Task 4 School is an institution that wants to educate children and adults, succeed, and enrich them. However, at schools around the world, extracurricular activities such as art, ceramics, bands, choirs, orchestras, and dances and courses are disconnected, and students have the opportunity to succeed in their lives. People claim that they want their children to be comprehensive, confident and intelligent, but refuse to accept the courses necessary to establish any of these courses. Schools should not cut art classes because they may lead to social skill deterioration, difficulties in motor skills and spatial intelligence, and lack of creativity in later generations.
The first art school appeared in India in the 19th century. The example is Mumbai Art School (1857), a university now known as Sir JJ Art School, and Calcutta Art University (1884). These school courses include art academy as well as pottery, tile making, and metal crafts. In the late 1950s, graphic design (commercial / applied art) courses were introduced at these universities to respond to the media and the publishing industry. India's design education revolutionized and introduced the government institution "National Design Institute" in Ahmedabad. This is based on "India Design Report" by Charles and Ray Eames. NID initially provided a basic design course and immediately entered the industrial and product design curriculum. The Ministry of Technology established the Indian Crafts Research Institute in Jaipur with the support of NID and Ahmedab ad.
The first bio design course began this autumn at New York University, Rensselaer Polytechnic University, Pennsylvania University. Spring semester includes Faculty of Visual Arts, Chicago Art Museum, Fashion Engineering School, Southern California Architecture Institute, and Maryland Art University. Life is not like any other substance. Steel beams will never grow out of the lifetime matrix, then they will be divided and assembled into buildings. But this is what happens when cells form organisms. By exploring all the ways in which biology and design intersect, we hope to help develop a dialogue on how this blog shapes the future of our biotechnology.