Education
Related: About this forumPrincipal fires security guards to hire art teachers — and transforms elementary school
http://dailynightly.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/05/01/18005192-principal-fires-security-guards-to-hire-art-teachers-and-transforms-elementary-schoolA pilot school for grades K-8, Orchard Gardens was built on grand expectations.
But the dream of a school founded in the arts, a school that would give back to the community as it bettered its children, never materialized.
Instead, the dance studio was used for storage and the orchestra's instruments were locked up and barely touched.
The school was plagued by violence and disorder from the start, and by 2010 it was rank in the bottom five of all public schools in the state of Massachusetts.
That was when Andrew Bott the sixth principal in seven years showed up, and everything started to change.
They got rid of the security guards and reinvested the savings into the arts.
defacto7
(13,631 posts)This is the way! If you teach kids fear and distrust, that's exactly what you get plus push back. Give them creativity and hope and life... that's what comes back plus humanity.
BrotherIvan
(9,126 posts)Students NEED the arts. They need it for self-expression, learning different ways to think, and becoming a full individual. Historians have always said the arts are a reflection of the health of a society. We so need this right now.
JDPriestly
(57,936 posts)I agree with you. But in addition, the arts benefit the individual student. They reward focus, give a sense of accomplishment earned by hard work and self-discipline. And music, in particular, teaches linear thinking (reading music) and often, teamwork.
We need to make sure every child in our school system either plays an instrument, sings in a choir or participates in art classes -- every child. They don't have to do it every schoolyear, but somewhere along the way, each child should participate in the arts.
And it would be great if every child got to experience participating in all the arts.
BrotherIvan
(9,126 posts)In my short foray into teaching, I taught at a continuation high school, basically a last chance for students with academic, behavioral and attendance problems. It was an inner city school with bullet holes in the windows! These students had failed in school their entire lives and believed they were stupid--many had been told this by teachers as they were growing up.
On my lunch hour, I created a drama club at the students' request. All of a sudden students who hated school, who were only there because it was a condition of their probation, were so involved and enthusiastic. They were verbal/oral/tactile learners. Sitting still in a desk and learning from a lecture or reading a book is for visual/verbal learners, so they had consistently failed. But they took to theatre like ducks to water, learning all their lines easily, coming up with blocking and costumes. I had a rule: miss one class and you're out because it lets your group down. Not one student was ever absent and their attendance improved in all their classes. All their teachers noticed their academic improvement as well. It was because these students finally felt like school was a place where they could succeed, where they belonged.
antigop
(12,778 posts)programs. A lot of kids "find themselves" once they get involved in theatre.
BrotherIvan
(9,126 posts)Teaching was not my calling, especially not in the era of standardized testing, but I sure did enjoy that.
antigop
(12,778 posts)Music training helps with language skills and mathematics.
PBS did a program on this not too long ago.
Yes, every child should be able to experience participating in the arts. Sadly, it's the arts programs that are cut in the schools (at least in my neck of the woods). But football reigns supreme.
ANOIS
(112 posts)I saw it featured on the evening news also.
As a former teacher, this story, & the autistic boy & his prom date give me such hope, among so much other dreary news!
mountain grammy
(27,344 posts)Iwillnevergiveup
(9,298 posts)they look so HAPPY! 'Cause they got the right principal. YAAAAAAAY!
HiPointDem
(20,729 posts)learn, they can pass the test. duh.
BrotherIvan
(9,126 posts)They measure how well the student takes standardized tests. Full stop.
savebigbird
(417 posts)They still need to acquire test taking strategies (I mean, we all take tests from time to time), but they need not be the center of education!
AdHocSolver
(2,561 posts)Motivating students to learn. Such a quaint educational concept.