This document discusses the importance of arts education and outlines eight core principles for building a strong arts education program. The first principle discussed is creating enriched and affirming learning environments in the arts. It emphasizes establishing a safe space where students from all backgrounds feel a sense of community, respect, trust and that their identities are affirmed. The arts can be used to ensure marginalized students feel like valuable assets. It provides research supporting this principle and an example of a classroom applying this principle through assignments meant to foster community and connection among students.
The Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center (SKyPAC) provides arts education programs for over 30,000 students annually. It aims to expand these programs and attract more acclaimed performances through its "Engaging HeARTS. Enriching Lives." campaign. The $6 million campaign will fund expanding arts education, elevating performances, showcasing more visual art, and establishing an endowment to ensure long-term sustainability. Supporters hope the campaign will allow SKyPAC to continue enriching lives in the community through the transformative power of the arts.
This document outlines the curriculum and assessment policy for Technology in grades 7-9 in South Africa. It discusses the background and aims of Technology education, which is to develop technological literacy and skills like problem solving. The core content areas covered are structures, processing, mechanical systems, and electrical systems. A key aspect is the design process, which teaches skills like investigation, design, making, evaluation, and communication. Learners apply these skills to complete practical tasks using materials and tools safely. The methodology is structured around exposing learners to problems and having them develop solutions using the design process.
HSC Design and Technology. The design briefpezhappy99
A design brief is a written document provided to a designer that outlines the goals, objectives, and milestones of a design project. It ensures important design issues are considered before work begins. The brief specifies the design problem to be solved, explaining the project constraints and desired results to help the designer achieve an efficient finished design. Constraints can include timelines, budgets, technology limits, and social/ethical standards. Specifications give additional constraints like size, colors, materials, and costs that the design must meet. Sample briefs outline designing a hallway storage unit for families and a stationery organizer for students.
The packaging design brief is a valuable document that
provides an overview of the design request from the client
to its agency and should be used by companies of all sizes.
It is absolutely worth the time and effort to create this
document, as it allows for a truly collaborative process and
a smooth transition to the desired finished packaging
design.
The document provides details about establishing an Academic Education and Arts Academy (EAA) in Hayatabad, Peshawar. It outlines the business idea, target audience (children and young people up to age 25 in Peshawar), and how the EAA will work by coordinating programs and resources across organizations. The EAA aims to provide opportunities in performing arts, visual arts, and academic education for gifted and talented youth to collaborate with professionals. It will have minimal physical infrastructure and focus available resources on benefiting students. The EAA budget outlines expenses including rent, furniture, staff salaries, laboratory equipment, advertising, and monthly operating costs. The mission and vision statements describe preparing students to be successful through a diverse,
The DCPS Visual and Performing Arts Department developed a comprehensive 3-year plan to address gaps and leverage opportunities in arts education. The plan focuses on increasing access to arts programs through improved scheduling, developing an Arts Advisory Council, expanding the successful Live at the Met program, holding the first All-County Arts Showcase, and fully implementing the Any Given Child initiative through community partnerships. The goal is to provide high quality, equitable arts education that engages and develops students while changing perceptions of the value of arts learning.
This document summarizes the key findings from a study on advancing arts education through an expanded school day at five schools. It finds that the schools are able to provide robust arts programs while also improving academics due to their longer school days. The benefits of arts education discussed include developing skills like problem solving, communication, persistence and engagement. While research on direct impacts on test scores is limited, arts education may enhance competencies that support learning. Intrinsically, the arts allow for understanding and appreciation in unique ways. The expanded schedules of the profiled schools allow them to realize a well-rounded education with both strong academics and arts.
This document provides a model for including research-based visual and performing arts language in a school's Single Plan for Student Achievement (SPSA). It outlines five goals and strategies to implement for each goal to strengthen arts education. The goals are: 1) 100% Graduation through achievement of state standards and Common Core, 2) Proficiency for All through high-quality arts instruction, 3) 100% Attendance by engaging students through the arts, 4) Parent & Community Engagement through arts-focused events, and 5) Improving School Safety, Climate and Culture by utilizing the arts daily. For each goal, the document lists research, standards, and strategies showing how arts education supports the goal, such as increasing
The Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center (SKyPAC) provides arts education programs for over 30,000 students annually. It aims to expand these programs and attract more acclaimed performances through its "Engaging HeARTS. Enriching Lives." campaign. The $6 million campaign will fund expanding arts education, elevating performances, showcasing more visual art, and establishing an endowment to ensure long-term sustainability. Supporters hope the campaign will allow SKyPAC to continue enriching lives in the community through the transformative power of the arts.
This document outlines the curriculum and assessment policy for Technology in grades 7-9 in South Africa. It discusses the background and aims of Technology education, which is to develop technological literacy and skills like problem solving. The core content areas covered are structures, processing, mechanical systems, and electrical systems. A key aspect is the design process, which teaches skills like investigation, design, making, evaluation, and communication. Learners apply these skills to complete practical tasks using materials and tools safely. The methodology is structured around exposing learners to problems and having them develop solutions using the design process.
HSC Design and Technology. The design briefpezhappy99
A design brief is a written document provided to a designer that outlines the goals, objectives, and milestones of a design project. It ensures important design issues are considered before work begins. The brief specifies the design problem to be solved, explaining the project constraints and desired results to help the designer achieve an efficient finished design. Constraints can include timelines, budgets, technology limits, and social/ethical standards. Specifications give additional constraints like size, colors, materials, and costs that the design must meet. Sample briefs outline designing a hallway storage unit for families and a stationery organizer for students.
The packaging design brief is a valuable document that
provides an overview of the design request from the client
to its agency and should be used by companies of all sizes.
It is absolutely worth the time and effort to create this
document, as it allows for a truly collaborative process and
a smooth transition to the desired finished packaging
design.
The document provides details about establishing an Academic Education and Arts Academy (EAA) in Hayatabad, Peshawar. It outlines the business idea, target audience (children and young people up to age 25 in Peshawar), and how the EAA will work by coordinating programs and resources across organizations. The EAA aims to provide opportunities in performing arts, visual arts, and academic education for gifted and talented youth to collaborate with professionals. It will have minimal physical infrastructure and focus available resources on benefiting students. The EAA budget outlines expenses including rent, furniture, staff salaries, laboratory equipment, advertising, and monthly operating costs. The mission and vision statements describe preparing students to be successful through a diverse,
The DCPS Visual and Performing Arts Department developed a comprehensive 3-year plan to address gaps and leverage opportunities in arts education. The plan focuses on increasing access to arts programs through improved scheduling, developing an Arts Advisory Council, expanding the successful Live at the Met program, holding the first All-County Arts Showcase, and fully implementing the Any Given Child initiative through community partnerships. The goal is to provide high quality, equitable arts education that engages and develops students while changing perceptions of the value of arts learning.
This document summarizes the key findings from a study on advancing arts education through an expanded school day at five schools. It finds that the schools are able to provide robust arts programs while also improving academics due to their longer school days. The benefits of arts education discussed include developing skills like problem solving, communication, persistence and engagement. While research on direct impacts on test scores is limited, arts education may enhance competencies that support learning. Intrinsically, the arts allow for understanding and appreciation in unique ways. The expanded schedules of the profiled schools allow them to realize a well-rounded education with both strong academics and arts.
This document provides a model for including research-based visual and performing arts language in a school's Single Plan for Student Achievement (SPSA). It outlines five goals and strategies to implement for each goal to strengthen arts education. The goals are: 1) 100% Graduation through achievement of state standards and Common Core, 2) Proficiency for All through high-quality arts instruction, 3) 100% Attendance by engaging students through the arts, 4) Parent & Community Engagement through arts-focused events, and 5) Improving School Safety, Climate and Culture by utilizing the arts daily. For each goal, the document lists research, standards, and strategies showing how arts education supports the goal, such as increasing
The document introduces the National Visual Arts Standards published by the National Art Education Association (NAEA) in 1994. It provides background on the NAEA, which was founded in 1947 and includes art educators from the US and other countries. It describes the multi-year process of developing the standards through committees, reviews, and public feedback. The standards are intended to outline what students should know and be able to do in visual arts from kindergarten through 12th grade. They provide a foundation for art education but are not intended as a national curriculum. The goal is to ensure high-quality and meaningful art education for all students through implementation of the standards.
The document discusses a partnership between Arts Academy in the Woods (AAW) and Oakland University (OU) to benefit student learning through integrated arts and academic programming. It provides an overview of AAW's current student demographics, academic and arts programs. It outlines opportunities for the AAW-OU partnership, including teacher development, early college programs, and shared resources. It discusses AAW and OU's vision for the future, which includes authentic student learning through the arts, personalized learning, and continuous professional growth.
The early childhood degree program's conceptual framework is based on "Art as a Way of Learning" which views the arts as a symbol system for children to construct knowledge. The framework guides the program and is reflected in its mission and philosophy. While the framework remains grounded in the arts, it has evolved over time to better align with research and standards on diversity, equity and inclusion. The program aims to further strengthen faculty understanding of integrating the arts and issues of social justice through professional development. Plans include aligning the framework with new national standards and ensuring ongoing relevance through periodic reviews.
This document discusses Caldwell University's Campaign for Caldwell, which has a $15 million goal to be achieved within five to seven years. The priorities of the campaign are improving student experience by investing in art therapy, studio art, and graphic design programs and facilities, as well as increasing scholarships and annual funding. The document focuses on how supporting Caldwell's art programs can help students bring their skills and talents to benefit others through art therapy, studio art, and graphic design. Planned improvements to art therapy facilities through the campaign are described as a moral imperative to help vulnerable communities.
This document summarizes a fundraising proposal for Caldwell University's art therapy, studio art, and graphic design programs. It provides details on Caldwell's history and the goals of the Campaign for Caldwell, including raising $15 million over 5-7 years to support student experiences and scholarships. The proposal highlights how art therapy helps those struggling with mental health issues and the career opportunities for graduates. It requests donor support to upgrade facilities and ensure the programs' continued growth in helping communities through the power of art.
The document discusses strategies for improving school districts and ensuring success for all students. It emphasizes developing a compelling vision focused on high levels of learning for all students, ensuring data-driven and compliant actions are taken, and creating an aligned system through collaboration between the district and schools. The key is taking a whole child, whole community approach through partnerships that engage families and address students' basic needs in order to create a culture where all believe in students' potential for success.
Academic Plan Executive Summary 091709Jenny Darrow
Executive Summary - This academic plan outlines the multi-dimensional efforts of Keene State College and the Division of Academic Affairs to achieve academic excellence. It comes at a time in history when it will not be enough for educational institutions to be known for the physical attributes of their campus or community, or the measures of the many inputs that historically have equated with status in the educational pecking order. Our stakeholders—students, parent, community, system and legislators—are demanding evidence of real educational outcomes, which are captured best in one overarching College strategic goal—achieving academic excellence. The institutions that rise to this new challenge will succeed and prosper, while those that do not will languish. While the Division of Academic Affairs at Keene State College has primary responsibility for meeting this challenge, our success will depend on the creative energies and hard work of the entire College community.
The document outlines the mission, vision, values, and strategic objectives of NUS Scotland. The vision is for NUS Scotland to be a pioneering organization that fights barriers to education, empowers students to shape their learning experience and world, and supports democratic and well-resourced student associations. The core values are equality, democracy, and collectivism. The strategic objectives include securing fair funding for education, shaping the student learning experience, ensuring the health of student associations, promoting equality and diversity, and ensuring good governance and management of NUS Scotland.
The Creative Arts: A Process Approach for Teachers and Childrenmodolenex
This document provides a summary of the book "The Creative Arts: A Process Approach for Teachers and Children" by Linda Carol Edwards. The 366 page book published by Pearson is intended for courses in creative arts in early childhood education. It emphasizes using a process approach to help preservice teachers guide preschool and primary grade students in creative self-expression through visual arts, dance, drama, and music. Key changes in the fifth edition include new sections on extending creativity to families and addressing national standards, as well as more multicultural content.
Using curriculum mapping to assist at risk students finalMike Fisher
The document discusses using curriculum mapping to help "at-risk" students. It begins by laying the foundation, which involves inviting representatives from the school and collaborating social services to collect data on standards, assessments, and student records. This data is then used to research technology options like NovaNET for curriculum delivery and student management. The next steps are to collect and assess the data to create an ongoing action plan. Curriculum mapping provides an opportunity to differentiate instruction and build learning communities to meet students' specific needs through a connected, meaningful learning experience.
Case Study: Collective Action in Lansing, MichiganAmericans4Arts
The Lansing School District eliminated all elementary art and music teacher positions due to budget cuts. This prompted the Arts Council of Greater Lansing to lead a coalition of arts organizations to advocate for restoring arts education. Their efforts included crafting a message about the benefits of arts education, gaining media coverage, and working with the school district on small interim steps while pursuing longer term goals like a state arts education mandate. Progress includes community arts partnerships and incorporating arts into regular lessons for now.
