Education

Transformative Education Through the Arts

Published May 04, 2009 @ 08:14AM PT

Julie Owen is a public school parent in Jackson, MS and active with Ask for More Arts, a local school-community arts partnership advocating quality education for all children by integrating the arts into classroom teaching and learning.  Julie is also active in the Jackson chapter of Parents for Public Schools, which serves as the convening partner of Ask for More Arts.  Check out Julie's blog at Casey Arts.

From tiny white eggs found on the leaves of milkweed in a large pasture in Jackson, Mississippi, my family is rescuing and raising 6 monarch butterflies.  Now that some of the caterpillars are well on their eating and growing journey, it is our job to keep their containers clean, feed them from the stash of harvested milkweed leaves in our refrigerator, and release the butterflies into the world when they emerge from their chrysalises.  These caterpillars need our help because they are under threat from predatory insects such as fire ants.  Habitat loss is making the milkweed plant, the only plant that monarch caterpillars eat and on which they lay their eggs, harder to find.

Just as every monarch caterpillar needs milkweed to survive and transform into a monarch butterfly, all children in our nation need a quality education in order to become engaged, productive, creative, thoughtful, and innovative citizens in our communities. As parents and citizens, it is our duty to care for and nurture our nation’s children not only by providing for their basic needs but by supporting our teachers, public schools, policy makers, and governments in providing a quality education for all children regardless of economic status, race, or culture.  Our children and some of our nation’s public schools are under threat from inadequate funding and resources, dwindling or poor community support, and curriculums that do not meet the needs of children with diverse learning styles.

As a parent of children in public education and as an arts education advocate, I believe children in our nation’s public schools need curriculums rich in the arts to help them discover their unique gifts and open transformative possibilities.  Arts integrated learning works because children have unique ways in which they learn best and in which they may be challenged to grow.  A school that uses the arts to teach core academic subjects such as reading, writing, math, social studies, and science will reach more children to help them succeed because more styles of learning are nurtured and encouraged.

My daughter’s school has a bulletin board in the front entrance that explains to all visitors why it is an arts integration school.  Arts education makes learning fun and relevant to student’s lives.  Arts education contextualizes learning across disciplines.  Students who participate in the arts develop stronger interpersonal skills, encouraging empathy for others and increasing understanding of diversity.  The arts teach children that problems can have more than one solution and that questions can have more than one answer.  The arts provide new challenges for students considered already successful and help build confidence in children who struggle with core curriculum areas but may be very talented in an arts area.  The arts enable children to have experiences they can have from no other source.

As an involved parent, I have seen children experience all of the above positive aspects of arts integrated learning and teaching.  My daughter has used drama and pantomime to explore concepts of place and community in social studies and history.  She has painted and collaged to learn and reinforce multiplication and fractions.  She has read and written poetry to learn about science, and she has developed writing skills through photography.  Through arts integrated instruction, she is receiving the tools, strategies, and experiences she needs to flourish, dream, imagine, question, and succeed.

As a parent and citizen of this country, I want all children to have an education that challenges, nurtures, encourages, and transforms.  All children deserve the opportunity to discover their talents, turn their weaknesses into abilities, and build upon their strengths.  Through arts integrated education, our nation’s public schools can become the chrysalises that will transform lives and give children the wings necessary for learning, achievement, and flight.

Share this Post

Related Posts

Comments (4)

  1. Anne Foster

    Julie, thank you for sharing your passion for the arts in education and for your strong work in this arena. I hope that blog readers will get a better understanding of why we need to fund arts education for all children in our public schools. Your words reflect the benefits that the arts bring to the intellectual development of students in their acadmic journey.

    Posted by Anne Foster on 05/04/2009 @ 08:30AM PT

  2. Katharine Beals

    What about students who aren't into art, and prefer to learn math in a more abstract way?  I write about these "left-brain" kids on my blog, http://oilf.blogspot.com, and I'm concerned that too many of them are being frustrated by mandatory arts requirements that are integrated into more and more math and science assignments.

    Posted by Katharine Beals on 05/05/2009 @ 05:48PM PT

  3. Julie Owen

    Katharine, Thank you for your concerns and questions and for sharing your blog address.  As a parent, I want all children to be able to learn in whatever way is best for them.  If some students are left-brainers and need to learn in an abstract way, then I think they should be taught using their strengths.  Some arts education, however, can also require and develop abstract thinking skills. Every child learns differently.  In some parts of the country, arts education may be mandatory.  In other parts, children do not have the opportunities to explore how arts can enhance education. 

    Posted by Julie Owen on 05/09/2009 @ 03:36AM PT

  4. Charlie Newbold

    Katharine,

    I agree with your statement about catering for those children that aren't necessarily 'into' art based learning. However, I feel that it is a key part of a child's development to be exposed to all different forms of learning, including those styles that may be deemed a little bit more creative. It works both ways. To provide a rich and broad education for the children, they need to experience different styles of learning. The balance for this will be determined by the individual and their personal preferences and needs. Art education, I feel, is more of a downfall with regards to the teachers specifically. Many teachers will deliberately pay less focus on areas that they feel less confident in. Some, for example, struggle with MFL so this may not be incorporated as much as it would be with a fluent teacher. I think specific support should be provided in order to help teachers become more confident in both the logical and creative aspects of various teaching styles.

    Posted by Charlie Newbold on 10/23/2009 @ 05:21AM PT

  5. Reply to thread

Add a Comment

For your comment to be published, you will need to confirm your email address after submitting your comment.

If you already have an account, click here to log in.

Comments on Change.org are meant for further exploration and evaluation of the ideas covered in the posts. To that end, we welcome constructive comments. However, we reserve the right to delete comments that are offensive, abusive, or off-topic; that contain ad hominem attacks; or that are designed to subvert or hijack comment threads rather than contribute to them. Repeat offenders may be permanently removed from the site at our discretion.

Author
Anne Foster

Anne is the Executive Director of Parents for Public Schools, a national organization of community based chapters working with public school parents and other supporters to improve and strengthen local schools.

close

This user's Profile page is not public. They have restricted it to only their friends.

Already a Member?

Create an Account

You must create a Change.org account to complete this action.
If you already have an account click here.