DID YOU
KNOW?
Young people who participate in
the arts for at least three hours on three days each week through at
least one full year are:
- 4 times more likely to be
recognized for academic achievement
- 3 times more likely to be
elected to class office within their schools
- 4 times more likely to
participate in a math and science fair
- 3 times more likely to win an
award for school attendance
- 4 times more likely to win an
award for writing an essay or poem
Young artists, as compared with
their peers, are likely to:
- Attend music, art, and dance
classes nearly three times as frequently
- Participate in youth groups
nearly four times as frequently
- Read for pleasure nearly twice
as often
- Perform community service more
than four times as often
- (Living the Arts through
Language + Learning: A Report on Community-based Youth
Organizations, Shirley Brice Heath, Stanford University and
Carnegie Foundation For the Advancement of Teaching, Americans
for the Arts Monograph, November 1998)
The facts are that arts
education...
- makes a tremendous impact on
the developmental growth of every child and has proven to help
level the "learning field" across socio-economic boundaries.
- (Involvement in the Arts
and Success in Secondary School, James S. Catterall, The UCLA
Imagination Project, Graduate School of Education &
Information Studies, UCLA, Americans for the Arts Monograph,
January 1998)
- has a measurable impact on
youth at risk in deterring delinquent behavior and truancy
problems while also increasing overall academic performance among
those youth engaged in after school and summer arts programs
targeted toward delinquency prevention.
- (YouthARTS Development
Project, 1996, U.S. Department of Justice, National Endowment
for the Arts, and Americans for the Arts)
Businesses understand that arts
education...
- builds a school climate of
high expectation, discipline, and academic rigor that attracts
businesses relocating to your community.
- strengthens student
problem-solving and critical thinking skills, adding to overall
academic achievement and school success.
- helps students develop a sense
of craftsmanship, quality task performance, and
goal-setting-skills needed to succeed in the classroom and
beyond.
- can help troubled youth,
providing an alternative to destructive behavior and another way
for students to approach learning.
- provides another opportunity
for parental, community, and business involvement with schools,
including arts and humanities organizations.
- helps all students develop
more appreciation and understanding of the world around
them.
- helps students develop a
positive work ethic and pride in a job well done.
- (Business Circle for Arts
Education in Oklahoma, "Arts at the Core of Learning 1999
Initiative")