The Arts Education curriculum in Saskatchewan aims to enable students to understand and value arts expressions throughout their lives. It has four main goals: to respect creativity, express oneself through non-verbal means, understand arts' contributions to societies, and gain an appreciation of arts. The curriculum covers dance, drama, music, and visual art, and encourages creative works, cultural/historical knowledge, and critical analysis. It seeks to develop students' senses, artistic skills and understanding, and knowledge of arts in cultures.
This document provides a literature review on arts-based teaching and learning. It finds that there are various models for implementing arts-based practices at the community, school, classroom, teacher, and student levels. These include programs run through community arts centers, whole-school arts curricula, classroom artist residencies, and comprehensive school reform initiatives. The literature also examines the cognitive, affective, and academic effects attributed to arts integration based on multiple studies, though notes research findings are sometimes inconclusive. Recommendations are provided for successful implementation as well as ongoing questions that remain.
This document outlines a program called "The Journey to the Emerald City" that will use dance and creative expression to teach 4th grade students at Kermit Roosevelt Booker Elementary School. Over three weeks, the students will replace their physical education class with dance instruction from the group Molodi Artists, learning styles inspired by "The Wiz". They will then perform with Molodi Artists at The Plaza and their own school. The program aims to build the students' self-esteem, appreciation for the arts, and education through creative expression. It incorporates elements of The Links, Inc.'s programming facets and has partnerships with organizations like The Smith Center, Let's Move, Nevada Arts Council, and Positively Arts Foundation.
Learn about Composers and Schools in Concert and How We Serve Composers and S...csicteam
Composers and Schools in Concert (CSIC) supports youth music education by connecting professional composers with high school music ensembles throughout the United States. CSIC provides high school students with an educational opportunity in the professional field of music composition through composer commissions, composer workshops and a contemporary score library for young performers.
The document discusses three model schools that represent culturally relevant practices and creativity in education. Hayward Unified School District in California serves a diverse population of over 20,000 students across 30 schools. Clark Magnet High School in Los Angeles focuses on leadership, culture, and connecting curriculum to real-world challenges. Toledo School for the Arts in Ohio integrates superior arts and college preparatory academics to prepare lifelong learners committed to diversity. All three schools promote teacher and student creativity through culturally relevant pedagogy and partnerships with the community.
In Their Own Words--Teachers Use of the Arts to Enhance Student Critical Thin...Mark Eutsler
The document summarizes a program called "Arts Indiana in the Classroom" that used the magazine Arts Indiana as a supplemental educational resource in Indiana classrooms. Teachers provided feedback that the program enhanced critical thinking skills and supported interdisciplinary learning. The program received endorsements from education leaders and helped deliver arts education across the state before going on hiatus due to lack of funding.
Speakers: Alice Young, Head of Arts Award Programme, Arts Award; Sara Candy, Executive Director, Opening Minds and Louise Thomas, Senior researcher, RSA - Discover how Arts Award can help support your younger audiences and enable
your organisation to develop links with schools, colleges, youth services and arts
organisations. Hear also about the RSA’s Opening Minds and Area Based Curriculum
work with museums, heritage sites and schools on curriculum co-design – making
the most of the environment beyond the classroom in collaborative and practical ways.
Alagangle is an open art space for anyone who loves to create and experience art which encourages, experiments, innovations, sharing, discussions and most importantly encourages all to ask questions.
Everyone here is encouraged to practice their own interest. Here no one teaches art but they are left free to experience and explore what art is…
We are three individual practicing artists (tanul, milli & lalit) with altogether different way of working but with similar vision came together to found Alagangle, a space to support artists, art lovers and to create the awareness of art in public
Alag Angle Art Studio - Let Your Imagination Fly........
'For one and all' - Alag Angle Studio, where Age, sex, profession is no bar. And the only passion is Art :The love for painting, photography, sculpting et al. Art is not methodical, it should be free flowing, since it holds different meaning for everyone. Use your own imagination for Everything. That's the only Rule we have at Alag Angle.'
The art form that influences and affects one or more of the senses, emotions and intellect is the outcome of different thinking and its successful expression.
The purer, clearer and more different you can think,
the more outstanding you can create.
Alag Angle is all about this.
It is more than just an art studio. It is an experience of the artistic journey where you enjoy
art as much as you express yourself. People of different ages finely blend in with the shades
of Alag Angle. Thoughts, emotions and feelings have the liberty to be expressed in various
forms of art. Each one has a unique and beautiful identity and virtue.
Because we believe in spreading the message of seeing differently and meaningfully!
The document introduces the National Visual Arts Standards published by the National Art Education Association (NAEA) in 1994. It provides background on the NAEA, which was founded in 1947 and includes art educators from the US and other countries. It describes the multi-year process of developing the standards through committees, reviews, and public feedback. The standards are intended to outline what students should know and be able to do in visual arts from kindergarten through 12th grade. They provide a foundation for art education but are not intended as a national curriculum. The goal is to ensure high-quality and meaningful art education for all students through implementation of the standards.
The document discusses a partnership between Arts Academy in the Woods (AAW) and Oakland University (OU) to benefit student learning through integrated arts and academic programming. It provides an overview of AAW's current student demographics, academic and arts programs. It outlines opportunities for the AAW-OU partnership, including teacher development, early college programs, and shared resources. It discusses AAW and OU's vision for the future, which includes authentic student learning through the arts, personalized learning, and continuous professional growth.
The early childhood degree program's conceptual framework is based on "Art as a Way of Learning" which views the arts as a symbol system for children to construct knowledge. The framework guides the program and is reflected in its mission and philosophy. While the framework remains grounded in the arts, it has evolved over time to better align with research and standards on diversity, equity and inclusion. The program aims to further strengthen faculty understanding of integrating the arts and issues of social justice through professional development. Plans include aligning the framework with new national standards and ensuring ongoing relevance through periodic reviews.
This document discusses Caldwell University's Campaign for Caldwell, which has a $15 million goal to be achieved within five to seven years. The priorities of the campaign are improving student experience by investing in art therapy, studio art, and graphic design programs and facilities, as well as increasing scholarships and annual funding. The document focuses on how supporting Caldwell's art programs can help students bring their skills and talents to benefit others through art therapy, studio art, and graphic design. Planned improvements to art therapy facilities through the campaign are described as a moral imperative to help vulnerable communities.
This document summarizes a fundraising proposal for Caldwell University's art therapy, studio art, and graphic design programs. It provides details on Caldwell's history and the goals of the Campaign for Caldwell, including raising $15 million over 5-7 years to support student experiences and scholarships. The proposal highlights how art therapy helps those struggling with mental health issues and the career opportunities for graduates. It requests donor support to upgrade facilities and ensure the programs' continued growth in helping communities through the power of art.
The document discusses strategies for improving school districts and ensuring success for all students. It emphasizes developing a compelling vision focused on high levels of learning for all students, ensuring data-driven and compliant actions are taken, and creating an aligned system through collaboration between the district and schools. The key is taking a whole child, whole community approach through partnerships that engage families and address students' basic needs in order to create a culture where all believe in students' potential for success.
Academic Plan Executive Summary 091709Jenny Darrow
Executive Summary - This academic plan outlines the multi-dimensional efforts of Keene State College and the Division of Academic Affairs to achieve academic excellence. It comes at a time in history when it will not be enough for educational institutions to be known for the physical attributes of their campus or community, or the measures of the many inputs that historically have equated with status in the educational pecking order. Our stakeholders—students, parent, community, system and legislators—are demanding evidence of real educational outcomes, which are captured best in one overarching College strategic goal—achieving academic excellence. The institutions that rise to this new challenge will succeed and prosper, while those that do not will languish. While the Division of Academic Affairs at Keene State College has primary responsibility for meeting this challenge, our success will depend on the creative energies and hard work of the entire College community.
The document outlines the mission, vision, values, and strategic objectives of NUS Scotland. The vision is for NUS Scotland to be a pioneering organization that fights barriers to education, empowers students to shape their learning experience and world, and supports democratic and well-resourced student associations. The core values are equality, democracy, and collectivism. The strategic objectives include securing fair funding for education, shaping the student learning experience, ensuring the health of student associations, promoting equality and diversity, and ensuring good governance and management of NUS Scotland.
The Creative Arts: A Process Approach for Teachers and Childrenmodolenex
This document provides a summary of the book "The Creative Arts: A Process Approach for Teachers and Children" by Linda Carol Edwards. The 366 page book published by Pearson is intended for courses in creative arts in early childhood education. It emphasizes using a process approach to help preservice teachers guide preschool and primary grade students in creative self-expression through visual arts, dance, drama, and music. Key changes in the fifth edition include new sections on extending creativity to families and addressing national standards, as well as more multicultural content.
Using curriculum mapping to assist at risk students finalMike Fisher
The document discusses using curriculum mapping to help "at-risk" students. It begins by laying the foundation, which involves inviting representatives from the school and collaborating social services to collect data on standards, assessments, and student records. This data is then used to research technology options like NovaNET for curriculum delivery and student management. The next steps are to collect and assess the data to create an ongoing action plan. Curriculum mapping provides an opportunity to differentiate instruction and build learning communities to meet students' specific needs through a connected, meaningful learning experience.
Case Study: Collective Action in Lansing, MichiganAmericans4Arts
The Lansing School District eliminated all elementary art and music teacher positions due to budget cuts. This prompted the Arts Council of Greater Lansing to lead a coalition of arts organizations to advocate for restoring arts education. Their efforts included crafting a message about the benefits of arts education, gaining media coverage, and working with the school district on small interim steps while pursuing longer term goals like a state arts education mandate. Progress includes community arts partnerships and incorporating arts into regular lessons for now.
The Arts Education curriculum in Saskatchewan aims to enable students to understand and value arts expressions throughout their lives. It has four main goals: to respect creativity, express oneself through non-verbal means, understand arts' contributions to societies, and gain an appreciation of arts. The curriculum covers dance, drama, music, and visual art, and encourages creative works, cultural/historical knowledge, and critical analysis. It seeks to develop students' senses, artistic skills and understanding, and knowledge of arts in cultures.
This document provides a literature review on arts-based teaching and learning. It finds that there are various models for implementing arts-based practices at the community, school, classroom, teacher, and student levels. These include programs run through community arts centers, whole-school arts curricula, classroom artist residencies, and comprehensive school reform initiatives. The literature also examines the cognitive, affective, and academic effects attributed to arts integration based on multiple studies, though notes research findings are sometimes inconclusive. Recommendations are provided for successful implementation as well as ongoing questions that remain.
This document outlines a program called "The Journey to the Emerald City" that will use dance and creative expression to teach 4th grade students at Kermit Roosevelt Booker Elementary School. Over three weeks, the students will replace their physical education class with dance instruction from the group Molodi Artists, learning styles inspired by "The Wiz". They will then perform with Molodi Artists at The Plaza and their own school. The program aims to build the students' self-esteem, appreciation for the arts, and education through creative expression. It incorporates elements of The Links, Inc.'s programming facets and has partnerships with organizations like The Smith Center, Let's Move, Nevada Arts Council, and Positively Arts Foundation.
Learn about Composers and Schools in Concert and How We Serve Composers and S...csicteam
Composers and Schools in Concert (CSIC) supports youth music education by connecting professional composers with high school music ensembles throughout the United States. CSIC provides high school students with an educational opportunity in the professional field of music composition through composer commissions, composer workshops and a contemporary score library for young performers.
The document discusses three model schools that represent culturally relevant practices and creativity in education. Hayward Unified School District in California serves a diverse population of over 20,000 students across 30 schools. Clark Magnet High School in Los Angeles focuses on leadership, culture, and connecting curriculum to real-world challenges. Toledo School for the Arts in Ohio integrates superior arts and college preparatory academics to prepare lifelong learners committed to diversity. All three schools promote teacher and student creativity through culturally relevant pedagogy and partnerships with the community.
In Their Own Words--Teachers Use of the Arts to Enhance Student Critical Thin...Mark Eutsler
The document summarizes a program called "Arts Indiana in the Classroom" that used the magazine Arts Indiana as a supplemental educational resource in Indiana classrooms. Teachers provided feedback that the program enhanced critical thinking skills and supported interdisciplinary learning. The program received endorsements from education leaders and helped deliver arts education across the state before going on hiatus due to lack of funding.
Speakers: Alice Young, Head of Arts Award Programme, Arts Award; Sara Candy, Executive Director, Opening Minds and Louise Thomas, Senior researcher, RSA - Discover how Arts Award can help support your younger audiences and enable
your organisation to develop links with schools, colleges, youth services and arts
organisations. Hear also about the RSA’s Opening Minds and Area Based Curriculum
work with museums, heritage sites and schools on curriculum co-design – making
the most of the environment beyond the classroom in collaborative and practical ways.
Alagangle is an open art space for anyone who loves to create and experience art which encourages, experiments, innovations, sharing, discussions and most importantly encourages all to ask questions.
Everyone here is encouraged to practice their own interest. Here no one teaches art but they are left free to experience and explore what art is…
We are three individual practicing artists (tanul, milli & lalit) with altogether different way of working but with similar vision came together to found Alagangle, a space to support artists, art lovers and to create the awareness of art in public
Alag Angle Art Studio - Let Your Imagination Fly........
