Politicians strike again! In their attempt to de-obesitize (oh yes, I know it's not a word... but it should be!) students in Georgia, the Senate has passed a Bill requiring a minimum of 150 minutes of physical education instruction for elementary children per week, and 225 minutes for middle school students. Now this is all fine and dandy until we consider from whence this time will be taken: such extracurricular activities as music, art, foreign language, and drama. While all areas, including health and fitness are important, let us consider the effect this will have on children in Georgia. I have many of my own arguments, but I think this article from USA Today will save me some typing:
WASHINGTON — Schoolchildren exposed to drama, music and dance may do a better job at mastering reading, writing and math than those who focus solely on academics, says a report by the Arts Education Partnership.
"Notions that the arts are frivolous add-ons to a serious curriculum couldn't be further from the truth," says James Catterall, education professor at the University of California-Los Angeles, who coordinated the research.
The report is based on an analysis of 62 studies of various categories of art — ranging from dance, drama, music and visual arts — by nearly 100 researchers. It's the first to combine all the arts and make comparisons with academic achievement, performance on standardized tests, improvements in social skills and student motivation.
Catterall says the studies suggest that arts education may be especially helpful to poor students and those in need of remedial instruction.
"While education in the arts is no magic bullet for what ails many schools, the arts warrant a place in the curriculum because of their intimate ties to most everything we want for our children and schools," Catterall says.
The report took two years to produce, with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts and the U.S. Department of Education.
Gerald Sroufe of the American Educational Research Association describes the report as "a benchmark" and "a starting place for future research in the arts because it represents a fairly comprehensive picture of what research-based knowledge exists." However, he says, the report is "necessarily a thin volume, including some rather thin studies."
Eileen Mason of the National Endowment for the Arts says that President Bush has requested $11 million to support arts education projects.
"We are eager for more research," Mason says. "We want to learn more about how we can best convey to our children the knowledge and skills required to create, perform and respond to the arts. At the same time, we need to know more about how the arts help to develop other capacities of our children, such as language, reading and spatial reasoning."
School officials often complain that arts programs tend to be the first cut in schools facing budget deficits.
G. Thomas Houlihan, executive director of the Council of Chief State School Officers, acknowledges that many school superintendents, principals and teachers are unaware of the value of arts education.
He says copies of the report will be distributed to school leaders throughout the nation.
Houlihan says he was impressed by the one study finding that "arts motivate and reach certain students."
The Arts Education Partnership is a coalition of more than 100 national education, arts, philanthropic and government organizations. CCSSO and the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies administer the partnership under a cooperative agreement with the Education Department and the National Endowment for the Arts.
I think there must be a better way. Perhaps they could start by removing the vending machines containing soda, candy, chips, and other snacks and maybe replacing them with bottled water and healthy snack foods. If they are so concerned about student obesity and the battle with heart disease and diabetes, then maybe their lunch and breakfast menus should be healthier with something like a salad bar instead of the choice to buy pizza delivered by Papa John's or fried chicken sandwhiches from Chik-fil-a.
Georgia is currently ranked number 40 as far as education is concerned. Take away the advantage that these certain programs give children, and we will watch that number drop.
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2 comments:
amen sista! You are 100% right!
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