|
Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student Academic and Social Development
Home | Read the Report
| Critical Links Tool kit | Press Information
Media Articles
Report Links Arts Instruction to Academic Achievement
Ellen R. Delisio, Education World
May 16, 2002
Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student Social and
Academic Development, a report released May 16, is a collection
of studies illustrating how skills learned through instruction
in the arts affect children's academic and personal development.
Included: Descriptions of ways arts enhance learning.
A report released May 16 by the Arts Education Partnership (AEP)
shows connections between instruction in the arts and greater
student achievement and social development. Economically disadvantaged
students, those needing remedial instruction, and young children
experience the most gains in learning from arts education, the
report suggests.
The AEP is a national coalition of more than 140 arts, education,
business, philanthropic, and government organizations that "demonstrates
and promotes the essential role of the arts in the learning and
development of every child." The report, Critical Links:
Learning in the Arts and Student Academic and Social Development,
is a compilation of 62 studies collected over three years by education
researchers James S. Catterall of the Imagination Group, University
of California at Los Angeles; Lois Hetland of Project Zero at
the Harvard Graduate School of Education; and Ellen Winner of
Project Zero and the department of psychology at Boston College.
In addition to selecting the studies on the connection between
the arts and learning, the three researchers also wrote summaries
of them; two additional researchers provided comments for each
study.
"It is clear in the Compendium (Critical Links) that there
are cognitive skills and motivational and communications skills
that are highly developed in arts learning -- skills that are
applicable in school settings," says Richard J. Deasy, director
of the AEP, who edited the compilation.
At the same time, according to Deasy, more research is needed
to determine what specifically about instruction in the arts improves
learning. "They [the essayists] agree that the Compendium
studies suggest that well-crafted arts experiences produce positive
academic and social effects, but they long for more research that
reveals the unique and precise aspects of the arts teaching and
learning that do so. Curriculum, instruction, and professional
development would benefit greatly from such clarification,"
he writes in the report's introduction.
A PROMISING BENCHMARK
Gerald Sroufe, director of government relations for the American
Educational Research Association (AERA), called the report "a
promising benchmark." AERA conducts educational research
with a focus on the quality of curriculum and its application
to real-world situations.
"[This report] represents the best of what's there, but
there is not much there," Sroufe tells Education World. "I
hope it stimulates Congress to think this is a very productive
area of educational research and study it more."
Critical Links includes studies on the effects of dance, drama,
and multi-arts, a combination of various types of arts, on student
learning.
Catterall, one of the researchers who collected the studies,
noted in remarks at a May 16 press conference in Washington, D.C.,
that when Critical Links differentiates among the groups of children
who benefit, it identifies no fewer than 84 distinguishable valid
effects of the arts.
Areas that instruction in the arts affects most are basic reading
skills, language development, and writing skills, according to
Catterall. Improvements in general academic skills also show up
and appear to reinforce those specific literacy-related developments,
he writes. Those general skills include focus and concentration,
expression, persistence, imagination, creativity, and "inclinations
to tackle problems with zeal."
In addition, a variety of social skills accompanies learning
in the arts and engagement in arts activities, adds Catterall,
including positive social behaviors, social compliance, the ability
to express emotions, courtesy, tolerance, conflict-resolution
skills, the ability to collaborate, and attention to moral development.
DRAMA TAKES CENTER STAGE
Most impressive to him, Deasy tells Education World, were the
19 studies involving the affect of drama on learning, as well
as several studies dealing with the relationship between music
and language development. Notes in the report indicate that more
research about the connection between dance and learning is needed.
"The drama studies should be particularly interesting to
elementary teachers," Deasy says. "They show that various
kinds of drama improve children's understanding, language skills,
comprehension, and ability to recognize words that they have not
read before."
Music teachers should find interesting the studies about using
music to develop language skills. "Music itself is kind of
a language," Deasy says. Studies also have shown that music
helps develop spatial reasoning, which is used in both music and
mathematics, he adds. Students with challenges to learning also
seem to gain a great deal from arts learning. "Those students
benefit in unique kinds of ways," Deasy notes. He thinks
that the role of arts instruction for economically disadvantaged
students, for example, also needs to be studied more extensively.
One unpublished study on the topic, "The Impact of Whirlwind's
Reading Comprehension through Drama Program on Fourth Grade Students'
Reading Skills and Standardized Test Scores," involved students
in Chicago. The study, in which students participated in a ten-week
drama program, found that those "low-income, urban students
of color exposed to drama showed impressive gains in grade-equivalent
terms of three months more than the control group."
"I think this [report] makes it a matter of equality that
all children have arts education," says Deasy. "Involvement
in quality arts learning is a key factor in helping kids."
WHAT'S NEXT?
As part of the follow-up process, the compilation's message needs
to be disseminated to politicians, educators, and parents, Deasy
says, and researchers need to "deepen their understanding
of learning in the arts," possibly through neurological studies.
More research on effective ways of teaching the arts, such as
acting, drawing, and music, also is important, Catterall says.
"How do children go from being scribblers to artists?"
he asks.
The findings of Critical Links are important at a time when some
people fear that standardized testing requirements will pressure
administrators to eliminate arts instruction in order to devote
more time to math and language arts skills. "This report
says that is counterproductive," Deasy says. "We hope
this [report will be] used to help improve instruction."
Article by Ellen R. Delisio Education World® Copyright ©
2002 Education World 5/16/2002
|