THE MESSAGE
A newsletter for Iowa's art educators
Winter 2007

In this issue:

IMPORTANT INFO All State Art 2007
Youth Art Month
AEI/Des Moines Art Center All State Art Camp
KUDOS!
Arts Education: Teaching The Whole Child

 

IMPORTANT INFO All State Art 2007

We are well into January, 2007, so it is time to think about preparations for the All State Art Awards.....deadline is not until March, but we all know how easy it is for time to slip away. Make plans now to help your students prepare to submissions for this outstanding opportunity. The collaboration that will occur with Grandview College will also be a positive. Printable versions of the AEI All State Art forms are available from the AEI website (www.artedia.org). Note you will also need the Nominees guideline form, which may also be found on the website. (debby ym)

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UPDATE #1: All of the judges have been secured for the 2007 All- State Art Awards program. UPDATE #2: The reception May 5th will NOT be held at the Des Moines Art Center due to an Art Center Board policy change involving a new rental fee which makes the use the auditorium too expensive for AEI. We would like to thank the Des Moines Art Center for supporting us over the past ten years. The new location for the All-State Art Awards reception will be on the campus of Grand View College. Details will be provided by mail to all of the winners once selected. Details will also be posted on the AEI web site.

UPDATE #3: Laurie Zaiger and I are contacting businesses in order to secure additional funding for scholarships. The initial goal is to increase the overall package to $3,000. Any information on businesses that maybe supportive of this goal will help us. We would appreciate their continued support but it isn't a requirement.

UPDATE #4: We would like to thank Art Scene magazine for publishing a free ad high-lighting All-State Art Awards. In addition, essential dates of upcoming events are now listed in the Art Scene on- line calendar and is linked to other sites around the state.

UPDATE #5: Recent contacts are being worked to ramp-up the visibility of the All-State Art Awards program. Once this process has been achieved an update notice will be placed on the AEI web site describing the effort.

UPDATE #6: In order to cut down on costs the judging will be held in Perry at the Hometown Perry, Iowa (HPI) headquarters. We would like to thank the MonteBello staff in ames for their past service.

UPDATE: Next year, the All-State Team will be needing a new statistician to run the Excel program on judging day which is usually around the last week of March. Myron Halverson, who has donated his services for many years, and Joani, who has served as a judge, have announced that this will be their last year with the program. Their service to AEI and the All-State Art Awards program has beeninvaluable. Again, business names are needed in order to increase our visibility around the state. It always translates into money. Dave Pratt, All-State Art Awards Chairperson Pratt3d@iowatelecom.net
All State Art Awards 2007

Youth Art Month
Check the website for details on the upcoming Youth Art Month exhibition and celebration at the Des Moines Historical Museum. Bring artwork to the February 3 AEI board meeting or send them in advance. Snow dates listed on the artedia.org website.



AEI/Des Moines Art Center All State Art Camp
AEI/Des Moines Art Center All State Art Camp The Art Educators of Iowa and the Des Moines Art Center invite energetic and motivated young artists to participate in the fifth annual All-State Art Camp, June 4 – 8, 2007. This camp is designed especially for students interested in pursuing the visual arts in college and those preparing portfolios for the AEI All-State Competition. Students entering grades 10 – 12 in the fall of 2007 are eligible.

The Art Center’s visiting artist Anthony Pontius presents traditional and non-traditional approaches to art making early in the week. This prepares the students for working independently during the second half of the week. An all-day drawing marathon is planned for Friday. Opportunities to work with professional artists, learn about careers in the arts, and explore the museum’s art collections and architecture are included. For more information and an application, contact studio programs director Peggy Leonardo at 515.271.0321 or email pleonardo@desmoinesartcenter.org. June 4 – 8, 2007, 9 am – 4 pm Tuition $325 ($260 Art Center member) Art Center membership for student $25 Limit 15 students Application deadline April 1, 2007 Students must apply to be accepted Limited scholarship money is available Des Moines Art Center, 4700 Grand Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa 50312



KUDOS!
amy Pfeiler-Wunder has been selected the Western Region Elementary Art Educator for 2007 and Becky Kobos has been selected the Western Region ArtEducator! Busy days for these exceptional art educators!



Arts Education: Teaching The Whole Child


Teaching The Whole Child - by Esther D’Agrosa The arts are fundamental resources through which the world is viewed, meaning is created, and the mind developed.To neglect the contribution of the arts in education, either through inadequate time,resources, or poorly trained teachers is to deny children access to one of the most stunning aspects of their culture and one of the most potent means for developing their minds.--Elliot W. Eisner, Professor of Education and Art, Stanford University High stakes testing.

No Child Left Behind. Math and Science scores must improve. The education community must respond. For some, the answer to such educational challenges is more drill and more time spent on specific tasks in the “critical” mandatory reporting areas of the curriculum. But will more of the same tactics reach the students who are struggling? Probably not. These students need different approaches that will engage them in becoming motivated learners. Since Jefferson’s time, public school goals have valued moral and social education equally with academic instruction. (Noddings.)

