Since the time
when humans drew figures on the walls of the caves of Lascaux, the
arts have been our means of recording human experience and making
meaning in the world. They are a sign of a thoughtful, inventive, and
creative citizenry. As the global economy becomes faster and more
competitive, these qualities are increasingly important. As such, the
arts are an integral part of a complete, successful, and high-quality
education.
Study of the arts enhances young
people's intellectual, personal, and social development. The arts
provide a rich and engaging curriculum that develops students'
abilities to think, reason, and understand the world and its
cultures. A comprehensive arts education encompasses such areas as
the history of the arts, the honing of critical-analysis skills, the
re-creation of classic as well as contemporary works of art, and the
expression of students' ideas and feelings through the creation of
their own works. In other words, students should have opportunities
to respond, perform, and create in the arts.
Research has shown that those who
study the arts improve their achievement in other subjects, including
mathematics, reading, and writing. In math, for example, studies
point to a direct connection between music and spatial reasoning and
spatial temporal skills, which are important to understanding and
using mathematical concepts. For high school students, coursetaking
data collected by the College Board indicate that students of the
arts annually outperform their nonarts peers on the SAT. In 2004, for
example, students who studied music scored 40 points higher on the
math portion of the test than students reporting no arts coursework.
Similarly, students who studied acting and play production outscored
their nonarts peers on the verbal portion of the SAT by an average of
66 points.
The effect of arts study on
reading is similar. Because reading is the educational skill upon
which all others in our lives are based, the No Child Left Behind Act
focuses on literacy and sets the goal that all students read by the
3rd grade. We know from research that the arts can help achieve this
goal, and that certain forms of arts instruction enhance and
complement reading instruction. Studies have shown, for example, that
when creative dramatics are a component of reading with preschool-age
children, skills in comprehension and vocabulary increase.
The academic benefits of arts
education also go beyond math and reading. An analysis of U.S.
Department of Education data on 25,000 middle and high school
students found that students who were highly involved in the arts
performed better on a variety of academic measures than other
students. They earned better grades, did better on exams, performed
more community service, and watched fewer hours of television. And a
growing amount of evidence shows that the arts can be particularly
beneficial to students from economically disadvantaged backgrounds,
and can even keep some potential dropouts in school.
Most Americans recognize the
importance of this early engagement in the arts. A recent Harris Poll
found that 90 percent of respondents considered the arts vital to a
well-rounded education for all students. The same poll also revealed
that nine in 10 parents of school-age children oppose subjecting arts
programs to budget cutbacks.
To put it simply, we need to keep
the arts in education because they instill in students the habits of
mind that last a lifetime: critical analysis skills, the ability to
deal with ambiguity and to solve problems, perseverance and a drive
for excellence. Moreover, the creative skills children develop
through the arts carry them toward new ideas, new experiences, and
new challenges, not to mention personal satisfaction. This is the
intrinsic value of the arts, and it cannot be overestimated.
President Bush and both Democrats
and Republicans in Congress recognized that the arts have this
intrinsic value, are a necessary component of preparation for life in
our democracy, and have a positive impact on student achievement and
motivation. They understood that dance, drama, music, and the visual
arts provide important skills and are educationally powerful tools
for reaching all learners-that the arts can engage a child in ways
that defy imagination. That's why the arts are considered a core
academic subject under the No Child Left Behind law: They can and
should play a central role in fulfilling the law's goal of improved
student achievement, as well as similar goals of states, districts,
schools, and parents. And that's why the Department of Education
included the arts, in addition to math, science, and reading, in its
Research-to-Practice summit, a component of its Teacher-to-Teacher
Initiative, this past summer.
The state of the arts varies from
state to state and district to district, but we are beginning to see
recognition of their importance in education across the country.
Using the state of Arkansas as an example, we can see this in more
than a dozen school, community, and governmental efforts to bring the
arts to students.
o Every public school
elementary student in the state now receives instruction in music or
the visual arts.
o The Future Art and Music
Teachers pilot program gives 11th and 12th grade students in at least
six schools the opportunity to offer music and visual-arts
instruction to K-6 students.
o The Arkansas School for
Mathematics and Sciences has been expanded to include the arts,
making the state one of only a handful offering a year-round,
rigorous program for students gifted in the arts.
o The A+ Schools Program, begun in
North Carolina and operating in Arkansas and Oklahoma as well,
incorporates the arts into every subject in the curriculum of a
number of schools.
Other states are at work in this
area as well. In Arizona, state Superintendent Tom Horne's
"content-rich curriculum" initiative is investing $4 million in
comprehensive-school-reform funds under the No Child Left Behind Act
to support arts education improvement efforts at 43 schools
throughout the state. The initiative is based on the success of
Tucson's Opening Minds Through the Arts program, which received
federal support from the Department of Education's Arts in Education
Model Development and Dissemination program. Again this year, the
department's office of innovation and improvement will solicit
applications for both the models program and professional-development
projects for K-12 arts educators.
The Education Commission of the
States is undertaking a two-year focus on ensuring access to
high-quality arts education in our schools. The goal of the ECS
initiative-The Arts: A Lifetime of Learning-is to put the arts front
and center on the education agenda. Its work plan is centered on four
interrelated areas-awareness, research, tools, and state
leadership-that, together, form the word "arts" and provide a set of
objectives vital to increasing the arts' stature in education:
o Raise levels of
public awareness and deepen understanding among state policymakers
about the educational, social, and civic benefits of student
involvement in the arts.
o Call for and contribute to the
development of better state-level research and data on which to base
policy decisions.
o Equip state policymakers with
the tools to analyze and interpret state-level information related to
the status and condition of arts education and instruction in
schools.
o Support state leadership in
efforts to develop policies and practices designed to improve
educational outcomes for all students through school-based
integration of the arts.
As a nation, we must develop
children who are productive, happy, well-adjusted citizens, rather
than kids who can just pass a test and get through school. We must
ensure that our children can compete in the 21st-century economy by
preparing a workforce and a citizenry that can think creatively,
skillfully, and "outside the box." The arts are a vital part of doing
this-and of ensuring that every student can achieve his or her
potential and contribute fully to our society.
We know our nation is up to the
challenge, but we must mobilize, inform, educate, and inspire
education and policy leaders to recognize the vast potential returns
that can be realized by investing now in arts education. Because of
their primary responsibility in setting policy and in determining
funding levels for public education, these leaders play a critical
role in helping to make and keep the arts strong in schools.
By working together to bring the
arts to every child in America, not only will we change attitudes
about the curriculum, but we also will change the future of our
country.