For those
who work in the arts either as creators of an art or as teachers who
try to foster the benefits of art to those in schools, the trip has
always been uphill. The arts have suffered from a stereotype that
regards them as more ornamental than essential, more emotional than
reflective, closer to the rim of educational purposes than to its
core. Those concerned with the arts and who assign them an important
value in education are more often than not looking in from outside
the window.
It is true, of course, that
schools offer a modicum of arts activities to their students, but
this offering is seldom considered a central part of the school's
program. There are, sometimes, protestations from policymakers that
arts are at the core of education, but the reality is that they are
more often at the margin.
Just how does one make a case for
the arts in education? One might ask why one has to make a case for a
form of human practice that is as old as humans themselves.
Nevertheless, cases do need to be made and, even more, the politics
of curricular choice need to be addressed if the arts are to secure
more than eloquent testimony.
There are, I think, a myriad of
reasons why music of all the arts should have a central place in
school programs. I will, however, describe three reasons for music's
important role in education. The first of these pertains to what can
be regarded as its cognitive contributions, the second to what music
enables one to express or know, and the third pertains to the kind of
experience that music makes possible.
Distinctions such as the type I
have made are necessary to be able to speak about most anything. Yet,
in reality, to the extent to which we can know it, the distinctions
meld and fuse, they melt and blend into each other. I am painfully
aware of that. Nevertheless, for purposes of clarification, I return
to the distinctions between what is mental, or cognitive, what
resides in matters of meaning, and finally, in what is experiential.
Experience in music as a
performer, especially but not only, makes it possible for students to
have what might be called musical ideas. Musical ideas are notions
expressed in music and organized in ways that reflect the choices
that the maker selects. Thinking musically means thinking within the
constraints and affordances of patterned sound and, more recently, in
silences as well. The medium is auditory and the practices that give
it shape are cognitive. We learn to hear and to notice. We learn how
to organize sound so that what it expresses will not take the impress
of literal or even metaphorical description. In this process, we
learn to think. The thinking that we learn to do is thinking within
music. As I indicated, music in its perception and especially in its
creation, requires us to think musically about what we attend to.
Insofar as music makes such
demands on those who experience it, music is a vehicle for developing
the mind. But it is a way of developing the mind musically, not
necessarily generally. There may be transfer involved in some aspects
of musical thought but that is not the hook on which I would hang my
hat. Intelligence in music is expressed musically. Music education is
a way to foster such intelligence.
With respect to matters of
meaning, the role of music in enabling humans to express what cannot
be said is, and has been, exemplified throughout the ages. One has
only to think about the uses of music in the ceremonies that followed
9/11 to recognize that humans have a profoundly deep need to embrace
the arts, all of them, when they need to express what cannot be
articulated in language. Music is a way of sharing and indeed
experiencing the deepest aspects of our interior landscape. They give
us access to forms of life that express what has been compressed into
musical thought. Such thinking shapes feeling and gives feeling a
presence in the public world. If music did not achieve such an
outcome, I do not think its place in human history would have been so
enduring. The irony, of course, is that although music has been
essential in our most important moments - - when we bury and when we
marry - - in the context of schools, it is taken for granted, very
often as a kind of divertimento. It is much more than that.
The third function of music
pertains to the quality of life that music makes possible. Music, at
rock bottom, is a source of intrinsically valued experience. We go to
the concert hall to be moved, to be touched, to undergo forms of life
that have their own, non-instrumental rewards. A life without such
experience is one which is flat, dry as toast, emotionally drained.
Music, in short, is a way of reminding us what it is to be alive.
The contributions, therefore, of
music in the context of education is at once cognitive, meaningful,
and experiential. Music develops ways of thinking, it provides forms
of significance that will take no other form, and it yields forms of
experience that are, at their best, deeply treasured. I believe that
such contributions represent profoundly significant justifications
for the place of music in schools. Indeed, such justifications when
they are realized often pale what many other fields given more
attention, more time, and more significance have to offer. Perhaps
one day not only music but all of the arts will be recognized for
their potentially important contributions for helping our children
realize their humanity.