Instruction in the arts is an ideal vehicle in which to integrate the academic, social, and moral aims of education. Arts education is essential in the curriculum PK-12: not only does education in the arts raise scores on the mandatory tests, (Fowler) but it is pivotal in the development of creativity, innovation, risk taking, critical thinking, problem solving, and imagination. Arts education is the core of teaching the whole child.

The value of teaching the whole child has been established. The arts affirm that all learning is connected, thus teaching the whole child.

How Does Education in the Arts Reach theWhole Child? Active learning is inherent in the arts. To become literate in the arts, the student must participate in making art. Skills are modeled by the instructor and then practiced by the student. The student must be selfdirected to practice in order to improve. Arts teach self-reliance and self-discipline. Problem solving and divergent thinking give ownership to students. Arts teach divergent rather than convergent thinking. Once a student has acquired a specific artistic skill, he/she can begin to explore changes. Improvisation using skills that the student has mastered is the next step.

Finally the student has a new composition, one that he can call his own. Students quickly grasp that in the arts there are multiple solutions to the same problem. Divergent thinking IS creativity in action. Teamwork is essential in many art forms. Participation in many art forms requires teamwork. Each member of the orchestra must be sensitive to every other orchestra member, as well as the conductor. Staging a school play can only be successful when cast, crew, and director collaborate. Teamwork is essential to develop a whole person.

Students who are at risk are likely to be engaged in the arts. The arts reach students who are at risk. Researcher Shirley Brice Heath of Stanford University--not an arts researcher--was charged with studying all forms of after school programs: sports teams, church groups, scout programs, the arts and more. Much to her own surprise, she found that the arts students dramatically outperformed their non-arts connected peers in significant ways.

Working with high risk students in inner city east Palo Alto--far from an affluent neighborhood--Heath found that arts students are four times more likely to win academic awards, four times as likely to participate in math and science fairs, and show a significant reduction in these areas without arts experiences. These studies were reinforced by a Harvard study focusing on students working with Shakespeare, work that promotes greater complexity in thinking, greater verbal acuity, tolerance of ambiguity, interpretive skills and increased sense of selfdiscipline and self-esteem. (Cameron.)

The arts engage students in non-traditional ways. The arts invite students to explore the affective aspects of life: emotion, spirituality, and empathy. Studies reported in Critical Links, state that, “students exposed to the arts gain more empathy and self-control, and develop improved conflict resolution and socialtolerance skills.” There is a “UCLA study that proves that high school seniors who participated in the creation of theatre are 40% less likely to tolerate racist behavior than kids who were not theatre participants.” (Cameron)

The Twenty-First Century For those who value the education of the whole child, this is a time of opportunity! Pulitzer-prize winning author Thomas Friedman (The World is Flat) and Microsoft CEO Bill Gates are only two of the many experts who have written about the importance of developing imagination and creativity in today’s children. In a flat world (Friedman), flexibility, adaptability, and creativity are essential qualities for workforce success. Corporate executives are hiring arts consultants to train their employees to become imaginative problem solvers and collaborative creative thinkers. (Friedman)

Many contend that arts education is at the center of a renaissance in education. Ken Robinson, a senior advisor for education policy at the Getty Foundation, stated in a 2005 interview: “The most important challenge they (company executives) said was finding people who could make good decisions in times of uncertainty, who can adapt to new opportunities and respond creatively to change,” (Bartelme). Those qualities are inherently exemplified in arts instruction. Studying the Picasso painting,Guernica, students and instructors may begin a dialogue about war and its effects.

Simultaneously, students may read and discuss the Gunther Grasse novel, The Tin Drum, as well as Grasse’s recent revelation about being part of the Third Reich. Students in wind ensemble may perform In Memoriam Dresden by Daniel Bukvich. Choral students may perform and/or listen to Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem. The theatre department may stage Antigone. Students may create their own war paintings, music, and theatre. All of the above can add depth to a debate about the current war with Iraq, and the Mid-East conflict. The possibilities are endless. The impact for reaching the whole child is enormous.

“As a strong supporter of the arts, I believe that we must all be vigilant to maintain arts education in our schools. The research is very clear that a strong arts program does contribute to academic achievement. But, in my mind this should not be the only reason we would support the arts. The enrichment of our lives, the relationships that are established through group work, and the emphasis on helping students become well-rounded citizens are necessary for a flourishing democracy.”

Judy Jeffrey, Director Iowa Department of Education Noddings, Ned. What Does It Mean to Educate the Whole Child? EducationalLeadership. 9/2005

Fowler, Charles. Strong Arts, Strong Schools. Oxford Press. p.139

Ben Cameron, Executive Director: Theatre Communications Group, tcg.org

New Times,New Vision Highlights: Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student Achievement and Social Development.

Friedman, Thomas. The World is Flat. Farrer, Strauss, and Giroux.Education Commission of the States (ECS). 2005 ecs@ecs.org

Bartelme, Lois. The View from the trenches: an interview with Harvey Seifter and Tim Stockil: Journal of Business Strategy. Vol 26 No 5. 2005

Esther D’Agrosa is past president of the Iowa Alliance for Arts Education. Currently she is Associate Professor of Music at Morningside College, Sioux City, Iowa. She can be contacted at dagrosa@morningside.edu.