'For one and all' - Alag Angle Studio, where Age, sex, profession is no bar. And the only passion is Art :The love for painting, photography, sculpting et al. Art is not methodical, it should be free flowing, since it holds different meaning for everyone. Use your own imagination for Everything. That's the only Rule we have at Alag Angle.'
The art form that influences and affects one or more of the senses, emotions and intellect is the outcome of different thinking and its successful expression.
The purer, clearer and more different you can think,
the more outstanding you can create.
Alag Angle is all about this.
It is more than just an art studio. It is an experience of the artistic journey where you enjoy
art as much as you express yourself. People of different ages finely blend in with the shades
of Alag Angle. Thoughts, emotions and feelings have the liberty to be expressed in various
forms of art. Each one has a unique and beautiful identity and virtue.
Because we believe in spreading the message of seeing differently and meaningfully!
How Barcodes Can Be Leveraged Within Odoo 17Celine George
In this presentation, we will explore how barcodes can be leveraged within Odoo 17 to streamline our manufacturing processes. We will cover the configuration steps, how to utilize barcodes in different manufacturing scenarios, and the overall benefits of implementing this technology.
A Visual Guide to 1 Samuel | A Tale of Two HeartsSteve Thomason
These slides walk through the story of 1 Samuel. Samuel is the last judge of Israel. The people reject God and want a king. Saul is anointed as the first king, but he is not a good king. David, the shepherd boy is anointed and Saul is envious of him. David shows honor while Saul continues to self destruct.
Temple of Asclepius in Thrace. Excavation resultsKrassimira Luka
The temple and the sanctuary around were dedicated to Asklepios Zmidrenus. This name has been known since 1875 when an inscription dedicated to him was discovered in Rome. The inscription is dated in 227 AD and was left by soldiers originating from the city of Philippopolis (modern Plovdiv).
Andreas Schleicher presents PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Thinking - 18 Jun...EduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher, Director of Education and Skills at the OECD presents at the launch of PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Minds, Creative Schools on 18 June 2024.
Gender and Mental Health - Counselling and Family Therapy Applications and In...PsychoTech Services
A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
THE SACRIFICE HOW PRO-PALESTINE PROTESTS STUDENTS ARE SACRIFICING TO CHANGE T...indexPub
The recent surge in pro-Palestine student activism has prompted significant responses from universities, ranging from negotiations and divestment commitments to increased transparency about investments in companies supporting the war on Gaza. This activism has led to the cessation of student encampments but also highlighted the substantial sacrifices made by students, including academic disruptions and personal risks. The primary drivers of these protests are poor university administration, lack of transparency, and inadequate communication between officials and students. This study examines the profound emotional, psychological, and professional impacts on students engaged in pro-Palestine protests, focusing on Generation Z's (Gen-Z) activism dynamics. This paper explores the significant sacrifices made by these students and even the professors supporting the pro-Palestine movement, with a focus on recent global movements. Through an in-depth analysis of printed and electronic media, the study examines the impacts of these sacrifices on the academic and personal lives of those involved. The paper highlights examples from various universities, demonstrating student activism's long-term and short-term effects, including disciplinary actions, social backlash, and career implications. The researchers also explore the broader implications of student sacrifices. The findings reveal that these sacrifices are driven by a profound commitment to justice and human rights, and are influenced by the increasing availability of information, peer interactions, and personal convictions. The study also discusses the broader implications of this activism, comparing it to historical precedents and assessing its potential to influence policy and public opinion. The emotional and psychological toll on student activists is significant, but their sense of purpose and community support mitigates some of these challenges. However, the researchers call for acknowledging the broader Impact of these sacrifices on the future global movement of FreePalestine.
1. 1
The
Visual
and
Performing
Arts
CORE PRINCIPLES
A TRANSFORMATIVE APPROACH FOR BUILDING THE
FOUNDATION FOR Sustainable STUDENT SUCCESS IN THE ARTS
Reinvigorating Arts Education in California
An Initiative of the
California County Superintendents
Educational Services Association
2. At GE, we know that an education including the arts is vital.
Because students who appreciate the conceptual
as well as the analytical are the ones
who’ll create the innovations of tomorrow.
GE Advertisement, 1996
Students engaged in the arts continue to outperform their non-arts peers
on the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT), according to the College Entrance
Examination Board. For the past several years, students who study the
arts for four years or more score up to 59 points higher on the verbal and
44 points higher on the math portion of the test than students with no
coursework or experience in the arts.
The College Board, Profile of SAT and Achievement Test Takers
4. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles4
THE IMPORTANCE OF THE ARTS
Luis Valdez, the famous playwright, once said: “To
whom does the future belong? It belongs to those
who can imagine it.” There is no doubt that through
the visual and performing arts, our students can give
their imaginations life, and in doing this, they create
something that never was before. They are fully capable,
with our guidance and support, of designing a future
that is richer because of their contributions. That is one
of the reasons why, even in times of increased focus on
accountability and student achievement, we cannot, we
must not, leave the arts behind.
Rather, the arts can be a path to a new future that uses all
of the power of our imaginations. Someone once said
that if we can imagine it, we can build it. Imagination
is that powerful. And artists, many of whom live in the
bodies and minds of our own students, can unleash a
powerful imaginative and creative force that can show
us the way to a better world, and better lives for us in
that world.
Works of art, and those who create them, should be at
the center of our efforts to improve our schools and
our society. But the arts are not only about imagination.
They’re about the courage to create a world worth living
in . . . to create new worlds that can embrace all of who
we are and who we can be as human beings. After all, as
Vincent Van Gogh reminded us, what would life be like
if we had no courage to attempt anything?
As administrators, as teachers, as parents, as community
members, the responsibility rests with us to nurture the
creativity and imagination that lives in our children and
our youth. We can help them transform their imaginings
and their dreams into art works that all of us can treasure
and appreciate and use to enrich our own lives. By our
actions, we must say to them that we believe that dreams
have the power to move the heart, and when we can set
those dreams free, through the arts, we can change the
world for the better. When we implement and support
powerful and comprehensive arts education in our schools,
we will provide paths and bridges to new, more profound
understanding of the vital nature of arts education for
each and every one of us.
THE CCSESA ARTS INITIATIVE:
REINVIGORATING ARTS EDUCATION
IN CALIFORNIA
The California County Superintendents Educational
Services Association (CCSESA) supports the belief that
every student needs and deserves a high-quality education
in the arts, including the subject areas of dance, music,
theatre, and the visual arts. The arts are an integral
component of a comprehensive curriculum. The arts play
an essential role in the daily lives of California citizens and
influence expression, creativity, and imagination as they
relate to the human experience. An understanding and
appreciation of the arts, as well as the ability to participate
in the arts, are key attributes of an educated person. The
California County Superintendents Educational Services
Association believes the arts contribute to children’s
education and preparation for life in numerous ways.
“They are fully capable, with
our guidance and support, of
designing a future that is richer
because of their contributions.”
INTRODUCTION
5. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 5
The CCSESA Arts Initiative is working with county
offices and school districts across the state to
develop models for long-range planning, curriculum
development, professional development, data gathering,
policydevelopment,andadvocacy. CCSESAispleasedto
partner with the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
to develop a statewide infrastructure utilizing pilot
county offices to develop specific tools and protocols to
be disseminated widely.
CCSESA will launch a 20-year plan and a powerful
advocacy movement in order to strengthen and expand
K-12 arts education in California. By working on
both the state and local levels simultaneously, a strong
mechanism and movement can be built and sustained.
This effort is part of CCSESA’s mission to strengthen
the service and leadership capability of California’s 58
County Superintendents in support of students, schools,
districts, and communities.
VISUAL & PERFORMING ARTS CORE
PRINCIPLES
Principles-based school reform is different from
a school improvement process that is focused on
implementing a new program or instructional approach.
It does not prescribe a particular program or curriculum
or structure or form of decision-making. Instead,
principles-based reform engages school communities
in a creative process of developing deeper and deeper
understanding of how research applies to their particular
school and students, in reflecting on what they are doing
and the impacts on students, and it enables schools to
select or design the particular mix of approaches that will
be powerful for their own students and community.
At the heart of the CCSESA Arts Initiative is a vision of
student success in the arts and a set of eight principles
distilled from research on the needs of, and effective
approaches for, comprehensive arts instruction and
the research on school change. No single principle stands
alone. They are inter-related, and reaching high levels of
student success in the arts requires implementation of all
eight principles.
This booklet describes these eight principles, and for each
principle lists selected references from the research base
behind that principle, and provides a vignette illustrating
how one school or team went about programmatically
implementing and infusing the principle into the life of
the school. Following the descriptions of the principles
is a matrix and summaries of some of the programs
and approaches schools might utilize in making real the
emerging statewide vision of learning in the arts for every
student, every day, in every school.
This vision of comprehensive arts education is one that
should not solely be dreamed of and sought after, but
indeed, made reality for each student—ensuring a
lifelong experience of success and fulfillment.
INTRODUCTION
6. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles6
The visual and performing arts are an integral part of a comprehensive curriculum and are essential for learning
in the 21st century. All California students from every culture, geographic region, and socio-economic level deserve
quality arts learning in dance, music, theatre, and visual arts as part of the core curriculum. In support of this vision,
eight core principles have emerged from the research. The following pages provide in-depth descriptions, research, and
exemplars of each of these principles.
The research-based core principles to realize our powerful vision of arts education are:
ENRICHED & AFFIRMING LEARNING ENVIRONMENTSuu
EMPOWERING PEDAGOGYuu
CHALLENGING & RELEVANT CURRICULUMuu
HIGH QUALITY INSTRUCTIONAL RESOURCESuu
VALID & COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENTuu
HIGH QUALITY PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION & SUPPORTuu
POWERFUL FAMILY & COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENTuu
ADVOCACY-ORIENTED ADMINISTRATIVE & LEADERSHIP SYSTEMSuu
The California Visual and Performing Arts Framework and the State Board of Education-Adopted Visual and
Performing Arts Standards also provide additional guidance and direction related to the design, implementation, and
evaluation of powerful, comprehensive, and research-based arts education for students in grades K-12.
THE VISUAL & PERFORMING ARTS VISION & CORE PRINCIPLES
7. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 7
Create a safe, affirming, and enriched environment for
participatory and inclusive learning in and through the
visual and performing arts for every group of students.
DESCRIPTION
Visual and performing arts education provides all
students with opportunities to learn the language of the
arts, to grow artistically and cognitively, and to experience
accomplishment and self-confidence as divergent,
creative, and innovative learners and as solution seekers
and problem solvers. The arts, more than other content
areas, allow for a diversity of learning styles and abilities.
In the visual arts, students are encouraged to respond in
ways that are unique and personal. In the performing
arts, collaboration and group performances encourage
social attitudes and behaviors that are supportive and
inclusive. The arts create a safe, affirming, and enriched
environment with strategies for supporting students to
understand and respect differences and to give voice and
expression to their values and beliefs, actively imparting
the value of diversity. The performing arts tend to place
an emphasis on cooperative learning and instructional
strategies that have students working together with
peers and across ages and in activities that bring students
together.
The arts can be an effective tool to ensure that students
who are often marginalized in activities and on campus
are seen as assets because of their languages, cultures,
identities, and lived experiences. Arts educators need
to use inclusion strategies with English Learners,
students of color, special needs students, and other
traditionally under-represented students so that they
do not feel isolated because their linguistic or cultural
backgrounds are seen as barriers. Arts educators need to
assist newcomers in understanding the social norms and
culture of the school, and in so doing model a culture of
inclusion and welcoming acceptance. In turn, students
must feel that their teachers and peers respect their
unique gifts and that their classrooms and school are
places that recognize their artistic capacities and build
on these as the foundation for their success in school
and beyond.
Enriched and Affirming Learning Environments in the
arts promote:
COMMUNITY, so that students feel they belong and are
able to establish positive relationships with other students,
teachers, and other adults. In short, they feel connected to
the classroom and the school.
SELF-DETERMINATION,sothatstudents’identitiesare
affirmed, rather than eradicated; students are encouraged
to be self-aware, to reflect, to be responsive to those
around them, and to take responsibility for their own
learning, including speaking out when what is happening
in classrooms is not meeting their needs.
TRUST AND RESPECT, so that students can develop
empathy for others and a certain generosity of spirit where
every student can experience dignity, and where there is no
room for selfishness, humiliation, or mean-spiritedness.
DEMOCRACY, so that students can be involved in
decision-making and problem-solving both; where they
are intrinsically motivated and not dependent on external
punishments or rewards; where they see themselves and
are seen as competent and able to make change; where
their curiosities are taken seriously and so they learn to
take pleasure in learning and achieving; where they learn
to advocate on their own behalf and on behalf of others.
ENRICHED AND AFFIRMING LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS
PRINCIPLE 1: ENRICHED AND AFFIRMING LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS
8. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles8
ENRICHED AND AFFIRMING LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS
Selected Research Citations
Catterall, James S. (1999) “Chicago Arts Partnerships In Education Summary.” In E. Fiske (Ed.), Champions
of Change: The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington, DC: The Arts Education Partnership and the
President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
Evans, Richard (2002) Powerful Voices: Developing High-Impact Arts Programs for Teens. New York, NY: Emc.
