“…While analyses of teaching approaches have historically focused on behavioristic (Tyler, 1949;Taba, 1962;Hunter, 2004), or constructivist (Bruner, 1966(Bruner, , 1977Marzano, Pickering & Pollock, 2001;Wiggins & McTighe, 2005) frameworks, several studies have specifically explored aesthetically-oriented teaching practices. Uhrmacher, Conrad, and Moroye (2013) conceptually explore the perceptual mode through an analytic framework of intentions, process, product, and outcomes in their research study. They offer the perceptual mode, with its intrinsic emphasis on heightened sensorial aspects of teaching and learning, as either an enhancement to behavioristic or constructivist paradigms, or as an independent, stand-alone mode of lesson planning.…”