Creative Arts Programs in Schools: Guest Post
Today, I am pleased to have as a guest blogger, Elaine Drennon Little, who is taking part in a Women on Writing (WOW) Blog Tour. Elaine is a writer and educator. She writes as passionately as she teaches. Her new book, A Southern Place, tells the story of a young woman and her search for connections and her fight for life.
Welcome, Elaine!
The
Arts Education Network has the following sentence at the top of their website: Learning and participation in music, dance,
theater, and the visual arts are vital to the development of our children and
our communities. This topic is paramount to me as an educator, but also as
a student of the arts.
I was
one of those nerdy kids who was always the last chosen for sports teams; I
often feigned illness on “field day.” However, my chorus classes were the one
place that I could truly feel like a rock star. My friends, mostly nerds like
me, were all blown away when at fifteen, I was asked to come “sit in” with a
band, a group of older “unbelievably cool” guys who could have sat beside me
for a year and never known my name. But they were musicians; they saw how the
teacher moved me from one section to another to help people learn their parts,
then switched me to accompanist when she need to conduct. By age sixteen I was
playing for money every weekend—my lone artistic outlet in my small high school
gave me my first chance to see what I could do and who I could be.
As a
teacher, I felt it was an honor and privilege to help guide and instruct young
people. Every year we’d hear war stories of how football, soccer,
track---whatever sport was in season—saved this kid or that one from the
streets and turned them into the great citizens of tomorrow. I’d grit my teeth
and bear it because I had to; it was the athletes that drew the crowds, made
the papers, gave our school bragging rights, but I knew the other stories. I
knew kids who got up every morning and got themselves to school when no coach
was filling their heads with dreams of glory days.
In
every school in the country, there are smart, talented kids who keep coming to
school only for that one hour of band, chorus, visual art, drama, musical
theatre—whatever creative outlet gives them a reason to live. In my little AA division (less than 1000
students) alone, every graduating class featured college-bound students in all
these areas, many with partial to full-ride scholarships. I retired from
teaching two years ago, but my Facebook page is highly active with former
students pursuing the arts in colleges, grad schools, indie bands, equity
theatre groups, and (prideful drumroll here) now working as teachers and mentors
of the arts for the coming generation.
Arts
in the schools is a project that never stops giving. Aside from my artsy,
tree-hugging rant, the research has been done and the results are conclusive.
Middle and high school students involved in the creative arts score higher on
academic tests; they are also less likely to have registered emotional
problems. Unlike many individual athletic endeavors, the arts provide creative
outlets that can be actively followed for a lifetime. Several years ago the Georgia
Institute of Technology, a world-class academic institution, became concerned
about the climbing suicide rate in their numbers of high-functioning scientific
scholars. One of the many actions that they hoped would combat this was to add
two a cappella choirs with a highly acclaimed director to their offerings.
Guess how many subsequent episodes have occurred among these brainiac
singers—that’s right—NONE! Brain research has shown that when a body is
actively engaged in difficult musical pursuit, blood pressure lowers and the
stress level is sufficiently lowered as well.
Both
visual and theatre arts are often a part of institutional treatment for severe
emotional disorders. I like to believe that, by making such offerings a part of
the school curriculum, we are helping to prevent disorders before they happen.
A child who finds his/her passion in a particular art form can use this as a
coping mechanism for anxiety and stress forever.
There
is, of course, another important plus to arts in the schools: Another Jackson
Pollack, Leonard Bernstein, or Chita Rivera may exist but never rise to
fruition if those talents are not cultivated. Bringing fine arts into the
public school system makes the fostering of artistry accessible to all, not just those in affluent
communities or able to afford private lessons. In the true spirit of the
American dream, the next “household name” artist should come from Anywhere,
USA. With fine arts in all schools,
this can really happen.
Today,
arts programs are most often the first to be terminated when budget issues
become outstanding. I’m starting to worry about those college arts majors I
mentioned earlier: Where will they go? What will they do? More importantly than
this, I worry about the generations of children, pushed to live for test scores
with no creative outlet to keep them centered and self-fulfilled.
The
often-heard adage “music has charms to calm the savage breast” is often
misquoted, using “beast” in place of “breast.” When thinking of the plight of
arts in the schools, I can see how such a mistake could have started. Music calms the soul and lowers the blood
pressure. Art forms in general give us all a creative outlet that calms and
nurtures us without drugs, psychoanalysis, or other expensive therapies. Arts in the schools are slowly being taken
away, leaving us with angry, anxious, unsettled students and teachers trying to
find their way in an unstable environment.
If we
don’t find a way to remedy this, soon,
we could be looking at a few beasts…
I know that educational funds are lacking in all areas, and it would take many
pages more to address these deficits and their possible solutions. However,
cutting arts funding hurts all and helps none. The arts reach out to all
students, across the board, awarding the opportunity for input (from all) to
the greater good (of all.)
“Just
do it,” advises Nike, but without funding, the “athletes” of the arts will not
be allowed to “do their thing” along with their classmates.
What
should these singers, dancers, actors, painters, dreamers-of-dreams “just do?”
About the Author:
Adopted at birth, Elaine lived her first
twenty years on her parents’ agricultural farm in rural southern Georgia.
She was a public school music teacher for twenty-seven years, and continued to
dabble with sideline interests in spite of her paid profession. Playing
in her first band at age fourteen, she seemed to almost always be involved in
at least one band or another. Elaine’s writing began in high school,
publishing in local newspapers, then educational journals, then later in online
fiction journals. In 2008 she enrolled in the MFA program at Spalding
University in Louisville, where upon graduation finished her second novel
manuscript. Recently retiring after eleven years as a high school chorus and
drama director, Elaine now lives in north Georgia with her husband, an
ever-growing library of used books, and many adopted animals.
Find out more about this author by visiting her
online:
Author blog: http://elainedrennonlittle.wordpress.com/
Author Facebook Page:
https://www.facebook.com/elaine.d.littleAuthor blog: http://elainedrennonlittle.wordpress.com/
A Southern Place is available as a print and e-book at Amazon.
Comments
Thank you for writing about this very important topic. I hope all my teacher/writer/artists friends share this blog post.
Together, we can make a difference!