Arts, A Report from the SURDNA Foundation, Inc.
Henze, R. (2001). Leading for Diversity: How School Leaders Can Improve Interethnic Relations. Santa Cruz, CA:
Center for Research on Education, Diversity & Excellence.
In this classroom at César Chávez Intermediate
School, the tables are covered with a variety of
papers, illustration board, and canvas boards.
An extensive range of media is available, and
students are skilled and knowledgeable in their
use. They have recently studied and discussed
Diego Rivera’s fresco, A Dream of a Sunday
Afternoon in Alameda Park. The task that has
been presented to them is to create their own
imaginary walk through a public place familiar
to them. In preparation for this assignment,
the students have sketched public places that
are familiar to them or their families. This has
provided them with the necessary background
imagery for this assignment. In this public place
they are to include people from their childhood
memories. They need to include people or things
that are powerful or significant in their lives
presently and include their own image, thereby
making a statement about the relationship they
have to the images in their work.
They are actively engaged in their personal
solution to the problem, and some students are
intensely discussing their work with others. Many
of thediscussionsgenerateconcernsthatstudents
Vignette
ENRICHED AND AFFIRMING LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS
have about their lives and about the feelings they
have regarding their community. Some students
are painting, some are using collage techniques,
and others are using charcoal and pastels. The
medium is theirs to choose, as long as the work is
at least 36” by 48”. When the individual projects
are finished, the work will be merged into a unified
single piece, and a concluding conversation
will ensue, challenging students to discuss their
concerns about their community and how they
see their place in society.
The teachers have created many of the
assignments in this school to intentionally and
explicitlychallengetheirstudentstoworktogether
and to create a sense of community by building
positive relationships through strengthening
their knowledge and skills in the arts. Teachers
begin by nurturing individual expression and
then challenging students to find ways to connect
to their own experiences and histories, to each
other, and together, to their school and home
communities. Teachers work hard to model for
students ways of finding the commonalities that
facilitate connectivity and hence community.
9. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 9
Kagan, S. (1997) Cooperative Learning. San Clemente, CA: Kagan Publishing.
Meltzer, J. and Hamann, E.T., (2004) “Focus on Motivation and Engagement for English Learners,” Providence,
RI: Education Alliance Northeast and Islands Regional Education Lab, Brown University.
Nieto, S. (1999) “Creating Learning Communities: Implications for Multicultural Education” in The Light in their
Eyes. New York, NY: Columbia University Teachers College Press.
Oreck, B. Baum, and S. McCartney, H. “Artistic Talent Development for Urban Youth: The Promise and the
Challenge.” In E. Fiske (Ed.), Champions of Change: The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington,
DC: The Arts Education Partnership and the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
ENRICHED AND AFFIRMING LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS
10. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles10
Use culturally and linguistically responsive pedagogy
that maximizes learning in and through the visual and
performing arts, actively accesses and develops student
voice, and provides opportunities for leadership for
every group of students.
DESCRIPTION
The essence of a quality arts program is that students
learn through making connections between what they
already know and the new experiences, perspectives,
and information they encounter. Making connections to
students’ lives is a major component of effective arts
instruction – since the arts require the expression of
the individual’s life experience in solving the range of
tasks presented. Pedagogy that encourages and supports
students to bring their experiences, culture, heritage, and
language into the classroom maximizes arts learning by
allowing students to build upon the full foundation of
their prior knowledge. Teaching the arts requires skills
for building upon the familiar, scaffolding the unfamiliar
through explicit activities, and eliciting and responding
to what students have to say. The arts can be extremely
valuable when students and teachers are not from the
same cultural background. The arts become a vehicle
for eliciting and listening to student and parent voice as
a source of information and a foundation for building
a relationship to literally give them a voice. The arts
provide the means for complex, hands-on learning
experiences in low threat/high challenge contexts, as
well as opportunities for active processing, deep creative
and critical thinking, and reflection.
EMPOWERING PEDAGOGY
PRINCIPLE 2: EMPOWERING PEDAGOGY
In particular, marginalized students benefit from arts
teaching that helps them link new knowledge with prior
knowledge and that provides them with opportunities
to bring their lives into the classroom and to examine
issues of social justice which have daily impact on their
families and communities.
The arts can be extremely valuable
when students and teachers are
not from the same cultural
background.
11. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 11
Selected Research Citations
Catterall, J. S., Chapleau, R., & Iwanaga, J. (1999). “Involvement in the Arts and Human Development: General
Involvement and Intensive Involvement In Music and Theater Arts.” In E. Fiske (Ed.), Champions of Change:
The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington, DC: The Arts Education Partnership and the President’s
Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
Cummins, J. (1996). Negotiating Identities: Education for Empowerment in a Diverse Society. Ontario, CA: California
Association for Bilingual Education.
Darling-Hammond, L., French, J. & García-López, S. (2002). Learning to Teach for Social Justice. New York, NY:
Teachers College Press.
Upriver in a small K-8 school in Northern
California, several local tribal storytellers are
speaking to the students. The students listen
to stories about the mountains, rivers, rocks,
and trees where they live and the people who
lived there and took care of all living things. As
they share these stories, the native storytellers
also explain the role of storytelling in the tribal
communities, as well as the place of stories in the
natural cycle of life. After listening to the stories,
the students find their own ways of retelling
these rich traditions, while respecting the native
cultural norms related to stories and storytelling.
Some of the students make drawings, others
sing, and some retell by creating performances
in small groups. It is evident that, as students
work in their chosen art discipline, they are
practicing arts skills that have been developed
by classroom instruction received earlier in the
school year. Samples of arts instruction and
procedures are evident on the classroom walls
and instructional models located at various
learning centers. Through this interactive,
collaborative process, each student finds his/her
own voice for learning in and through the arts.
The classroom teachers, in partnership with the
native storytellers, provide their students many
opportunities to develop skills for learning in the
arts, and now they are ready to expand this learning
in a meaningful project.
Over the next few weeks, additional support is
provided. Community members have provided the
school with many samples of their local resources
used such as willow, maidenhair fern, pine root,
and bear grass. Some tribal members have shared
their songs, and others have shared the meaning
of the patterns seen in their baskets and beading.
As they continue to work on their creations, the
students begin to refine their own methods of
storytelling as part of a cycle of learning and
building community. They are including their
artwork with scripts that other students in groups
are writing. Some of the students refine their songs
and are planning to record the songs as a part of the
overall presentation. Another group of students is
rehearsing the parts of the story that will be used
in the recording. The overall intention is for the
class to recreate these stories as a multimedia
online presentation and create an archive of this
rich oral tradition. The archive will be shared with
the native communities as a way of repaying their
contributions and teachings to the students.
Vignette
EMPOWERING PEDAGOGY
EMPOWERING PEDAGOGY
12. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles12
Evans, Richard (2002) Powerful Voices: Developing High-Impact Arts Programs for Teens. New York, NY: Emc.
Arts, A Report from the SURDNA Foundation, Inc.
Kennedy, John Roy (2002), “The Effects of Musical Performance, Rational Emotive Therapy and Vicarious Experience
on the Self Efficacy and Self Esteem of Juvenile Delinquents and Disadvantaged Children.” In R. Deasy
(Ed.), Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student Achievement and Social Development, Washington,
DC: AEP.
Peña, R. (1997). “Cultural Differences and the Construction of Meaning: Implications for the Leadership and
Organizational Context of Schools.” Education Policy Analysis Archives, 5(10). Tempe, AZ: Arizona State
University College of Education.
EMPOWERING PEDAGOGY
13. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 13
CHALLENGING AND RELEVANT CURRICULUM
Engage every group of students in comprehensive,
well-articulated and age-apppropriate visual and
performing arts curriculum that also purposefully
builds a full range of language, literacy, and other
content area skills, including whenever possible,
bilingualism, biliteracy, and multiculturalism. This
curriculum is cognitively complex, coherent, relevant,
and challenging.
DESCRIPTION
Too often the arts have been considered as
supplementary, enrichment, or elective curriculum.
Consequently, teaching in the arts is inconsistent,
episodic, fragmented, and superficial. Yet, for academic
success in the arts, students need a rigorous, sequential,
comprehensive, coherent, and well-articulated program
with consistency in approach across the school year
and from grade span to grade span. All students need
access to a visual and performing arts curriculum that
is challenging and high level, with the support needed
to master grade-level standards and beyond. They also
need to acquire the arts and aesthetic knowledge, skills,
and capacities to live in and take responsibility for
our complex 21st century global world that requires
high level communication, innovation, and creativity.
Moreover, bilingualism, cross-cultural competencies,
and knowledge about other cultures is now essential –
economically, politically, and socially – and these skills
contribute to development of the mental flexibility and
creativity that are hallmarks of powerful arts thinking
and learning. The need for discussion in the arts is a
rich and compelling aspect of the arts experience.
Special consideration is needed when there are multiple
languages in the classroom. Considering the diversity of
contemporary classrooms, opportunities for delivering
and assessing many kinds of learning in a non-verbal,
non-threatening fashion must be explored. Language
brings with it the characteristics of the group from which
it originates; arts educators need to be able to respond
to the speech and language that are representative of the
cultural backgrounds of their students.
Curriculum in the arts needs to include all five components:
artistic perception, creative expression, historical and
cultural context, aesthetic valuing, and connections,
relationships, and applications. Although each of the
arts is unique, these five dimensions or components are
common to the instruction of each discipline. Instruction
should be built upon a sequential progression through each
component spiraling into more complex levels of each of
the components. Curriculum in the arts benefit by all the
current research methodologies that have proven effective
for all academic courses of study, such as using Daggett’s
Rigor and Relevance Framework or Grant Wiggins and
Jay McTighe’s Understanding by Design principles, and
asking questions around essential understandings for
curriculum planning such as, “What is the larger universal
understanding that you want students to know about
this theme or topic?” “Does the idea have a lasting value
beyond the classroom?”
Into, Through, and Beyond is an organizational structure
that can also be helpful in planning Challenging and
Relevant Curriculum. It provides a framework for teachers
and students to begin an investigation or inquiry by
identifying and organizing students’ prior knowledge and
using that knowledge to connect students to the new topic,
to engage them in exploring and internalizing the new
content and language in meaningful and personal ways
and applying those new learnings in divergent contexts,
extending, evaluating, synthesizing, creating, and reflecting
on their new learning.
In the INTO phase, the focus is on identifying, organizing,
andusingwhatstudentsalreadyknowandhaveexperienced
to connect them to the new arts content, language, and
structures to be learned. In this phase, the teacher and
students design bridges that connect students to new arts
content, language, and structures.
PRINCIPLE 3: CHALLENGING AND RELEVANT CURRICULUM
14. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles14
In the THROUGH phase, the focus is on providing
access for students to key requisite arts content
through comprehensible messages, both input and
output. It is an opportunity to engage students in
meaningful communications as a result of personal
interactions with the new arts content and academic
language.
In the BEYOND phase, students are helped to extend
ideas presented in the arts lesson or inquiry through
even more divergent and creative explorations and
application of the arts concepts. Students engage
in higher order thinking activities that involve
synthesizing, evaluating, creating, and reflecting on
their new arts learning.
CHALLENGING AND RELEVANT CURRICULUM
PRINCIPLE 3: CHALLENGING AND RELEVANT CURRICULUM CONTINUED
15. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 15
Selected Research Citations
Catterall, J. S., Chapleau, R., & Iwanaga, J. (1999). “Involvement in the Arts and Human Development: General
Involvement and Intensive Involvement In Music and Theater Arts.” In E. Fiske (Ed.), Champions of Change:
The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington, DC: The Arts Education Partnership and the President’s
Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
Cole, R. W., (ed) (2001). Educating Everybody’s Children: Diverse Teaching Strategies for Diverse Learners. Alexandria,
VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Developement.
Darling-Hammond, L. (2001). The Right to Learn: A Blueprint for Creating Schools that Work. Indianapolis, IN:
Jossey-Bass Publishers.
Walking into the dance classroom, the students
at Rosa Parks Middle School are buzzing with
energy, warming up, sharing movement ideas,
and talking to the teacher. Students, who include
both young men and young women and who
represent the ethnic diversity of the school,
move through the space with confidence and
ease as they prepare for the day’s instruction.
One side of the classroom is mirrored from floor
to ceiling. Above the mirrors, a unit timeline
stretches, showing activities and expectations
from beginning to end of the unit. The other
walls hold the keys to dance learning and provide
glimpses into both the history of dance across the
world, and contemporary dancers representing
the cultures and genders of the students. Dance
vocabulary is posted throughout the room for
this unit, which is clearly aligned to the California
State Board of Education approved standards.
Terms such as choreographic process, dynamic
range, movement quality, rhythmic patterns, the
elements of dance (time, space, force/energy)
are found posted throughout the classroom
CHALLENGING AND RELEVANT CURRICULUM
Vignette
CHALLENGING AND RELEVANT CURRICULUM
with examples of each for students to consult.
