft, architecture, theatre, and music for the department he

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