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DID YOU KNOW?
Young people who participate in
the arts for at least three
hours on three days each week
through at least one full year
are:
-
4 times more likely to be
recognized for academic
achievement
-
3 times more likely to be
elected to class office
within their schools
-
4 times more likely to
participate in a math and
science fair
-
3 times more likely to win
an award for school
attendance
-
4 times more likely to win
an award for writing an
essay or poem
Young artists, as compared with
their peers, are likely to:
-
Attend music, art, and dance
classes nearly three times
as frequently
-
Participate in youth groups
nearly four times as
frequently
-
Read for pleasure nearly
twice as often
-
Perform community service
more than four times as
often
(Living the Arts
through Language +
Learning: A Report on
Community-based Youth
Organizations,
Shirley Brice Heath,
Stanford University and
Carnegie Foundation For
the Advancement of
Teaching, Americans for
the Arts Monograph,
November 1998)
The facts are that arts
education...
-
makes a tremendous impact on
the developmental growth of
every child and has proven
to help level the "learning
field" across socio-economic
boundaries.
(Involvement in the
Arts and Success in
Secondary School,
James S. Catterall, The
UCLA Imagination
Project, Graduate School
of Education &
Information Studies,
UCLA, Americans for the
Arts Monograph,
January 1998)
-
has a measurable impact on
youth at risk in deterring
delinquent behavior and
truancy problems while also
increasing overall academic
performance among those
youth engaged in after
school and summer arts
programs targeted toward
delinquency prevention.
(YouthARTS Development
Project, 1996, U.S.
Department of Justice,
National Endowment for
the Arts, and Americans
for the Arts)
Businesses understand that
arts education...
DIG DEEPER Proof of the Power of Arts
Education
Read highlights of key
national research on the impact
of arts education on
children and learning. These
brief findings offer links to
publication summaries that link
to full publications online
(when available).
HOW
HIGH DO WE REACH? What is it exactly that our kids
should be able to do when they
study the arts? We're glad you
asked.
Standards for arts education
have been developed by arts and
education experts at the
national level, and most of our
states have followed suit.
HOW
HAVE WE DONE SO FAR?
National Assessment of
Educational Progress: 1997 Arts
Assessment Report Card An ongoing project of the U.S.
Department of Education's
National Center for Education
Statistics, the National
Assessment of Educational
Progress (NAEP) regularly tests
students in different academic
subjects, including dance,
music, theatre, and visual art.
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