The “Enduring Understanding” for this unit is in
large letters across the top above the teaching-wall:
“Dance Has Purpose!”
On a large poster at the front of the room are the
standards that the students are addressing in this unit
of study, along with the essential questions: Can you
create dance without intention or meaning? Can we
dance without culture? Does art influence society,
or does society influence art? Under each question,
students’ writing samples provide insight into the
students’ critical reflection of each. The “Lesson At
A Glance” is posted providing the expected learning
for today’s lesson. When the bell rings, class begins
and so do the daily warm- ups. Students go through
a series of stretching, isolation movements, all
moving as one, knowing exactly what is expected
from each of the warm-ups. A student comes in
after the bell, moves onto the dance floor and joins
the class without hesitation. The teacher is with the
students, side coaching when necessary in a gentle
voice without missing a beat.
16. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles16
Ed Trust. (2003). “A New Core Curriculum for All: Aiming High for Other People’s Children.” Thinking K-16.
(Winter 2003). Washington, D.C.: Ed Trust.
Evans, Richard (2002) Powerful Voices: Developing High-Impact Arts Programs for Teens. New York, NY:Emc.
Arts, A Report from the SURDNA Foundation, Inc.
Fielding, A., Schoenbach, R., & Jordan, M.(2003) Building Academic Literacy: Lessons from Reading Apprenticeship
Classrooms. San Francisco, CA: West Ed/Jossey-Bass Publishers.
Marzano, R. (2003). What Works in Schools: Translating Research into Action. Alexandria, VA: Association for
Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Meyer, S. & Wong, K. (1998). “Title I Schoolwide Programs: A Synthesis of Findings from Recent Evaluations.”
Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 20(2), 115-136. Washington, D.C.: American Educational Research
Association.
Newmann, F., Smith, B., Allensworth, E., & Bryk, A. (2001). “Instructional Program Coherence: What It Is and Why
It Should Guide School Improvement Policy.” Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 23(4), 297-321.
Washington, D.C.: American Educational Research Association.
CHALLENGING AND RELEVANT CURRICULUM
17. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 17
HIGH QUALITY INSTRUCTIONAL RESOURCES
Provide and utilize high quality standards-aligned
visual and performing arts instructional resources that
provide each group of students with equitable access to
core curriculum and academic language in the classroom,
school, and community.
DESCRIPTION
In partnership with a well-trained teacher, high
quality, standards-aligned, and grade/age appropriate
instructional resources are a key component for access
to a comprehensive standards-based arts curriculum.
Districts need to adopt long-range plans for providing
appropriate facilities, equipment, and resources.
Community and parent involvement is critical in
planning as these support systems may be able to assist
in providing or sharing resources that can enhance the
arts program. Quality instructional materials, equipment,
facilities, and storage are essential for implementing
all of the five components of the curriculum. Each
grade level, as well as each of the four arts disciplines,
requires appropriate resources for students to become
successful arts learners. Materials and resources for
accessing contemporary and historic work need to
be readily available either through print or electronic
media. Students need access to works of art, available
museum visits, attendance at performances, art galleries
and events. Access to the arts includes a diversity of
contact points such as webcasts, podcasts, cyberspace
and all the ever-expanding public forums created by new
technology.
Appropriate facilities, depending on the arts discipline
and grade level, could include studio space, rehearsal
rooms, performance spaces, theatrical lighting, stagecraft
areas, sound systems, costume and makeup space, and
set design and construction areas. The visual arts need
spacious areas large enough for the number of students
with appropriate work areas including large flat surfaces,
good lighting, storage space for materials and equipment,
storage for work in various stages, hot water, and deep
sinks. Safety issues must be foremost in all stages of
planning and implementation. This includes safe use of
PRINCIPLE 4: HIGH QUALITY INSTRUCTIONAL RESOURCES
equipment, quality facilities, and adequate ventilation. Care
should be taken to ensure that all safeguards in regard to
materials are observed.
All of the arts disciplines require the use of new media
and electronic technology, not only for the recording and
editing of student work and performances, but also as an
important art form in today’s high tech world. Students
need access to computer technology for accessing a wide
range of multi-media arts, as well as creating their own
multi-media artwork. Mastering technology as a tool for
learning, expression, innovation, and communication
has become a core competency for the 21st century for
all students. Generally, middle-income students and
native English speakers have access to a wider range
of technology and print resources outside of school.
English Learners, poor students, students of color, and
special needs students often depend upon the school as
the primary source of access to both technology and the
arts. The quality and scope of available materials in both
English and the students’ primary languages, and reflective
of all students’ culture and experiences is critical.
Quality instructional materials,
equipment, facilities, and storage
are essential for implementing
all of the five components of the
curriculum.
18. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles18
HIGH QUALITY INSTRUCTIONAL RESOURCES
Selected Research Citations
Burton, J., Horowitz, R., & Abeles, H. (1999) “Learning In and Through the Arts: Curriculum Implications.” In
E. Fiske (Ed.), Champions of Change: The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington, DC: The Arts
Education Partnership and the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
Christensen, L. (2000). Reading, Writing and Rising Up: Teaching About Social Justice and the Power of the Written
Word. Milwaukee, WI: Rethinking Schools Ltd.
Cummins, J. and Sayers, D. (1995) Brave New Schools: Challenging Cultural Illiteracy through Global Learning
Networks. New York: Palgrave MacMillan Publishers.
Glatthorn, Allan A. ( 2000). The Principal as Curriculum Leader. Shaping What is Taught. Thousand Oaks, CA:
Corwin Press.
Seidel, S. “Stand and Unfold Yourself: A Monograph on the Shakespeare & Company Research Study,” In E. Fiske
(Ed.), Champions of Change: The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington, DC: The Arts Education
Partnership and the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
MimosaElementarySchoolDistrictiswellknown
for its high quality performing arts programs,
especially since the district has worked hard with
the community to ensure that all students have
the appropriate facilities and materials to do high
quality, standards-based arts work. The district
has always had a music program, and over the
years the music teachers have made every effort
to acquire a full range of percussion instruments,
including glockenspiels and xylophones, so that
all students are able to learn to read and play
music. Since not all of the sites need to use the
equipment all of the time, enough instruments,
have been purchased so that each school in the
district has timely access to the instruments.
In addition, thereis adequatespacefor thestorage
of all the instruments and risers for students to
use for performances. The music program has
a wonderful reputation in the community, and
parents and community members are eager to
attend the students’ music festivals and events.
Recently, an indoor/outdoor performance area
was created for the elementary schools to use for
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HIGH QUALITY INSTRUCTIONAL RESOURCES
theatrical and dance performances. A portable
spring floor was purchased last year for the dance
performances. There is a backstage area for
students to change costumes and makeup, as well
as for storing some of the costumes, lighting and
sound equipment, and props. The local theatre
company provides additional storage, lighting
equipment, and set design areas when needed.
Each elementary school has a dedicated area for
dance, physical education, and theatre activities.
Where this area is also utilized as the multipurpose
room, every effort is made to ensure that it is
available when needed for arts purposes.
Recently, new technology has been acquired
that allows students to begin to create their own
musical pieces and record them with the use of
a computer and garage band software. With this
new addition, students are creating their own
podcasts and radio shows for the elementary
school community. Students are producing
original music and scripts with the assistance
of community volunteers, and teachers in their
newly created performing arts technology center.
This addition of technological resources rounds
out an already well-resourced music program.
19. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 19
VALID AND COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENT
Build and implement valid and comprehensive visual
and performing arts assessment systems designed to
promote reflective practice and data-driven planning in
order to improve academic, linguistic, and socio-cultural
outcomes for each specific group of students.
DESCRIPTION
The capacity of teachers, students, and parents to know
how students are progressing is core to good instruction
and assessment in the arts and is inherent to the artistic
process. It is essential that schools and districts have
assessments and assessment processes and protocols
that yield valid, reliable, and appropriate data to support
powerful arts teaching and learning. Such data are most
powerful when they are used on a regular basis to promote
reflection among teachers and students about arts practice,
to inform arts teaching and learning decision-making, and
to prompt dialogue about student arts work and academic
programs. This requires that administrators and arts
teachers use multimodal arts assessment measures and
understand how valid and reliable they are for the students
and the arts disciplines they are assessing.
In addition, arts educators need timely access to clean,
disaggregateddata,andsupportwithtrainingandbackupto
analyze and make sense of the data in ways that lead directly
to instructional decision-making that directly improves
student arts learning. The most effective arts programs
make data-based inquiry a regular part of professional
development, professional dialogue, and planning – and
administrators commit the time and resources to make
that happen in the arts. What we measure drives what
we focus on in instruction. Schools that are committed
to high level competencies that go beyond basic mastery
in the arts need to find ways to measure not only student
skill development in the various arts disciplines, but also
the impact of arts learning, including expanded creativity,
innovation, and critical thinking/reasoning, across the
curriculum and in students’ intra- and inter-personal
development. They need to use multiple measures and
approaches, with a focus on analyses of actual student
work, processes, and performances. Collected data must
be triangulated so that judgments of student achievement
and progress in the arts are not dependent on any single
indicator.
PRINCIPLE 5: VALID AND COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENT
Valid and Comprehensive Assessment should be on-
going, formal and informal, dynamic and interactive,
designed to improve learning, multidimensional and
multiperspective, based on observation, performance,
and analysis, and designed to assess all five strands of
the visual and performing arts curriculum. California has
provided teachers, schools and communities with a clear
set of expectations as to what students should know and
be able to do in all four of the arts disciplines with key
standards at each grade level. Critical to the success of a
comprehensive arts program is regular on-going evaluation
of student progress towards grade-level standards.
Comprehensive assessment in the arts should include
works of art and performances, open-ended projects
or questions, research assignments, response items and
constructed responses, and a variety of portfolio types.
Some examples would include specified portfolios with
assessment tasks, best-work portfolios, and process
portfolios that include stages of the work’s process and
reflective writing. Student information systems should
allow teachers and administrators to recognize classroom,
school,anddistrictpatternsof artsachievementandshould
be sufficiently sophisticated to allow for disaggregation of
teacher and student data across a broad array of student,
teacher, and school demographic, background, and
programmatic variables. When districts and schools are
able to accurately and consistently assess the real arts data
picture, they are able to comprehensively determine the
needed changes in arts instructional programs.
20. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles20
VALID AND COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENT
The teachers at Cold Creek High School (CCHS)
have professional collaboration time one day
a week. On a biweekly basis, the visual and
performing arts teachers meet in arts discipline
groups and review student portfolios to examine
the quality of students’ work, students’ self-
assessmentsophistication,andtheirownpractice
that led to the students’ learning that resulted in
thespecificstudentwork.Theyalsorefertogroup
data available through the district’s student data
system to track aggregated and disaggregated
student progress in meeting the established arts
standards and benchmarks for their particular
arts disciplines. Through this collaborative and
reflective practice, they establish consistency
of assessment and evaluation practices and
refine the variety of assessment processes and
protocols used. Teachers then agree upon the
aspects of their practice that should be modified
to improve student learning and performance
in the various arts disciplines. They identify
patterns of student success, which they regularly
celebrate and communicate to students, other
teachers, and the community. They also identify
patterns of less than adequate progress and
seek short and long-term solutions that leverage
the expertise among their colleagues and that
provide opportunities for community artists
to contribute specific expertise aligned to the
standards and to students’ needs.
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VALID AND COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENT
The teachers believe that these sessions are
critical to their success as they establish the space
for collegial conversations about what students
should know and be able to do, how good is
good enough, and what teachers and students
must do when student learning and performance
is below par. The sessions also allow for more
productive conversations with parents, as well as
students. Students have a clear understanding of
the expectations for success in each of the arts
disciplines as successful portfolios from the year
prior are referenced by teachers and students
throughout the year.
A practice used by the visual and performing arts
teachers at CCHS is to introduce assignments to
students with the criteria for success generated
with students as a part of the learning process.
Students are able to understand what the
purpose of the assignment is and how they will
be evaluated. Students may have opportunities
to redo or improve work until it meets their
own standards, as well as the teacher’s standards.
Students at CCHS have a clear idea as to their
own progress and as to what it is they still need
to be able to do and know. All students feel that
they can be successful in the arts and enjoy arts
learning at CCHS.
Selected Research Citations
Aguirre-Muñoz, Z. & Baker, E. (1999). “Improving the Equity and Validity of Assessment-Based Information Systems.”
In M. Nettles (Ed.), Measuring Up: Challenges Minorities Face in Educational Assessment. Norwell, MA:
KLUWER Academic Publishing.
Evans, Richard (2002) Powerful Voices: Developing High-Impact Arts Programs for Teens. New York, NY:Emc.Arts, A
Report from the SURDNA Foundation, Inc.
21. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 21
Marzano, R. J., Pickering, D. , & McTighe, J. (1993). Assessing student outcomes: Performance Assessment Using the
Dimensions of Learning Model. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Olsen, L. and Jaramillo, A. (1999). “Opening Doors to Data and Inquiry” in Turning the Tides of Exclusion,
Oakland, CA: California Tomorrow.
