At the , the 鈥攁 canvas spanning 11 feet that features a flamenco dancer鈥攊s a popular starting point for getting students to spend time with a work of art.
But viewing and discussing the 1882 piece by the American artist John Singer Sargent isn鈥檛 just a cultural experience. It also presents a powerful opportunity to tap into some of the same skills asked of students under the Common Core State Standards, said Michelle A. Grohe, the director of school and teacher programs at the museum, which has a close partnership with four Boston public schools.
鈥淲hen one of our schools is focusing on 鈥榗lose鈥 readings, to read an excerpt of text and describe the main idea and provide supporting evidence or details, that is very similar to what we do with the visual arts,鈥 she said.
As educators nationwide seek to help students meet the demands of the common core in English/language arts and mathematics, many arts education advocates are making the case that the arts can be a valuable partner. And in some cases, they鈥檙e identifying ways to make the links explicit.
鈥淭here are a lot of natural connections,鈥 said Susan M. Riley, a curriculum specialist with the 77,000-student Anne Arundel County district in Maryland, where part of her job is to work with teams across all academic departments on implementing the new standards. 鈥淚 see the common core as a great platform for the arts to really rise and share their importance in the educational fabric of a school.鈥
Seeing Connections
Ms. Riley, who has a background in arts integration, said her district is developing resources to help teachers make classroom connections between the common core and other disciplines, including the arts. One lesson she created on her own asks students to read a passage from Robinson Crusoe and examine illustrations for the book by the artist N.C. Wyeth.
In New York City, the school system is developing a set of arts-focused instructional units that 鈥渨ill be very explicit鈥 in their alignment with the common core, said Paul King, the executive director for the arts in the 1.1 million-student district. He cites an elementary dance unit on the Underground Railroad and a high school theater lesson that involves producing an original monologue.
鈥淲e鈥檙e working very deeply with arts teachers鈥 on the common core, Mr. King said. 鈥淗ow do they engage in good discussion? What are good inquiry questions? What is good writing in the arts? And how do you do that without sacrificing the artmaking?鈥
One regular cultural partner with the New York City schools, the nonprofit ArtsConnection, got a $1.1 million federal grant in 2010 to connect theater and dance with the new English/language arts standards, with a focus on developing and documenting interdisciplinary units of study and formative-assessment practices.
The 鈥楪reat News鈥
The new standards are also getting significant attention at arts education conferences and workshops.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very much on the radar screen鈥 of the arts education community, said Sandra S. Ruppert, the director of the Washington-based Arts Education Partnership. 鈥淭he common core clearly is the big education reform game-changer right now.鈥
In September, the advocacy group Americans for the Arts hosted a weeklong 鈥渂log salon,鈥 where about a dozen experts explored and debated the standards, and in some cases, offered ideas on how to connect them with the arts.
Embracing the common core may be something of a survival strategy for the arts in schools, some experts suggest, given how much time, energy, and resources districts and schools are devoting to the standards.
鈥淎 lot of people in the arts have been worried, 鈥極h gosh, we鈥檙e just going to get lost in the sea of the common core,鈥 鈥 said Kristen Engebretsen, an arts education program coordinator at Americans for the Arts, based in Washington. 鈥淏ut if you walk into the principal鈥檚 office and say, 鈥楬ey, I can connect this to the common core,鈥 you鈥檙e going to get their ear.鈥
Meanwhile, a new set of voluntary national standards for arts education is being developed by leaders in the field. Organizers say they鈥檙e working to ensure strong and clear alignment between that document and the common core.
The common standards, adopted by all but four states in English/language arts and all but five in math, embody some potentially big changes to instruction in many public schools. Although arts educators say the standards in both subjects have strong potential for arts infusion, the appear to be drawing more attention so far.
After the weeklong Americans for the Arts blog salon wrapped up, David Coleman, a lead writer of the English/language arts standards, wrote a .
He started by outlining some of the critical components of the English/language arts standards: building knowledge through reading, writing, listening, and speaking, with a focus on 鈥渉igh-quality source material"; engaging in careful observation in reading; and basing analysis of a text or work of art on evidence.
鈥淭he great news is that the standards call on so many things the arts do well,鈥 wrote Mr. Coleman, who this fall became the president of the College Board. 鈥淭he tradition of careful observation, attention to evidence and artists鈥 choices, the love of taking an artist鈥檚 work seriously lies at the heart of these standards.鈥
Mr. Coleman said curricular materials in the arts that seek to align with the common core 鈥渘eed to shift to embrace these core shifts鈥 in the standards. He suggests that the 鈥渘ext generation of arts materials鈥 should examine fewer works of art more closely, look for and share 鈥渢he most magnificent things written about the arts at higher levels of text complexity,鈥 and pay 鈥渟pecial attention to the choices artists make when students are observing or making art.鈥
Careful analysis of specific scenes in drama, he added, provides a 鈥減articularly promising opportunity to explore at once textual evidence and visual interpretation.鈥
The ELA standards make explicit reference to disciplines across the curriculum, suggesting that literacy should be a schoolwide endeavor. A separate section for grades 6-12 even outlines standards for literacy in science, social studies/history, and technical subjects.
Some arts experts lament that the section did not specify the arts. But the standards do touch on the arts, including drama, illustrations, and drawing.
A variety of resources have been developed to help schools and teachers connect the arts with the Common Core State Standards.
This 55-page document from the nonprofit group Common Core suggests many arts-infused lessons, with references to specific English/language arts standards.
Developed by the nonprofit Expeditionary Learning and the Harvard Graduate School of Education, this website has collected a large set of exemplary project-based student work, much with a strong arts dimension. For each, it indicates relevant common-core math and English/language arts standards (as well as other state standards).
