Using Art To Enhance Writing
Using Art To Enhance Writing
Writing
How writing curriculums can sustain art education
Article by Isabella Rivera
The Death of Art Education
It is an unfortunate truth that American public schools are on a
downward trend to include meaningful art education curriculum. In 2011,
Arne Duncan, U.S. Secretary of Education, stated: To succeed today and in
the future, Americas children will need to be inventive resourceful, and
imaginative. The best way to foster that creativity is through arts education.
(Dwyer, 2011) However, a large population of parents, educators, and policy
makers see art education as a luxury as opposed to a valuable academic
component of education. Furthermore, the pressure of high stakes test
scores in reading, writing, and mathematics often lead to art being
considered a subject which is nice but not necessary.
Children need art. They need to think it, feel it, and see it. Pablo Picasso once
said, Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once he
grows up. Artistic behavior is an inherent characteristic in children. For
children, art is a natural means of expression and communication. For most
individuals, a life void of arts participation seems abnormal. Besides being a
naturally occurring behavior in children, research has proven that the arts
provide an invaluable source for brain development by provoking learners
with the opportunity to examine the world more carefully, and develop new
knowledge outside of what is handed down through textbooks. (Jensen,
2001)
By depriving our young students of art education, we are depriving
them of a natural tool and resource which is already ingrained in them. So,
how do educators overcome the issue of providing art education? One way is
to use an art integration approach to learning, particularly using artwork and
artistic practice within the writing curriculum.