Porter, A. (2000). “Doing High Stakes Testing Right.” School Administrator, 57(11), 28-31. Alexandria, VA: American
Association of School Administrators.
Porter, A. (2002). “Measuring the Content of Instruction: Uses in Research and Practice.” Educational Researcher,
31(7), 3-14. Washington, D.C.: American Educational Research Association.
Reeves, D. (2000). Accountability in Action: A Blueprint for Learning Organizations. Denver, CO: Center for
Performance Assessment.
Schmoker, M (1996). Results: The Key to Continuous School Improvement. Alexandria, VA: Association for School
Curriculum Development.
Wolf, D.P., & Pistone, N. (1991). Taking Full Measure: Rethinking Assessment Through the Arts. New York: College
Entrance Examination Board.
VALID AND COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENT
22. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles22
HIGH QUALITY PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION AND SUPPORT
Provide coherent, comprehensive, and ongoing
visual and performing arts professional preparation,
and support programs based on well-defined standards
of practice. These programs are designed to create
professional learning communities of administrators,
teachers, and other staff to implement a powerful vision
of excellent arts instruction for each group of students.
DESCRIPTION
National and state professional development standards
articulate the importance of high quality professional
learning as part of the daily work of educators and call
upon schools to provide the resources to improve and
increase teachers’ knowledge of academic subjects as
an integral part of broad school-wide and district-wide
educational improvement plans. School and district
leaders have the role of guiding continuous instructional
improvement through data-driven priority setting,
drawing upon research, and fostering learning and
change. High quality professional development needs
to be available for the arts specialist and the generalist,
as well as for teachers in other content areas who are
interested in the power of integrating the arts into their
curriculum.
High quality professional development should give
teachers and administrators the knowledge and skills to
providestudentswiththeopportunitytomeetchallenging
State academic content standards and student academic
achievementstandards.Itshouldfocusondevelopingthe
sequential nature of the standards in each of the four arts
and the comprehensive approach of including the five
strands and effective ways to teach them. Professional
development that most powerfully supports changes in
classroom practice includes workshops, readings, and
presentations to deepen arts knowledge and content, as
well as opportunities for application, classroom-based
coaching, ongoing participation in professional learning
communities and communities of practice, classroom
demonstrations by more expert colleagues, reflection
and self-assessment, and hands-on planning.
Professional development should also be concerned
with developing advocacy-oriented arts teachers and
other staff who are responsive to the linguistic, cultural,
and equity issues facing California’s diverse student
PRINCIPLE 6: HIGH QUALITY PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION AND SUPPORT
population. Such professional development supports arts
teachers and staff not only in reaching deep arts content
knowledge, but also in building a) powerful critical
pedagogy, technological fluency, solid language and
literacy development expertise, and strong foundations
in child/adolescent cognitive development, engagement,
and motivation; b) assessment expertise, including data
analysis and interpretation skills; c) competency in the
specific languages and cultures of their students; d) the
knowledge and skills to involve parents and create two-
way partnerships with families and other stakeholders
appropriately; and e) facilitation, negotiation, and
collaboration skills.
California has a unique system of subject matter projects.
The California Arts Project (TCAP), one of nine state
subject matter projects, is the state educational agency
supportingtheimprovementof teachingandlearninginthe
arts through standards-based professional development.
TCAP’s statewide network of university-based regional
professional development centers develops leadership and
provides technical assistance, arts education assessment,
and professional development services to teachers,
schools, and districts. TCAP programs include regional,
campus-based, and school- or district-based institutes,
series, customized programs, workshops, and seminars.
Other professional development offerings may include
courses at institutions of higher education or conferences
sponsored by professional arts organizations. Additionally,
teaching artists enhancing arts programs need high quality
professional development in the arts to understand
the focus of a standards-based arts curriculum for all
students. Often, arts councils provide such support to
artists wishing to work in collaboration with teachers and
students. Providers of arts professional development must
be able to demonstrate the effectiveness of their pedagogy
and content for the typically diverse California classroom.
23. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 23
Located in a large urban area, Santana
Unified School District engages in long-term
professional development to improve arts
education for all students. Efforts began with a
strong district commitment to implement a high
quality standards-based, culturally-responsive
arts program in all four arts disciplines for all
students, the majority of whom are African
American. This is an on-going commitment to
build the district’s arts education in partnership
with professional organizations and the
community.
During the first phase of the professional
development plan, single-subject arts teachers
attended institutes as part of an on-going
partnership with The California Arts Project.
Each year, two or three teachers attend institutes
that broaden and deepen their arts knowledge
and experience by actively engaging these
teachers in arts processes. They explore how
standards affect learning and creativity, and
they share their excellence in teaching practices
as they develop their leadership skills. They
also have opportunities to partner with local
African American artists from the community.
The benefits are multiple: students are able to
see people who look like them actively involved
in the arts; teachers develop their own cultural
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HIGH QUALITY PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION AND SUPPORT
competence and knowledge; and community
artists are able to share their experiences and
skills. The success of this triple partnership
is evident in the enthusiasm and notable
achievement of the students.
In addition, district-embedded professional
developmentisprovidedbythepartnershipalong
withservicesfromthecountyoffice,professional
arts organizations, and the local California
Arts Council. This has been especially helpful
for the elementary schools where high quality
professional development in Framework and
Standards are provided, as well as professional
development in all four arts disciplines. One
component of the site work has been the
formation of Action Research Groups. This has
encouraged teachers in this district to propose
and implement change, as well as improve their
practice and student performance.
As a result of the strong, professional and
community partnerships and teacher leadership,
the district continues to develop a plan for
improvement while observing and documenting
the effects of their current commitment to arts
learning for all students. At present the district is
still working on full implementation of all four
arts disciplines especially at the elementary level,
where dance and theatre arts are still not fully
implemented at all schools in the district.
Selected Research Citations
Adkins, A. McKinney, M. (2001) “Placing A+ in a National Context: A Comparison to Promissing Practices for
Comprehensive School Reform.” In R. Deasy (Ed.), Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student Achievement
and Social Development, Washington, DC: AEP.
HIGH QUALITY PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION AND SUPPORT
24. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles24
Burton, J., Horowitz, R., & Abeles, H. (1999) “Learning In and Through the Arts: Curriculum Implications.” In
E. Fiske (Ed.), Champions of Change: The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington, DC: The Arts
Education Partnership and the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
Evans, R. (2002) Powerful Voices: Developing High-Impact Arts Programs for Teens. New York, NY:Emc.Arts, A
Report from the SURDNA Foundation, Inc.
Guskey, T. (1986). “Staff Development and the Process of Teacher Change.” Educational Researcher, 15, 5-12.
Washington, D.C.: American Educational Research Association.
Lezotte, L. (1997). Learning for All. Okemos, MI: Effective Schools Products, LTD.
Seidel, S. “Stand and Unfold Yourself: A Monograph on the Shakespeare & Company Research Study,” In E. Fiske
(Ed.), Champions of Change: The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington, DC: The Arts Education
Partnership and the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
Smylie, M. (1988). “The Enhancement Function of Staff Development: Organization and Psychological Antecedents
to Individual Teacher Change.” American Educational Research Journal, 25(1), 1-30. Washington, D.C.:
American Educational Research Association.
Wink, J. & Wink, D. (2004). Teaching Passionately: What’s Love Got to Do with It? Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon.
Wong Fillmore, L. & Snow, C. (2000). What Teachers Need to Know about Language. ERIC Clearinghouse on
Languages and Linguistics Special Report. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Education, Office of
Educational Research and Improvement.
HIGH QUALITY PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION AND SUPPORT
25. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 25
POWERFUL FAMILY AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
Implement strong family and community engagement
programs that build leadership capacity and value and
draw upon community funds of knowledge to inform,
support, and enhance visual and performing arts
teaching and learning for each specific group of students.
DESCRIPTION
Active parent and community engagement is a hallmark
of schools in which students thrive. The collaborative
nature of the arts leads to strong partnerships between
schools, county offices of education, community arts
providers, artists, parents with arts expertise, and parent
volunteers. Vital community support and partnerships
for art programs in schools help students develop a
deeper understanding and appreciation of their local
communities. Furthermore, strong partnerships are made
to vital industries, businesses, and fields of work using new
technologies. These partnerships may become valuable
resources for grants, equipment, educational materials,
technological expertise, job shadowing, and guest speakers.
Positive and supportive relationships develop among
students, teachers, and the school community when they
are involved in creating performances or responding to
works of art. The arts change the school environment in
ways that build a sense of community within and around
the school. Participation in art activities helps students
develop deeper understanding and connections to cultures
and values different from their own. In these schools
parents have the information to support their children’s
arts learning at home, are active in the arts classrooms,
and help teachers bridge and connect to community
resources for arts-related learning. It is important that
parents monitor their children’s arts learning and have
the skills and knowledge to advocate effectively to create
the conditions students need to learn and master the arts
curriculum. Parents of English Learners, poor students,
students of color, and special needs students, however, face
linguistic, cultural, and other barriers to such involvement.
PRINCIPLE 7: POWERFUL FAMILY AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
Schools with strong arts programs create inclusive,
welcoming, and supportive conditions for families
that are from other cultures and backgrounds. Arts
programs can provide these families with powerful ways
of making connections to the school and community.
Powerful family and community engagement strategies
include: a) leadership development for parents and
active recruitment into leadership groups at the school;
b) parent education to support students graduating
from high school college-ready and with well-developed
arts competencies; c) professional development for
teachers and administrators in cross-cultural skills and
competencies for building two-way communication with
families of English Learners, poor students, students of
color, and special needs students; d) resources allocated to
enable arts teaching/learning projects in the community;
and e) orientations for newcomer parents and others.
26. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles26
Teaching secondary ceramics classes requires
many hours of extra time spent loading and firing
kilns, preparing and recycling clay, and making
and renovating glazes in order to serve over 175
students daily. Students, parents, and community
members can be given the opportunity to learn
responsibility for and contribute to this studio
work. During the school day, daily classes are
limited to fifty minutes or less, and studio work
and creative activities often do not conform to
these restrictive time periods. For these reasons
and for the purpose of encouraging students to
share these experiences with their friends and
families, Open Studio was established at Valley
View High School.
Open Studio has met every Wednesday evening
on the traditional school schedule for over four
years. Students take written notification home to
their parents, encouraging parental involvement
and also inviting siblings and friends of the
students. Likewise, a general school notice goes
out to the entire staff and faculty through the
staff bulletin. Ceramics students are encouraged
to invite their other classmates who might also
have an interest. Three basic precepts have been
established: whoever invites the guest (or family
members) is responsible for “hosting” them and
introducing them to studio; the ceramics teacher,
Mr. Fisher, will not be doing any formal teaching,
but will be an equal participant in the studio
event; and, “as you teach, so shall you learn.”
Over the last three years, the community in
general has become aware of this opportunity.
No one is required to pay until they begin to
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POWERFUL FAMILY AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
produce finished work. Donations are welcome,
and several of the adults have been quite generous
with their appreciation. These donations are used
to secure extra help and time to keep a smoothly
running studio. At first, students brought family
and friends, but soon parents invited other
parents and friends, and former students continue
to return each year and bring other friends. The
end result has been consistently, well-attended,
resourceful, and productive open studio events.
Advanced ceramics students take responsibility
for hosting and helping the guests. Through
informal conversations, they assist parents and
community members in understanding how the
ceramic arts develop powerful and enduring
learning and skills in students and where the
ceramic arts fit into the larger school curriculum.
Parents and adults who have ceramics experience
often help the beginners, and frequently, parent
participants in Open Studio take the next step of
visiting ceramics classes during the school day to
observe and contribute.
But the most exciting learning and community
building episodes happen as young ceramics
students witness and experience interaction
between and with adult learners. They learn that
ceramics and the study of fine arts is not just a
subject in school, but is shared by a community
that goes beyond the school. The Open Studio
has developed a reputation within the Valley
View High School community as a gathering
place for the community, adults, and students to
participate, learn, and celebrate creativity through
the ceramic arts.
POWERFUL FAMILY AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
27. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 27
Selected Research Citations
Ascher, C. (1988). “Improving the School-Home Connection for Poor and Minority Urban Students.” The Urban
Review, 20(2), 109-122. Norwell, MA: KLUWER Academic Publishing.
Bermúdez, A. & Padrón, Y. (1987). “Integrating Parental Education into Teacher Training Programs: A Workable
Model for Minority Parents.” Journal of Educational Equity and Leadership, 7(3), 235-244. Columbus, OH:
Arizona State University Council for Educational Administration.
Catterall, J. S., Chapleau, R., & Iwanaga, J. (1999). “Involvement in the Arts and Human Development: General
Involvement and Intensive Involvement In Music and Theater Arts.” In E. Fiske (Ed.), Champions of Change:
The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington, DC: The Arts Education Partnership and the President’s
Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
Cochran, M. & Dean, C. (1991). “Home-School Relations and the Empowerment Process.” The Elementary School
Journal, 91(3), 261-269. Columbia, MO: University of Chicago Press.
