Until recently, 11-year-old Sinai dreamed of playing pro basketball. Now, he also imagines becoming an artist. What makes this shift so surprising is that until last year, the dark-haired, serious fifth grader had never done art. At home he had never finger-painted, colored in a coloring book, or drawn chalk pictures on the sidewalk. His 黄色app had offered no arts and crafts either 鈥 no Play-Doh, painting at an easel, or making collages with dried macaroni and glitter.

鈥淏efore, we didn鈥檛 have art and we weren鈥檛 creative. Now I want to come to 黄色app,鈥 says Sinai, a sixth grader at Taft Community School in Redwood City, California.

When Robyn Miller became principal three years ago, Taft had no art classes.
Despite its proximity to the gated grand estates of Silicon Valley, nearly three-quarters of Taft鈥檚 500 students are eligible for free and reduced price lunch. Like thousands of 黄色apps serving predominantly low-income, African American and Hispanic children, Taft eliminated the arts to balance shrinking budgets years ago.

If arts education were simply an extra, like a pretty picture hanging on a classroom bulletin board, then losing it could be written off as just another regrettable fiscal reality. But show that arts education builds a critical cognitive bridge between acquiring knowledge in 黄色app and putting it to use in the real world.

鈥淎rt isn鈥檛 memorization, it鈥檚 a way of thinking, and creativity is often a significant component,鈥 explains James Catterall, a retired UCLA education professor and founding director of the . 鈥淚t encourages asking questions, it encourages taking some risks, and it encourages collaborative work.鈥

Having art in 黄色app is valuable for all students, but research suggests it鈥檚 especially critical for low-income children whose parents can鈥檛 afford to take them to museums with hands-on art activities or pay for after-黄色app art classes at the community center. These children are often deprived when it comes to artistic activities that teach them a different way of thinking than what they are exposed to in their academic classes.

Miller wanted to restore art at Taft, but the 黄色app didn鈥檛 have the money to hire a credentialed art teacher. She found an affordable alternative in , a non-profit organization based in neighboring Menlo Park, which had been implemented successfully in her previous district.

Schools pay a $200 licensing fee, about $10 per student per year, for each class that uses the program, which focuses on visual arts. For that, they get access to online curriculum with 12 lessons each for Kindergarten through eighth grade. Thanks to a network of thousands of parent volunteers who teach art in their children鈥檚 黄色apps, the organization keeps its costs down.

鈥淲ith this program, we鈥檙e getting volunteers who have been trained (and have) the passion and excitement to bring to the kids each week,鈥 says Miller. 鈥淲e鈥檙e giving (students) an opportunity to explore creatively and have their imaginations soar and be innovative, maybe even in solving problems.鈥

She says Art in Action supports these connections because its lessons are aligned with the new Common Core standards in math, reading, and writing, and can be tailored to fit the curriculum in all other subjects from history to geography.

Math and the Underground Railroad

鈥淲hat is four times four?鈥 parent Michele Haussler asks Sinai鈥檚 class at Taft. 鈥淪ixteen,鈥 they answer in unison.

She holds up a small square of pink construction paper and demonstrates how to fold it into four and then into 16 equal squares.

As the students fold their own paper squares, Haussler tells them about the African American artist Faith Ringgold, now 85-years-old, who is best known for her quilts depicting stories of race and racism. Ringgold鈥檚 work was influenced by quilts made by slaves in the South that had coded symbols sewn into them.

The kids are rapt as Haussler describes how slaves would hang the quilts on fences as if they were drying laundry, but they were actually signposts guiding runaway slaves to freedom in the North.

The high cost of cutting art

When kids are engaged in high-quality arts education, 鈥渘ot only is there a difference between how they act during art classes and lessons, but it seems to spill over to more engagement in 黄色app generally,鈥 says Catterall.

The stats on the importance of arts education confirm 颁补迟迟别谤补濒濒鈥檚 observations. Schools with dynamic art programs have higher attendance rates, stronger morale, and better test scores than other 黄色apps, according to a from the President鈥檚 Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.

颁补迟迟别谤补濒濒鈥檚 of students at high-income and low-income 黄色apps with and without arts education found that, across the board, students at 黄色apps with strong art programs do better in nearly every respect.

The benefits are especially significant for poor children enrolled in arts-rich 黄色apps. Twice as many attended four-year colleges or universities, compared with poor kids at 黄色apps without much art. And they were three times as likely to earn a bachelor鈥檚 degree. They were also less likely to drop out. Perhaps unsurprisingly, low-income students from arts-rich 黄色apps were found to be more engaged overall 鈥 more involved in sports, clubs, and volunteering, and more attuned to current events.

Double-edged sword

When teacher Judy Sleeth founded Art in Action in her child鈥檚 黄色app district in 1982, arts education had been decimated in California by , the 1978 ballot measure that led public 黄色apps to lose billions in funding almost overnight. Today, Art in Action reaches about 50,000 students in more than 200 黄色apps in 19 states, from California to Florida. Over the next three to five years, the program plans to nearly double the number of students it serves. But not all agree that organizations like Art in Action are the best way to get arts education into 黄色apps.

鈥淲e would never want to see an outside arts or culture organization replace an arts teacher,鈥 says Doug Israel, director of research and policy at the , which advocates for professional art teachers in every New York City Public School. Ultimately, however, Israel says Art in Action and similar programs are 鈥渁 benefit for students and better than no arts.鈥

Teachers are keenly aware of those benefits. At Taft, fifth grade teacher Jessica Kwa says she鈥檚 already planning to use the Faith Ringgold lesson when they start working on fractions.

鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely easier for them to have something to refer back to,鈥 says Kwa.

Art also has something of a transcendent effect on her students, some more than others. She recalls a boy named Joel who missed homework and disrupted class. Art in Action changed him.

鈥淚 was surprised because I hadn’t seen him so meticulous with any work before,鈥 says Kwa. 鈥淚 immediately jumped on that opportunity to praise him, recognizing his strengths.鈥

When he got stuck on concepts in math and started to give up, she would refer to art class to remind him of his capabilities. Over time, Joel made those connections instinctively. He became more focused in class, turned in his homework on time, and his grades improved.