Raise your hand if you think you know why.
Yes, of course, the reason for the reduction in arts
education is that in many schools, and especially those with high concentrations
of low-income families, the money for arts has been diverted to the tested
subjects – Language Arts and Mathematics. Given very limited resources, schools
are abandoning the visual and performing arts for test prep. Why? For survival.
Under pressure to raise test scores, as if these scores were a true measure of
a school, schools have been given little choice. The corporate education reform
movement, of which former New York Mayor Bloomberg is a leading proponent,
looks to close “underperforming schools”, fire teachers and principals and turn
school children over to private sector run charter schools. With these high
stakes tests hanging over their heads, schools abandon the arts and in the
process abandon their children.
It should not need to be reiterated how important the arts
are to a child’s education. Wealthy parents seem to acknowledge this daily. I
can’t imagine a private school or a wealthy suburban public school without a
rich music, art, and theater program. I bet former Mayor Bloomberg would not
send his children to a school without a fine arts program. My own grandchildren
are currently enjoying opportunities to develop their talents as musicians,
actors and visual artists thanks in large measure to the excellent arts program
their public schools provide. I credit arts programs at the schools where I
taught with being the difference makers for many children who might not have
been as academically oriented as their peers. The arts also provide new and
different learning challenges for students who are doing very well in academic
subjects. Arts programs bring joy to school children. Joy is too often in short
supply in a today’s test oriented school.
Strong
arts programs improve student learning. Research indicates that arts
education is associated with higher student grades and higher college
enrollment. Music education has been
shown to correlate with higher student math scores. Arts programs in music,
dance and theater foster teamwork in every bit as strong a way as does
athletics. For those who take a utilitarian view of education, the arts may
seem like a frill, but to those of us who view schooling as a chance to
experience all the richness that a life well lived can offer, the arts are indispensable.
My education in the arts did not lead me to be an artist, but it did help me
become an active, engaged and supportive audience member for the arts. My arts
education has enriched my life immeasurably. I want that for all children.
The comptrollers report in New York is a hopeful sign that
the tide may be turning. It calls for supplying a full-time, certified art
teacher for every school. It calls for controlling “co-locations” of charters
so that arts programs do not suffer. It calls for financing of arts education on
a separate budget line and expanding partnerships between the city’s many arts
organizations and the public schools. The report has been enthusiastically
received by the new schools chancellor, Carmen Farina. Here is hoping that this
great center for the arts will once again turn its attention to the arts in
public schools. If the schools do not offer a rich arts curriculum, where will
the audiences for the great plays, great paintings and great symphonies yet to
be produced come from?
No comments:
Post a Comment