Davies, D. (1991). “Schools Reaching Out: Family, School, and Community Partnerships for Student Success.” Phi
Delta Kappan, 72(5), 376-382. Bloomington, IN: Phi Delta Kappan.
Evans, Richard (2002) Powerful Voices: Developing High-Impact Arts Programs for Teens. New York, NY:Emc.
Arts, A Report from the SURDNA Foundation, Inc.
Heath, Shirley Brice (1998) “Imaginative Actuality, Learning in the Arts during the Nonschool Hours.” In E. Fiske
(Ed.), Champions of Change: The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington, DC: The Arts Education
Partnership and the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
Moll. L. (1992). “Funds of Knowledge for Teaching: Using a Qualitative Approach to Connect Homes & Classrooms,”
Theory into Practice 31(2), 132-141. Columbus, OH: Ohio State University College of Education.
Olsen, L., et al. (2001). And Still We Speak . . . Stories of Communities Sustaining and Reclaiming Language and
Culture. Oakland, CA: California Tomorrow.
POWERFUL FAMILY AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
28. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles28
ADVOCACY-ORIENTED ADMINISTRATIVE AND LEADERSHIP SYSTEMS
Provide advocacy-oriented administration and
leadership that institute system-wide mechanisms to focus
all stakeholders on the diverse visual and performing
arts needs and assets of each specific group of students.
These administrative and leadership systems structure,
organize, coordinate, and integrate visual and performing
arts programs and services to respond systemically to the
needs and strengths of each group of students.
DESCRIPTION
Inmanydistrictsandschools,studyof theartsisconsidered
the responsibility of the arts teachers, or the visual and
performing arts program. To create districts and schools
that embrace and support the arts well, the entire school
community has to feel and enact ownership of an arts
education for every child, in every school, every day, and
proactively work towards eliminating the arts deficit that
occurs in most districts today. Rather than being served in
“pull-out” programs or in 30-minute “add-ons,” the arts
are taught as discrete disciplines related to each other and
when appropriate to other subject areas in the curriculum.
In the elementary grades, arts are taught in an integrated
fashion as an important aspect of other core curriculum
disciplines. This requires strong advocacy-oriented
leadership from district superintendents to site-based
principals that makes it clear that arts learning is important
for all students and that all students are guaranteed access
to a rich, comprehensive, and meaningful standards-based
arts curriculum.
District and site administrators, counselors and other
support staff, visual and performing arts coordinators
and teacher, parent, and student leaders work together
as a district-wide arts team to develop a policy for arts
education. This advocacy team additionally builds broad-
based support through in-depth strategic planning that
yields results in professional development, standards-
based curriculum, quality instruction and methodology,
partnerships and collaborations, sustained arts funding,
resources and facilities, program evaluation and student
assessment. School and district administrative systems
need to effectively address issues of data, communication,
accountability, and equity relative to their arts programs,
as well as leverage and maximize existing arts resources to
create sustainable arts programs.
PRINCIPLE 8: ADVOCACY-ORIENTED ADMINISTRATIVE AND LEADERSHIP SYSTEMS
In addition, site administrators need to ensure that the arts
are included as core curriculum for all students by making
appropriate accommodations for students’ diverse learning
styles and abilities. Arts instruction should be culturally
and linguistically responsive to the needs and talents
of the students being served, and should be structured
and delivered in ways that encourage the successful
participation for English Learners, poor students, students
of color, and special needs students, all of whom have the
capacity to excel in the visual and performing arts.
Advocacy-oriented leadership realizes that to achieve
the emerging statewide vision of arts learning for every
student, every day, in every school, requires the ongoing
expansion of our community of arts education supporters.
A common unity must be developed among arts education
colleagues, friends, and allies. This involves providing arts
leadership that models, inspires, and facilitates relationship
building, trust, and mutual support—qualities required
for long-term social change. Finally, advocacy-oriented
leadership requires celebrating successes and struggles.
It is important to engage in public ceremonies that
acknowledge who the students are, what they contribute,
and what they have the potential to become relative to the
arts. Through the celebratory process, new arts visions and
possibilities are created that move schools from a deficit,
behavioristic way of thinking, doing and being, to a more
asset-based and culturally and linguistically responsive
approach, which is what students and families need, want,
and deserve.
29. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 29
The Sunset Elementary School District school
board has for several years had a policy in support
of an articulated visual and performing arts
instructional program for its grade K-6 students.
Three years ago, they hired a district Visual and
Performing Arts Coordinator, Mrs. Nguyen,
whose responsibility is to provide support to
the district’s four schools as they implement and
monitor their local arts programs. One of her first
responsibilities was to bring together district and
site administrators, teachers, parents, community
members, and organizations to develop a district
arts plan and individual school arts plans aligned
to the district plan.
This plan, which articulates a powerful vision of
comprehensive arts education for all students,
also outlines how this comprehensive curriculum
will be phased in starting with the visual arts, then
adding theatre arts, music education, and dance
over a seven year period. The plan includes goals
and objectives related to student achievement
in the arts, teacher professional development,
funding, internal and external communication,
parent and family involvement, use of local arts
providers and organizations, and arts advocacy
locally and at the state level.
Several partnerships have been established to
support arts education for the district’s students.
The local PTAs work in concert with the district
to take a leadership role in community arts
advocacy efforts. An alliance of local arts-related
businesses has been established to provide
internships and support for teachers who will
ADVOCACY-ORIENTED ADMINISTRATIVE AND LEADERSHIP SYSTEMS
Vignette
ADVOCACY-ORIENTED ADMINISTRATIVE AND LEADERSHIP SYSTEMS
be integrating arts teaching into their daily work.
These same businesses offer their employees to
work in the classroom as partners with teachers
to bring real-world relevance to the arts teaching
and learning. The local symphony has agreed
to provide a free symphony experience for
every student annually. The superintendent and
school board have met with a private foundation
interested in funding a multi-year evaluation of
the district’s efforts in arts education.
Mrs. Nguyen, the district visual and performing
arts coordinator, works with teachers with arts
expertise, to support them in serving as mentors
to other teachers at their sites. She has provided
arts leadership support to both site administrators
and central office staff, so that they are able to
see where the arts fit into the bigger instructional
picture. She regularly collaborates with the
district and school accountability staff so that
the arts are seen as a viable school reform vehicle
and to ensure that administrators, teachers, and
parents are able to access the data regarding
student, school, and district arts progress and
achievement. She communicates with the
district public information officer so that arts
achievements are communicated and celebrated
internally and in the community. She also meets
with the secondary school district into which
Sunset’s students feed to ensure that Sunset
students are placed appropriately in the middle
and high school arts programs, and Sunset’s
student information system tracks the progress
of its students through high school in order to
strengthen its own arts program.
30. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles30
Selected Research Citations
Adkins, A. McKinney, M. (2001) “Placing A+ in a National Context: A Comparison to Promising Practices for
Comprehensive School Reform.” In R. Deasy (Ed.), Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student
Achievement and Social Development, Washington, DC: AEP.
Berman, P., Chambliss, D., et al. (2000). Readiness of Low-Performing Schools for ComprehensiveReform. Emeryville,
CA: RPP International.
Bodilly, S. (1996). Lessons from New American Schools Development Corporation’s Development Phase. Santa
Monica, CA: RAND.
Bodilly, S. & Berends, M. (1999). “Necessary District Support for Comprehensive School Reform.” In G. Orfield &
E. DeBray (Eds.), Hard Work for Good Schools: Facts Not Fads in Title I Reform, 111-119. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University, The Civil Rights Project.
Burton, J., Horowitz, R., & Abeles, H. (1999) “Learning In and Through the Arts: Curriculum Implications.” In
E. Fiske (Ed.), Champions of Change: The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington, DC: The Arts
Education Partnership and the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
Darling-Hammond, L. (2001). The Right to Learn: A Blueprint for Creating Schools that Work. Indianapolis, IN:
Jossey-Bass Publishers.
Day, C. (2000). “Beyond Transformational Leadership.” Educational Leadership, 57(7), 56-59. Alexandria, VA:
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Edmunds, R. & Fredereksen, J. (1979). “Effective Schools for the Urban Poor.” Educational Leadership, 46(5), 29-32.
Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision & Curriculum Development.
Finnan, C. (2000). Implementing School-Reform Models: Why Is It So Hard For Some Schools And Easy For Others?
Paper presented at the American Educational Research Association Annual Meeting, New Orleans.
Gersten, R., Carnine, D., & Green, S. (1982). “The Principal As Instructional Leader: A Second Look.” Educational
Leadership, 40(3), 47-50. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Huberman, A. & Miles, M. (1984). Innovation Up Close: How School Improvement Works. New York, NY: Plenum
Press.
Joyce, B. & Calhoun, E. (1995).”School Renewal: An Inquiry, Not a Formula.” Educational Leadership, 52(7), 1-55.
Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
ADVOCACY-ORIENTED ADMINISTRATIVE AND LEADERSHIP SYSTEMS
31. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 31
Lezotte, L. & Cipriano Papperl, J. (1999). The Effective School: A Proven Path to Learning for All. Okemos, MI:
Effective Schools Products, LTD.
McLaughlin, M. (1990). “The Rand Change Agent Study Revisited: Macro Perspectives and Micro Realities.”
Educational Research, 19(9), 11-16. Washington, D.C.: American Educational Research Association.
Muncey, D. & McQuillan, P. (1996). Reform and Resistance in Schools and Classrooms: An Ethnographic View of
the Coalition of Essential Schools. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Newmann, F., Smith, B., Allensworth, E., & Bryk, A. (2001). “Instructional Program Coherence: What It Is and Why
It Should Guide School Improvement Policy.” Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 23(4), 297-321.
Washington, D.C.: American Educational Research Association.
Sebring, P. & Bryk, A. (2000). “School Leadership and the Bottom Line in Chicago.” Phi Delta Kappan, 81(6),
440-443. Bloomington, IN: Phi Delta Kappan.
Seidel, S. “Stand and Unfold Yourself: A Monograph on the Shakespeare & Company Research Study,” In E. Fiske
(Ed.), Champions of Change: The Impact of the Arts on Learning. Washington, DC: The Arts Education
Partnership and the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.
ADVOCACY-ORIENTED ADMINISTRATIVE AND LEADERSHIP SYSTEMS
32. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles32
REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
VISUAL & PERFORMING ARTS CORE PRINCIPLES
A REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
LOOKING AT OUR SCHOOL THROUGH Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles
This tool is designed to engage school teams in reflecting on the practices, policies, and life of their school through
the lens of the Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles. It is intended to deepen understanding about the principles
themselves, and to support both dialogue and planning towards systemic implementation of the emerging statewide
vision of arts learning for every student, every day, in every school. A matrix for each of the eight principles lists
characteristics of schools that are enacting that principle.
Step 1:uu As a team, select by consensus which Core Principle to address, as an initial starting point.
Step 2:uu Every member of the “team” individually fills out the tool, checking for each characteristic whether
you feel it is a “strength” of the school, a “work in progress”, “isn’t happening”, or “don’t know”.
Step 3:uu After all members have marked their ratings, go through the principle that was selected as a team,
sharing and comparing how you rated your school for each characteristic.
Questions to consider and discuss: WHY did we rate the school the way we did? What “evidence” led to that
rating? Note where there is clear consensus. Take time to talk about those characteristics where there is not
consensus. The dialogue is particularly important where there are differences in the ratings. It is an opportunity
to share differing perspectives and experiences that together inform a fuller picture of what is going on in the
school. Use this opportunity to learn from each other.
Step 4:uu Select one team member to calculate the average and range for each characteristic and share the
results with the rest of the team.
Step 5uu : Go back through your ratings and compile a list of all of the areas for which team members marked
“don’t know”. Add to that list any characteristics where there was wide disparity in how members of the team
ranked the school. This list becomes an agenda for further inquiry. Your Inquiry plan will be built from that
list.
Step 6:uu Go back through your ratings and compile a list of those characteristics which are a “strength” of
the school. This is where the Visual and Performing Arts vision is already firmly planted. It will be important
to celebrate, nurture, and protect that work.
Step 7:uu Go back through your ratings and compile a list of those which are works in progress. The next step
will be to do an Assessment and Alignment Process through which you will look deeper at what your school is
doing to work in those areas, assess how well you feel it is going and what else may be helpful to do.
Step 8:uu Go back through your ratings and compile a list of those characteristics about which there is general
agreement “isn’t happening”. These become important topics for further dialogue and possible inquiry and
fact-finding. These will require further diagnosis. WHY isn’t anything happening? Is it lack of awareness? Are
there policy and resource conditions that don’t allow it to happen? Is it lack of will?
33. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 33
REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
PRINCIPLE 1: ENRICHED AND AFFIRMING LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS
Create a safe, affirming, and enriched environment for participatory and inclusive learning in and through the visual
and performing arts for every group of students.
Characteristic Strength Work in
Progress
Isn’t
Happening
Don’t
Know
Rating
Arts staff expresses a positive attitude about
providing opportunities for student expres-
sion through the visual and performing arts,
and welcomes what students bring from their
backgrounds and homes into the arts class-
room and life of the school.
