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The Article By Zoe Ingalls

Decent Essays

Have you ever wondered how to discipline your hand without slowing down your mind? In the article by Zoe Ingalls, Sue Ferguson Gussow demonstrates how to. It sounds simple; however, it takes much practice. It is true that disciplining the hand may help you. This has been proven in Ms. Gussow 's freehand drawing class.

From the Journal of higher education, many lessons can be learned. One lesson being, Ms. Gussow emphasizes the importance of analyzing, assessing and reconstructing. For example, Ms. Gussow has her students create a drawing of a pea pod from memory. When they finish she brings in a real pea pod, by then the students recognize missed details. The lesson is to realize the difference from memory to reality. The students then notice that all pea pods are unlike one another. By this example, it shows the importance of observing more of the world around them. This illustration is similar to the excerpt on writing drafts. When beginning an essay some people often research and have one topic in mind. As they continue writing, more thoughts accumulate. By then you are writing about something you did not imagine when you began. Despite the previous argument, there are many reasons to prove such discipline can help.

Continued on in the semester Ms. Gussow has her students do extended drawings. In these drawings, they center in on certain parts of the human body. By now, they have shortened their time on them. "This is the best way

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