Arts essential for all
March
is Arts Education Month, so it is fitting to point out that when school budgets
get very tight, as they are in this current budget crisis, art and music education are among the early casualties.
In
a very sad way, it’s understandable. These are the days of No Child Left Behind
legislation, when every school and every classroom is rated according to how
students achieve on standardized tests. You can scan those tests till you grow
very weary and you will surely never see mention of a treble clef or a
two-point perspective drawing technique. When tests measure reading, math, and
social studies, that is what is taught and that is where resources must be
allocated.
What
is much more difficult to understand is a political
arena and a social context that makes that choice necessary in the first place.
It is short-sighted. The arts are not frills — they are essential elements of a
complete education, and often provide the very skills and motivation required
for school success.
The
arts represent a form of thinking that is both sensory and intellectual and is
based on human imagination and judgment. They are a form of expression and
communication that is essential to the human experience.
What’s
more, the arts provide unique ways of reaching students who may not access knowledge
as readily through language and mathematics alone.
The
research is unequivocal. In a comprehensive report, the Education Commission of
the States cited “a growing body of evidence that points to the importance of
arts education in improving student achievement, affirming positive
alternatives to troubled youth, and developing and building a workforce capable
of competing in an increasingly knowledge-based global economy.”
Among
the most critical findings was the fact that learning through the arts can
level the playing field for young people from disadvantaged backgrounds. In a
national sample of 25,000 students, those with high levels of art instruction
or experiences earned higher grades and scored better on standardized tests
than those with little or no involvement in the arts, regardless of
socioeconomic status.
Other
studies have shown that in terms of reading and language development, certain
forms of arts instruction enhance basic reading instruction aimed at helping
children “break the phonetic code” that unlocks written language by associating
letters, words, and phrases with sounds, sentences, and meanings. Also, in the
area of mathematics, certain music instruction develops spatial reasoning,
which is fundamental to understanding and using mathematical ideas and
concepts.
In
terms of fundamental thinking skills, art experiences strengthen problem
solving and creative thinking. Learning in the arts also nurtures motivation, and growth in self-confidence, self-control,
conflict resolution, collaboration, empathy, and social tolerance,
What’s
more, another researcher showed that an education rich in the arts and
humanities develops skills that are increasingly crucial to the productivity
and competitiveness of the nation’s workforce: the ability to think creatively,
communicate effectively and work collaboratively, and to deal with ambiguity
and complexity.
In
Santa Barbara County, thanks to the power of partnerships, we have managed to
keep the arts alive in our schools so far.
The
Children’s Creative Project, started by my office after Proposition 13, uses an
artist-in-residence approach and sends professionals in the visual and
performing arts to over 60 schools in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo
counties reaching over 30,000 students.
The
I Madonnari Italian street painting festival, which
has become a state and regional cultural event in its own right, is a primary
funding source. Grants from National Endowment for the Arts, California Arts
Council, district and PTA funding, illustrate what can be done in partnerships.
The
state-of-the-art Marjorie Luke Theatre at Santa Barbara Junior High School is
another excellent example of powerful partnerships, and the willingness of a
community to strongly support creative efforts to providing ongoing arts
experiences for our children. In the North County, the Orcutt
Union School District formed the “Orcutt Children’s
Art Foundation” and is maintaining support for art programs, once funded by
state grants, through the foundation. There are many other examples.
It
is also important to underscore the link between careers and the arts.
New
technologies for the arts, arts-related computer applications, and emerging
arts-related careers are especially vital in California. One study of the arts
found that spending on the nonprofit arts alone supports more than 115,000
full-time and part-time jobs in the state. In addition, entertainment products,
such as movies, television shows, video games, and music CDs, form one of the
country’s high-test export categories.
Many
young people find great joy in artistic expression. For some, it is an outlet
and a source of inspiration. It helps them keep connected to their teachers and
their schools.
The
benefits of arts education can translate into real advantages, including closing
the achievement gaps between groups of students, keeping young people in school
who otherwise might drop out, and preparing students for the demands of college
and an ever-changing workforce.
If
we had a magic pill that would do all that, we would be dispensing it widely.
Arts education is essential. On behalf of all the
children we represent and serve, we should support arts education with all our
efforts and resources. Otherwise we will
have drained from our schools the humanity, the creativity, the discipline, and
the joy that arts can provide to all our children.