Strong Arts, Strong Schools: The Promising Potential and Shortsighted Disregard of the Arts in American Schooling / Edition 1

Strong Arts, Strong Schools: The Promising Potential and Shortsighted Disregard of the Arts in American Schooling / Edition 1

by Charles Fowler
ISBN-10:
0195100891
ISBN-13:
9780195100891
Pub. Date:
11/07/1996
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195100891
ISBN-13:
9780195100891
Pub. Date:
11/07/1996
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Strong Arts, Strong Schools: The Promising Potential and Shortsighted Disregard of the Arts in American Schooling / Edition 1

Strong Arts, Strong Schools: The Promising Potential and Shortsighted Disregard of the Arts in American Schooling / Edition 1

by Charles Fowler
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Overview

At a time when Americans are increasingly concerned with finding jobs and economic stability, supporting families, and surviving in the global economy, many consider the arts to be a luxury, a frivolous distraction which entices students away from real learning. In Strong Arts, Strong Schools, Charles Fowler argues that, far from a luxury, the arts are a vitally important part of our society and our schools.
Speaking directly to educators, policy makers, and parents alike, Fowler presents a compelling defense of the arts and their importance in our lives. The arts illuminate "life in all its mystery, misery, delight, pity and wonder." Without them, students are deprived of learning what it means to be truly human. The arts teach students how rather than what to think. Highlighting the crucial effect of the arts on learning, he contends that the arts teach skills that other basic subjects cannot—critical thinking and problem solving, judgment and independence, attention to detail and craftsmanship, and an openness to other cultures and ways of thinking. Arguing on behalf of the arts, Fowler shows how the arts can enliven and extend the entire school curriculum by integrating different subjects in innovative interdisciplinary ways, sparking the interest of at-risk or special needs students. "The best schools have the best arts programs," writes Fowler. "Excellence in education and excellence in the arts go hand in hand."
In eighteen compelling essays, Fowler demonstrates the importance of the arts in our culture and the necessity of rescuing the arts for our future. Beginning with an overview of the context in which the arts operate, he offers an honest and sometimes distressing overview of the state of education and arts education today. He then examines the arts and economics, presenting a carefully researched exposition of the significance of the arts and their relationship to science and industry. Showing how the arts provide a more comprehensive education, he shows why the arts engage students and make learning relevant and fun. Tackling the controversial question of curriculum, Fowler addresses such questions as who should study the arts, which arts, and whose culture should be taught. Citing a shameful neglect of creativity in our culture, he highlights the negligence of the schools in teaching students to be creative and inventive thinkers, and he shows the capacity of the arts to communicate these essential skills. Fowler concludes the book with suggestions for reform and with practical strategies for winning the support of school boards and school administrators. Finally asking "how do we get there," he offers specific recommendations for changing our schools, providing equal opportunity for all, and—perhaps most critically in today's economic climate—paying the bill.
In this elegantly written, passionately argued book, Fowler presents a convincing case for teaching the arts to all children. "A downtrodden army of cultureless children," Fowler warns, "is marching toward a barren and depleted adulthood and taking the future of our civilization with them." Strong Arts, Strong Schools is a clarion call to action for any teacher, parent, policy maker, or citizen concerned about the fate of the arts in American society and about the state of our schools.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195100891
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 11/07/1996
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.56(h) x 0.96(d)
Lexile: 1310L (what's this?)

About the Author

The late Charles Fowler was a noted music educator and arts activist, and the author of numerous books and articles, including Can We Rescue the Arts for America's Children? and Music! Its Role and Importance in Our Lives. He served as editor of Music Educators Journal from 1965 through 1971 and as education editor of Musical America magazine from 1974 through 1989.

Table of Contents

Part 1Conditions3
1One Nation, Undercultured and Underqualified7
2The Arts and Economics: Opportunities Missed, Misunderstood, and Minimalized15
3Society and the Schools: A Dynamic Relationship25
Part 2Justification35
4Recognizing the Arts as Forms of Intelligence39
5Strong Arts, Strong Schools46
6Cheating Our Children: Why Every Child Needs the Arts57
7Improving General Education Through the Arts67
8Developing New Audiences74
Part 3Curriculum83
9All Arts, All Students85
10The Arts as Academic, Basic, and Comprehensive99
11Whose Culture Should Be Taught?112
12The Shameful Neglect of Creativity119
13Cultivating the Arts in High School128
14The Correlation with Academic Achievement138
Part 4Reform149
15Redefining the Mission: Value-Centered Arts Education153
16The Arts as Catalysts for Educational Reform161
17Overhauling Teacher Education: Can It Be Done?169
18An Agenda: What Should We Expect?179
19Prospects: How Do We Get There?193
Notes205
Index217
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