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The largest area of experimentation in arts education across the country these days is “arts integration.” Schools and school districts, arts organizations and individual artists, enthusiastic teachers and model schools—by the thousands—are exploring the benefits of bringing more arts experiences into classrooms in direct relation to other curricula. Music and math. Visual arts and social studies. Drama and language arts.
We human beings have a long history of proposing theories to unify disparate truths. This yearning to find a transcendent meaning for separate bodies of evidence may be one of our distinguishing traits.
The empathetic entry into the stories of others is an essential of health. That assertion may sound new age-y, but I believe it is a truth of spiritual health so real that it widely and inexorably manifests in physical health or travail.
We know a lot about the ways to spark, support and sustain the learning of students in our school residency programs. We eagerly apply all our understandings of pedagogical practices, and we carefully create a safe and stimulating learning atmosphere every time we work with students.
MusicianCorps Fellow Jeff Harms and two colleagues were singing and playing various instruments in their hour-long performance for twenty patients at a hospital’s Alzheimer's/dementia unit during the second week of the training. They played mostly old standards from the ’40s and ’50s.
Teaching artists are proudly passionate and eloquent about their work. But…are we good advocates for teaching artistry? The empirical evidence doesn’t suggest that we are. Teaching artistry remains under-funded and largely unrecognized even as it is heavily relied upon by large sectors of the arts and arts education. Of course, there are many hard realities that entrench the status of the field. However, as individuals and as a field, we haven’t succeeded in changing that standing.
COP26 has increased attention to the Code Red climate crisis. At least for the moment, and maybe long enough to create significant political movement.
On my first trip to observe El Sistema, I was dazzled by the sheer enormity, astonishing quality, vibrant joy and aliveness, and mind-boggling implications of this accomplishment in Venezuela.