The value that staff and administration place
on the artistic endeavors of students is evi-
denced by the diversity of student work and
performances throughout the school. Art is
everywhere, in every classroom and every
publication.
Intentional classroom and schoolwide strate-
gies are in place so that students and teachers
grow artistically and learn to understand and
respect differences.
Instructional strategies and pedagogy empha-
size cooperative and interactive learning.
Through policies, vision statements, activi-
ties, signs, and images on the wall, the school
actively communicates the importance of the
arts (music, dance, theatre, and visual arts)
as core curriculum and imparts the value of
diversity, multiple languages, and multicultur-
alism in the arts.
School has strong, enforced bottom-line poli-
cies of zero tolerance for anti-immigrant, anti-
bilingual, and racist language and behavior.
The arts faculty, staff, and administration in-
clude members of the major racial, language,
and cultural communities of the students.
34. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles34
REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
PRINCIPLE 2: EMPOWERING PEDAGOGY
Use culturally and linguistically responsive pedagogy that maximizes learning in and through the visual and performing
arts, actively accesses and develops student voice, and provides opportunities for leadership for every group of
students.
Characteristic Strength Work in
Progress
Isn’t
Happening
Don’t
Know
Rating
Staff understands that the student population
is multifaceted, diverse, and complex – and is
aware of the role of diverse languages, cul-
tures, and lived experiences in shaping stu-
dent participation in the arts.
Teachers motivate students to become active
participants in their arts learning by encour-
aging and providing opportunities for them
to ask questions, think critically, and make
choices.
Students are allowed to express ideas and feel-
ings in their home language and to use their
home language for arts academic work.
Students are actively and consistently invited
to share their experiences and to draw upon
their culture to make meaning of arts aca-
demic work.
Students traditionally under-represented in
the arts experience equal opportunities and
encouragement as other students to partici-
pate in arts leadership activities of the school
– and are proportionately represented in arts
leadership and performance roles.
Arts professional development supports staff
knowledge in the arts and cultures of their
student populations, as well as in the arts and
cultures that are different than the represented
populations. It includes effective and innova-
tive methodologies that address diversity in
teaching and learning styles.
35. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 35
REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
PRINCIPLE 3: CHALLENGING AND RELEVANT CURRICULUM
Engage every group of students in comprehensive, well-articulated and age-appropriate visual and performing arts
curriculum that also purposefully builds a full range of language, literacy, and other content area skills, including,
whenever possible, bilingualism, biliteracy, and multiculturalism. This curriculum is cognitively complex, coherent,
relevant, and challenging.
Characteristic Strength Work in
Progress
Isn’t
Happening
Don’t
Know
Rating
The arts curriculum is rigorous, sequential,
comprehensive, coherent, and well-articulated
with consistency in approach at every grade
level as part of the core curriculum for all
students.
The curriculum is standards-based and in-
cludes all four arts disciplines. It includes
artistic perception, creative expression, his-
torical and cultural context, aesthetic valuing,
and connections and applications to other
disciplines and to careers.
Arts curriculum emphasizes critical think-
ing, problem solving, creating and innovating,
analyzing and synthesizing complex ideas,
and the active production of arts knowledge.
Students have the opportunity to study both
home language and a second language to
advanced levels of literacy as part of their arts
experience throughout the grades.
A strong, articulated sequence and designated
instructional time exists for students to de-
velop arts expertise across the arts disciplines
and through arts integration experiences.
Students have access to high quality peer and
adult arts learning models.
Teachers design and modify instruction so
that students are engaged in high-level com-
plex arts learning in both home language and
English.
Students are learning and mastering arts ma-
terial at grade level or beyond.
All students are enrolled & succeeding in arts
curriculum that prepares them for college and
careers.
36. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles36
REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
PRINCIPLE 4: HIGH QUALITY INSTRUCTIONAL RESOURCES
Provide and utilize high quality standards-aligned visual and performing arts instructional resources that provide each
group of students with equitable access to core curriculum and academic language in the classroom, school, and
community.
Characteristic Strength Work in
Progress
Isn’t
Happening
Don’t
Know
Rating
High quality standards-aligned visual and
performing arts instructional resources are
provided for all sites, for all arts discipline
specific and arts integration classrooms, for
all four arts disciplines, and for every grade
level. Instructional resources are also aligned
to other core curriculum and ELD standards
as appropriate.
Materials used by students in the arts class-
room are designed for and appropriate to
the specific linguistic and academic needs/
strengths of students.
School sites have facilities and storage areas
designed to guarantee full implementation of
all four arts disciplines.
Safety issues address the placement and use
of equipment and provide for safe educational
environments for using arts-related materials
and facilities.
Arts instructional materials are developmen-
tally and age appropriate.
Arts instructional resources brought into the
school reflect and represent the diversity of
the students.
Technological resources are available and
used as an integral part of the arts instruc-
tional program to provide access to standards-
aligned arts curriculum content.
Technology is used to engage students in in-
teractive and generative arts learning.
Students have access to a wide range of arts-
related books in English and home language
which are made available in the arts classroom
and school library.
Students are encouraged and allotted time to
use arts resources independently in school
and at home.
37. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 37
REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
PRINCIPLE 5: VALID AND COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENT
Build and implement valid and comprehensive visual and performing arts assessment systems designed to promote
reflective practice and data-driven planning in order to improve academic, linguistic, and socio-cultural outcomes for
each specific group of students.
Characteristic Strength Work in
Progress
Isn’t
Happening
Don’t
Know
Rating
Standardized arts assessments are valid and
reliable for the student populations and arts
disciplines being assessed (normed by spe-
cific population and discipline), linguistically
accessible, free of cultural bias, and admin-
istered with appropriate accommodations for
English Learners and special needs students.
Arts placement and high stakes decisions are
based upon multiple measures and methods
and triangulated data.
Assessments track extracurricular outcomes,
as well as arts academic outcomes.
Teachers can easily access data relevant to the
arts about student achievement in meaningful
formats, and consistently use that data plus
student work as a basis for arts planning and
instruction.
District and school have a data system that
tracks individual student arts progress over
time, and can aggregate and disaggregate by
demographic, background, and programmatic
variables.
Decision-making includes a process of ask-
ing questions about the specific impacts of
arts programs and services and policies on
students.
There are regular, formal mechanisms and
supports through which staff collaboratively
reflects on arts data.
School is engaged in an ongoing cycle of
inquiry. The school regularly turns to data to
illuminate current and emerging arts issues
and problems.
Students regularly engage in self-assessment
of their own arts work and assessment results.
They participate in the development of crite-
ria and rubrics for arts performances and arts
projects.
38. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles38
REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
PRINCIPLE 6: HIGH QUALITY PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION AND SUPPORT
Provide coherent, comprehensive, and ongoing visual and performing arts professional preparation and support
programs based on well-defined standards of practice. These programs are designed to create professional learning
communities of administrators, teachers, and other staff to implement a powerful vision of excellent arts instruction
for each group of students.
Characteristic Strength Work in
Progress
Isn’t
Happening
Don’t
Know
Rating
The district and school have developed long-
range plans for full implementation of a com-
prehensive, sequential, standards-based arts
curriculum for all students K-12 and in all four
disciplines.
Teachers are given time, professional develop-
ment and support, including funding, to work
together in reflective learning communities on
arts teaching/learning issues, and to partici-
pate in conferences, institutes, and profes-
sional organizations.
Teachers, administrators, specialists, and
artist/educators have ready access to arts
research and highly effective practices, in-
cluding arts integration strategies so that the
arts are valued as discrete disciplines, as well
as methods for enhancing learning in other
content areas.
The school supports good quality arts teach-
ing through use of fully qualified and cre-
dentialed teachers in all four arts disciplines;
mentor teachers, coaches, and resource peo-
ple with deep expertise in the arts; and artists
and teaching artists.
Teachers have collaborative time built into the
school day for curriculum development, artic-
ulation, and implementation of arts programs.
Teachers and administrators are tapped into
arts networks, informed about, and encour-
aged/supported to participate in local and
state professional development related to
meeting the arts needs of California’s diverse
learners.
Teachers are co-participants in decision-mak-
ing about arts professional development.
Teachers are engaged in professional dia-
logue about arts-related student work, student
needs, and teaching & learning.
39. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 39
REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
PRINCIPLE 7: POWERFUL FAMILY AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
Implement strong family and community engagement programs that build leadership capacity and value and draw
upon community funds of knowledge to inform, support, and enhance visual and performing arts teaching and
learning for each specific group of students.
Characteristic Strength Work in
Progress
Isn’t
Happening
Don’t
Know
Rating
The climate in the school is very welcoming
and provides open access for parents to the
school and their student’s art classroom(s).
Teachers and administrators have received
training in cross-cultural communication and
strategies for strengthening two-way partner-
ships between home and school.
Parents of student populations tradition-
ally under represented in arts programs and
community members are represented on the
leadership bodies of the school.
The school has an active parent arts advocacy
community that includes relationships with
businesses and community arts providers and
other potential providers of additional arts
resources and support.
Positive and vital relationships are created
between the business community and new
technologies that arts students need for mak-
ing connections to the world of work.
Parents are engaged in leadership
development programs that enable them to
be an effective advocate and support for their
child’s success in the arts.
Parents receive information and guidance
regarding the importance of arts learning,
as well as information on supporting their
student’s arts development in school and at
home.
Arts education staff speak languages of the
families in the school; signs in arts classrooms
are in the languages of the home; and all no-
tices and parent materials are translated into
language of the home.
School and community arts programs orient
newcomer immigrant families to the arts com-
munity and resources.
40. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles40
REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
PRINCIPLE 8: ADVOCACY-ORIENTED ADMINISTRATIVE & LEADERSHIP SYSTEMS
Provideadvocacy-orientedadministrationandleadershipthatinstitutesystem-widemechanismstofocusallstakeholders
on the diverse visual and performing arts needs and assets of each specific group of students. These administrative
and leadership systems structure, organize, coordinate, and integrate visual and performing arts programs and services
to respond systemically to the needs and strengths of each group of students.
Characteristic Strength Work in
Progress
Isn’t
Happening
Don’t
Know
Rating
Leadership is grounded in the research and
theoretical frameworks for effective arts in-
struction.
There is equity in the allocation of resources
(appropriate teachers, advanced courses, etc.).
Arts programs are integrated into the curricu-
lum and are not delivered through pull-outs.
Administrators are well-versed in the legal re-
quirements and responsibilities of the school
for implementing and monitoring arts pro-
grams.
School leadership makes it explicit and clear
that arts education is a responsibility of the
whole school and is key to the school’s mis-
sion and vision.
School has a designated process/plan for
monitoring individual assessment and place-
ment of students in arts programs, reviewing
course assignments and master scheduling
to ensure access, and facilitating smooth
arts program transitions from gradespan to
gradespan.
Leadership is prepared to defend the arts pro-
gram with data and research, and proactively
garners needed resources to support the arts
program.
Guidance counselors and counseling services
are well informed about the arts needs of
students and facilitate appropriate placements
which provide widespread access to the core
arts curriculum.
Systems are in place to regularly monitor that
specific populations of students are not dis-
proportionately or inappropriately placed into
lower arts tracks or denied access to rigorous
arts courses and programs.
41. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles 41
REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
SUMMARY SHEET
PRINCIPLE MY
SCORE
OVERALL
RATING
(Group Average)
RANGE OF
RATINGS
(Low to High)
NOTES
PRINCIPLE 1
Enriched and Affirming
Environment
PRINCIPLE 2
Empowering
Pedagogy
PRINCIPLE 3
Challenging and
Relevant Curriculum
PRINCIPLE 4
High Quality
Instructional Resources
PRINCIPLE 5
Valid and Comprehen-
sive Assessment
PRINCIPLE 6
High Quality
Professional
Preparation & Support
PRINCIPLE 7
Powerful Parent and
Community
Engagement
PRINCIPLE 8
Advocacy Oriented
Administrative &
Leadership Systems
42. Visual & Performing Arts Core Principles42
REFLECTION, DIALOGUE, ASSESSMENT, AND PLANNING TOOL
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
(SEE PAGE 31, STEPS 5-8, FOR FURTHER GUIDANCE AND DIRECTION.)
1) LIST OF AREAS MARKED “DON’T KNOW” THAT ARE IMPORTANT FOR FURTHER INQUIRY.
2) LIST OF AREAS THAT ARE STRENGTHS – TO CELEBRATE AND PROTECT.
3) LIST OF WORKS IN PROGRESS – TO ASSESS AND ALIGN.
4) LIST OF AREAS THAT “AREN’T HAPPENING” – TO INVESTIGATE AND DISCUSS FURTHER.
49. People who don’t sing attend concerts; . . .
people who don’t paint purchase paintings.
One marvelous aspect of the arts is that they cognitively
stimulate both those who do them and those who observe
others do them. The arts are a total win-win situation.
The doers and the observers both discover something
about the further reaches of being human.
Robert Sylwester