This weeklong 鈥渂log salon,鈥 hosted in September by Americans for the Arts, brought together about a dozen experts to weigh in on the common core and the arts. They explore the new standards and, in some cases, offer both conceptual and practical advice on how to bring them together.
For instance, an 8th grade reading standard says students should analyze the extent to which a filmed or live production of a story or drama stays faithful to or strays from the text or script, evaluating the choices made by the director or actors. A 2nd grade writing standard says to use 鈥渁 combination of drawing, writing, and dictating鈥 to compose informative or explanatory texts.
A 3rd grade standard says to 鈥渆xplain how specific aspects of a text鈥檚 illustrations contribute to what is conveyed by the words in a story (e.g., create mood, emphasize aspects of a character or setting).鈥
An appendix to the standards that features suggested 鈥渢ext exemplars鈥 includes ample examples of drama, but also a volume on art history and The Illustrated Book of Great Composers.
Robinson Crusoe
The use of illustrations alongside text is part of the lesson from Daniel Defoe鈥檚 Robinson Crusoe that Ms. Riley of Anne Arundel County developed.
鈥淎fter reading the text and having a rich, deep discussion鈥 about its meaning, 鈥渢hen you take a look at the traditional illustrations,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hat techniques were used? Shadings of light and dark. What does that mean? Really delving into that artwork.鈥
She added, 鈥淵ou鈥檙e looking at whether or not they are able to closely read a piece of text, but also a piece of art, and whether or not they can understand perspective and how it changes, based on how it is written or portrayed.鈥
The district also has produced materials to help teachers integrate the arts with common-core math concepts. A one-pager for 4th grade鈥攆eaturing hyperlinks to math standards and state arts standards鈥攕erves up many examples. For instance, it suggests for operations and algebraic thinking that students 鈥渃ompose and analyze melodic and rhythmic patterns鈥 or 鈥渃reate a movement pattern and then depict it through drawing.鈥
At the Integrated Arts Academy at H.O. Wheeler, a magnet school in Burlington, Vt., a 4th grade unit brings together study of the painter Wassily Kandinsky and his abstract work with geometric concepts. Students identify various angles in the Russian鈥檚 work, then create their own art inspired by his approach and label the types of angles they use.
At Genesee Community Charter School in Rochester, N.Y., which has long embraced arts integration, teachers find natural fits with the common core.
鈥淯sing art as text, we鈥檙e teaching children to look at art or movement or listen to music and derive meaning from it,鈥 whether a 鈥渇amous painting or through watching 鈥楽wan Lake鈥 or singing Erie Canal [folk] songs,鈥 said Principal Lisa A. Wing. The school also looks at 鈥渦sing the arts as a vehicle of expression, the communication side of the common core, and knowing how to create artwork that creates a message and that conveys details,鈥 she said.
The nonprofit organization Common Core includes more than 100 arts-infused activities in a set of detailed 鈥渃urriculum maps鈥 for the English/language arts standards that it created to help educators, said Lynne Munson, the president and executive director of the Washington-based group. It developed a separate, 55-page document that pulls out those examples to show where English/language arts instruction 鈥渃ould be enhanced鈥 by the arts.
The lesson ideas are intended for use either by English teachers or arts teachers, or in collaboration. They draw on a vast array of material, including paintings by Vincent Van Gogh, Georgia O鈥橩eeffe, and the Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai, and music as diverse as that of Mozart, Bob Dylan, and a Duke Ellington-Irving Mills collaboration.
鈥楴ot Just Any Painting鈥
, Ms. Munson said that 鈥渨orks of art can, indeed should, be 鈥榬ead鈥 in a very similar way to a poem by Shakespeare or a speech by Winston Churchill.鈥
But she cautioned that any such activities should be done 鈥渋n addition to (not instead of) teaching the arts for their own sake.鈥
The key to such close reading is 鈥渋n selecting works of art that are of sufficient quality to serve as a basis for asking the kind of text-dependent questions called for by the [common core],鈥 Ms. Munson, a deputy chairwoman of the National Endowment for the Arts under President George W. Bush, said in an email. 鈥淣ot just any painting, photo, film, or piece of music will do.鈥
She also highlights the potential of the arts in grappling with the standards for speaking and listening.
Ms. Riley said high-quality arts-infused lessons require careful planning and collaboration between arts educators and regular classroom teachers. 鈥淭his is the only way to ensure integrity in both aligning the standards and in their execution and application,鈥 she said.
In Boston, the Gardner Museum鈥檚 school partnership program brings students to the facility twice a year to view and discuss art. Teachers also get professional development so they can facilitate further lessons on their own at school.
Ms. Grohe says the painting 鈥淓l Jaleo鈥 is a great starting place for students.
鈥淭here鈥檚 so much to talk about,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he movement. How characters are interacting, the lighting.鈥
The museum鈥檚 approach is guided by a teaching method called Visual Thinking Strategies, which aims to provide an open-ended group discussion that invites students to share what they鈥檙e observing.
When students first encounter a piece of art, they are asked to spend a few minutes looking silently at the image, Ms. Grohe said. Their guide begins by asking what鈥檚 going on in the artwork. As students share impressions, they are asked, 鈥淲hat makes you say that?"鈥攁 question that directly ties to multiple common-core standards for evidentiary reasoning in both English/language arts and math, she said.
A third question, Ms. Grohe said, is 鈥淲hat more can we find?鈥
By spending 15 to 20 minutes at a time with one work of art, 鈥渢he students learn to slow down and look carefully, attention skills that also are used when grappling with new or unfamiliar text, math equations, or problems,鈥 she said.
鈥淚nstead of sharing what we have learned with students, we basically flip it,鈥 Ms. Grohe explained. 鈥淲e take a very open-ended approach and ask students what they see and what meanings and connections they can come up with.鈥