Schrum, KellyYavelberg, Joshua Adam2017-01-292017-01-292016https://hdl.handle.net/1920/10568This dissertation utilized a Delphi methodology in discovery of the perceived outcomes and teaching strategies that are common for art history survey courses taught at higher education institutions throughout the United States. A group of art history faculty, chairs, and current researchers focused on studying teaching and learning within art history weighed in on their perspectives through three mixed method survey rounds, ranking the importance of various themes developed through the responses. The results discover that there is still a strong preference for a Socratic seminar teaching strategy, while the participants also highlighted other outcomes and strategies that are important areas for future research in the discipline.320 pagesenCopyright 2016 Joshua Adam YavelbergEducationArt educationArt history21st Century SkillsArt History SurveyDelphi MethodologyPedagogySoTLStudy of Teaching and LearningDiscovering the Pedagogical Paradigm Inherent in Art History Survey Courses: A Delphi StudyDissertation