The perennial bestseller―now in a new edition Authoritative and practical, this comprehensive guide offers everything a teacher needs to know for conducting an effective art instruction and appreciation program. The Third Edition of The Art Teacher's Survival Guide for Elementary and Middle Schools includes a complete update on public-relations guidelines, and reference material examples. The revised edition also features many new projects, an update on current projects and includes an explanation of the hot topic amongst art educators, Teaching Artistic Behavior (TAB/choice). Choice-based art education is reflected in the authors’ discussion of teaching in mixed-media, ceramics, photography, sculpture, and art history. This is an invaluable compendium for art educators and classroom teachers alike.
Appalachian Bible College has a publicly accessible master list of the textbooks that they use in all their classes. This is a super-awesome idea and I can't think why I haven't seen this at other uni... oh, wait, it's probably either banned by institutions to steer money to their bookstores, or they're just too unorganized to come up with the list.
Anyway, the "Art Teacher's Survival Guide" was on the book list for several courses in elementary art instruction, the subject for which I have the least possible qualifications.
Also, basing this purely on a sample metric involving "venality" and "organization", if you're looking for a bible college in the Appalachians, I'd go with them.
Originally, I borrowed the book from the library and liked it enough that I bought it off Amazon.
This is one that I will always be going back to for suggestions. As an artist who never specifically went to college for teaching, I do some children programs etc and this is extremely helpful for some ideas and insight to the different age groups I deal with. I wish it had more drawing suggestions, but it does try to give ideas for many of the mediums.