Leaders set priorities. With
multiple demands on limited school resources and
classroom time, an essential job of every school
leader is allocating resources to produce the
greatest student success. In some schools—often
those serving large proportions of poor and
minority students—the imperative to raise test
scores in literacy and math has led administrators
to sacrifice seemingly nonrelated subjects, such
as music and art.
The debate about this trade-off
is often contentious. Proponents view putting core
academics first as a matter of social justice: If
economically disadvantaged students lack essential
literacy and math skills, then no amount of music
or art will give them economic opportunity and
self-sufficiency. Proponents of the arts claim
with equal vigor that by exposing students in some
schools to a rich, varied curriculum and
consigning students in other schools to endless
reading and math drills, we are only exacerbating
opportunity gaps based on race and economics.
Both sides make a compelling
case. But the evidence suggests that the stark
choice between academics and the arts is a false
dichotomy. In fact, recent research suggests a
direct and systematic link between art experiences
and literacy skills. For example, Kennedy (2006)
described a study of a Guggenheim Museum art
project:
The museum dispatches artists
who spend one day a week at schools over a 10- or
20-week period helping students and teachers learn
about and make art. Groups of students are also
taken to the Guggenheim to see exhibitions. . . .
Students in the program performed better in six
categories of literacy and critical thinking
skills—including thorough description,
hypothesizing and reasoning—than did students who
were not in the program. (p. 1)
Literacy is essential, and
schools must provide interventions to enable
disadvantaged students to catch up with their more
advantaged peers. But the literature contains many
examples of schools serving substantial portions
of economically disadvantaged students and ethnic
minorities that have raised student achievement in
reading and math while delivering a well-rounded
curriculum that includes the arts (Petersen,
2007).
One of the most remarkable
examples of effective integration of the arts into
an academic curriculum comes from 24-year veteran
Maureen Copeland, who teaches Advanced Placement
European History at Fort Myers High School in Lee
County, Florida. Copeland's students are
ethnically and economically diverse and are
predominantly sophomores, rather than the seniors
who traditionally take AP classes. When students
enroll in the class, many of them need basic work
in reading, writing, document analysis, and
academic focus. Yet 80 percent of them routinely
pass the AP test, more than 30 percent with the
maximum score of 5. I asked Copeland about the
secret of her success. She explained,
Art is a hook. I'll use Goya
and David to show two perspectives on war, and
18th-century Dutch paintings that reflect the
relationship between colonialism and global trade.
The kids love it.
The AP European History
curriculum is notoriously dense and covers far
more than is reasonable for a single-period,
one-year class. How does Copeland find the time to
cover such an intense curriculum and also nurture
a love of art among her students? “If it's
important, you make the time,” she told me. Her
experience suggests that art is not an extra that
can be indulged in when time permits, but rather
an essential ingredient of superior academic
instruction.
In the current education
climate, standardized test scores in literacy and
math are important to both schools and individual
students. The challenge for school leaders is to
offer every student a rich experience with the
arts without sacrificing the academic
opportunities students need. Here are three
guidelines to consider.
First, call a truce.
Establish a norm that there is no such thing as a
“nonacademic” class in school and that every
subject, including the arts, is worthy of the
thought and discipline that we associate with
academic study. Just as we expect all teachers,
including those focused on the arts, to teach
honesty, self-discipline, and organization, we can
also reasonably expect all teachers to regard
literacy not as a diversion from their primary
subjects, but as a useful way of helping students
think about their subjects. We write in music and
art class because those subjects are worth writing
about.
Second, make it a two-way
street. Although it is increasingly common to
expect music and art teachers to integrate
literacy into their lessons, we also need to
encourage content-area teachers to integrate the
arts into their classes. Wise teachers of history,
English, science, and math know that music, art,
and dance can form powerful visual, auditory, and
kinesthetic associations that help students learn
essential content and concepts.
Third, refuse to settle for a
limited curriculum for any student. If you
were the headmaster of an elite private school and
some students were behind in reading and math,
parents would expect you to provide necessary
academic interventions and also deliver a rich and
engaging arts curriculum. Perhaps you would
provide extra literacy instruction for all
students, from those who are struggling to those
who are advanced. You certainly would ensure that
every student received opportunities to excel not
only academically, but also in the arts,
technology, and athletics. As you reflect on the
challenge of allocating limited resources and
time, ask yourself, Does any public school student
deserve less?
References
Kennedy, R. (2006, July 27).
The arts may aid literacy, study says. The New
York Times. p. E1.
Petersen, J. L. (2007,
Winter). Learning facts: The brave new world of
data-informed instruction. Education Next,
7(1), 36–42.
Copyright © 2007 by Association
for Supervision and Curriculum
Development