| Dance,
music, theatre, visual arts: The very important role of the arts
in education
Ask people who their favorite artists are —
those who create music, dance, drama, paintings and drawings —
and the answers will likely come from the roster of artistic
greats: Picasso, Georgia O’Keefe, Mikhail Barishnikov, Ella
Fitzgerald, Mozart. Yet is there a parent out there that hasn’t
proudly displayed colorful finger paintings or clapped with glee
over an impromptu performance of Swan Lake in the family living
room done by none other than their own brilliantly artistic kids?
Learning life skills through art
Despite the high status we often lend to famous
artists, creativity in the arts is something that everyone has the
potential to achieve. And lucky are the individuals whose budding
attempts at artistic expression are nurtured and allowed to grow
into strong creative thinking abilities that last a lifetime.
Recent research has added an exciting twist to
what we know about children’s brain development: though the
first four years have long been touted as the time for making
important brain connections, we now understand that this type of
development continues on through adolescence. For this reason, the
experiences and information children are exposed to, particularly
during the elementary years, need to be as stimulating and
meaningful as possible.
The arts are wonderful for providing such
stimulation. When children whisk a marker back and forth across a
big sheet of blank paper, push and pound a lump of clay or cut
with scissors, their brains are growing. Every time they move to a
rousing Sousa march, dance or act out a scene from a favorite book
with friends or listen to a favorite piece of music, their senses
send signals to the brain about how things work, how to work
together and what feels good.
Creative people invent, imagine, problem-solve and
communicate in unique ways. These are skills that help us make new
friends, learn about topics that interest us and become successful
adults.
The arts also nurture the types of skills needed
in today’s workforce. Virtually all businesses and professions,
from nursing and science to management and sales, require the
ability to "think outside of the box."
And it all begins in the early years. When
children share art supplies and dress-up clothes for pretend play,
design and paint a mural or play in a school band, they are
learning to work as part of a team toward a common goal.
What the arts look like during the
elementary years
Dance, music, theater and the visual arts all play
a very important part in the elementary classroom curriculum. Here
is a look at how the arts may be woven into your children’s
school day:
Kindergarten:
The focus of the arts curriculum in the early elementary years
is on enjoyment and self-expression. In the average kindergarten
classroom you are likely to find children singing, dancing or
playing rhythm instruments or listening to a variety of music.
Children use puppets, play dress up, put on plays and may watch
performances by other classes or professional artists. They have
lots of opportunity to experiment with art materials like paints,
crayons, pencils, markers and clay. Children will also be learning
the foundations of language and reading as they create poems,
songs, stories and plays that may be written down, collected into
classroom books or performed.
First and second grade:
During first and second grade, the arts continue to be used to
help children develop their self-confidence and strengthen
communication skills, as well as for pleasure. During these years,
children’s drawings and paintings will likely become more
detailed and colorful as they gain better control of art tools and
their hand-eye coordination improves.
As the curriculum becomes more formalized,
opportunities for artistic expression will be woven into units of
study, with children making up songs, creating colorful collages
or designing their own instruments. In-school performances and
field trips to museums, art exhibitions or musical and dance
performances will likely be built into the school year to provide
exposure to a variety of artists and performers.
Third through fifth grade:
In the upper elementary grades, the arts remain important for
strengthening children’s confidence and communication skills.
This is the time when choral singing and instruments are
traditionally introduced. At this point, the arts are fully
integrated into the curriculum. For example, children may read
biographies of musicians, dancers and painters as part of their
language arts work. They may compare traditional folk and
contemporary songs as part of their American history studies. Or
they may stage a play as a culmination of their elementary
experience.
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