How the arts deepen students thinking



There was a great article in last week’s Boston Globe.

The authors – Ellen Winner and Lois Hetland – dismiss the idea that arts education produces higher test scores. While it’s true, they say, that students who are involved in the arts do better in school and on the SAT, it’s not about the test scores. Their own research found no evidence that arts training is what’s causing scores to rise. The correlation is not the cause.

They argue that there are many reasons to teach art but that raising test scores is not one of them. Their research in Boston-area schools found that quality arts program teach a critical set of intellectual habits and skills that are rarely addressed in the other areas of the curriculum. They are critical because they have been identified as crucial to the students future development as thinkers and people.

Specifically the habits and skills taught and developed in the arts but rarely elsewhere include:

Developing artistic craft – Students learn the specific skills of different kinds of art.

Persistence – Students in good programs work on projects for extended periods of time and persevere through frustration.

Expression – Students are urged to move beyond technical skill to create works that express emotion, atmosphere, and their own voice and vision.

Making connections – Students are constantly asked to find links between the classroom and the real world outside, past and present.

Observing – Visual arts students are trained to look more carefully and objectively at the world and get past their preconceptions.

Envisioning – Students are taught to form mental images and use them to guide actions and solve problems.

Innovating through exploration – Arts classes put a high value on breaking the mold – experimenting, taking risks, or just mucking around to see what can be learned.

Reflective self-evaluation – Arts classes are not a break from thinking, as many believe, but involve heavy-duty nonverbal and verbal thinking. Good art teachers push their students to engage in reflective self-evaluation, step back, analyze, judge, and sometimes re-conceive their projects, asking questions like, “Is that working? Is this what I intended to do? Can I make this better? What’s next?”

They write: “It is well established that intelligence and thinking ability are far more complex than what we choose to measure on standardized tests…. They reveal little about a student’s intellectual depth or desire to learn, and are poor predictors of eventual success and satisfaction in life.”

The authors spent a year studying five visual-arts classrooms, videotaping and photographing classes, analyzing what we saw, and interviewing teachers and their students.

They found that the skills taught in arts classes taught “a remarkable array of mental habits not emphasized elsewhere in school.” These skills include visual-spatial abilities, reflection, self-criticism, and the willingness to experiment and learn from mistakes.

: “We don’t need the arts in our schools to raise mathematical and verbal skills,” conclude Winner and Hetland. “We already target these in math and language arts. We need the arts because in addition to introducing students to aesthetic appreciation, they teach other modes of thinking we value.”

Winner is a professor of psychology at Boston College and Hetland is an associate professor of art education at the Massachusetts College of Art. Both are also researchers at Project Zero at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
“Art for Art’s Sake”
by Ellen Winner and Lois Hetland in The Boston Globe, September 2, 2007.

Comments

  1. I really feel Arts education for k-12 in the USA is a waste of time.
    Arts education may help develop thinking abilities but it is simply not considered when applying to most Universitys (non-art univ’s).
    If someone took 4 years of high school art universities frown on that they would rather the person took additional math, science, programming, etc courses for those years instead.
    The primary goal for students is to get into the best university they can and sadly arts education just is not going to help.

  2. Who said the primary goal for students is to get into the best university?

    Do you really believe they “frown” on it? Do you have evidence for that? Do you think art is a waste of time?

    What is the “best” university?
    Really good colleges love the arts and know what a difference they make.

    I can’t tell whether you think that it is something inevitable and to be regretted. Or something that is a good thing.

  3. Maybe you didn’t read the research. Kids who study art do BETTER on the SAT. (Universities don’t care about SATs any more?) But the art is not the cause.

  4. I understand that yes art may not help with learning math or English but it is a way to separate a child from another. Colleges are looking less at sat scores and more on a Childs extracurricular and their hobbies. Some schools have children graded on art which is ridiculous a child should be able to express themselves freely and have a way to escape from the pressure of looking for a college and school work. Art can help develop the brain in which will help the child to connect more to the outside world and not just in the classroom. What is more important knowing all of the facts or being able to understand what you are learning and applying it?

  5. Wow! What a group of comments. I am amazed at what the first person wrote. Unfortunately he/she has not truly been able to create art or see the benefits of it in himself or in others.

    The arts are far more than what scores they can help you achieve. (And in the long run, they can.) They are even more than being able to give you freedom of expression. (Which of course they do.) They are also a catalyst to make better people, better workers, better contributors to society. Innovation, perseverance, hard work, curiosity… THESE are just a few of the things you learn as you study the arts.

    Isn’t that the root of what Winner and Hetland are saying here? ANYone looking for someone to work with or for them, would appreciate those skills.

    Let’s continue this conversation in 2010 –
    What are your thoughts on Arts Education??

  6. Hi Josie,
    I really liked your blog post about how the arts improve student’s thinking. I really enjoy trying to take all the arts classes that I can! I think that your post is really interesting and I agree with it.
    -Stella

  7. Josie,
    I love your post about the arts! I think that it’s a really interesting topic. This interests me so much because the middle school just improved their arts. I think that if students can choose their arts they will be a lot more expressive because they are doing what they love.
    –Anni

  8. Hi Anni:
    Glad you enjoyed the post. I think the Arts are crucial and have to be a big part of the curriculum. they build self – expression and communication and teach so many very important intellectual skills. Some people think that the arts are a break from academics. I don’t see it that way. They can certainly be a contrast but the arts teach all kinds of skills that are really important for all subjects. To give one example – taking risks and trying something new.
    - Josie

  9. Hi Josie!
    I think that arts do not always improve test scores in math and science. Arts can help you draw geometrical shapes and can help with science observations but will not help analyzing data or doing math problems.

    I think that art classes are great because you can learn about arts and can draw. I strongly disagree with the first person who commented and said art is a waste of time. I would like to know why he/she said that. Currently, I take two art classes. One is drawing. The other is media. In media we write and shoot movies. I do not think those classes are a waste of time. You can express yourself with the arts. You can learn more about things when you represent them in the arts. I enjoy drawing and painting.
    John M.

Trackbacks

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  12. Renee Pena says:

    RT @JosieHolford: Teaching the arts does NOT raise test scores. So why do we persist on spending time and money on them? http://is.gd/feZ7T

  13. RT @JosieHolford: Teaching the arts does NOT raise test scores. So why do we persist on spending time and money on them? http://is.gd/feZ7T

  14. JosieHolford says:

    RT @outgirlbox: RT @JosieHolford: Teaching the arts does NOT raise test scores. So why do we persist on spending time and money on them? http://is.gd/feZ7T

  15. anderscj says:

    RT @JosieHolford: Teaching the arts does NOT raise test scores. So why do we persist on spending time and money on them? http://is.gd/feZ7T

  16. RT @outgirlbox: RT @JosieHolford: Teaching the arts does NOT raise test scores. So why do we persist on spending time and money on them? http://is.gd/feZ7T

  17. RT @JosieHolford: Teaching the arts does NOT raise test scores. So why do we persist on spending time and money on them? http://is.gd/feZ7T

  18. @erickb Teaching the arts doesn't raise test scores…why have art? http://is.gd/feZ7T thanx @JosieHolford

  19. RT @aenclade: @erickb Teaching the arts doesn't raise test scores…why have art? http://is.gd/feZ7T thanx @JosieHolford

  20. RT @JosieHolford Teaching the arts does NOT raise test scores. So why do we persist on spending time and money on them? http://is.gd/feZ7T

  21. Crucial learning skills can be achieved through the study of the arts. http://t.co/6oa2v1jX

  22. JosieHolford says:

    Crucial learning skills can be achieved through the study of the arts. http://t.co/6oa2v1jX