Category Archives: Arts Education

BOSTON HERALD: Tight quarters in performing arts school

In this Boston Herald article, Erica Moura discusses the lack of space for classrooms, storage, and other necessities at Boston Arts Academy, the only high school in Boston dedicated to the visual and performing arts.  With 420 students, BAA has little room available for rehearsal space, classrooms, or the storage of arts equipment.  Read the article HERE.

The Bay State Banner: Company One Raises the Curtain for Student Jobs

Company One is featured in an article in The Bay State Banner for our Stage One program. The article highlights the apprenticeship program in addition to our programs in local Boston area schools. It also talks about the work the students do as well as the impact the program is having on those who participate. Read the article here.

Boston Globe: Op-Ed Letter

This op-ed in the Boston Globe calls for expanded buildings for Boston Arts Academy under the leadership of a superintendent who supports arts education in schools. Read the op-ed here. Full text is below:

THE NEW Walsh administration and the School Committee desperately need to hire a school superintendent who is a strong advocate for the arts as essential to the educational success of young people. One very visible way for the city to show its commitment to the arts would be to fully endorse an expanded new facility for the Boston Arts Academy, the city’s high-performing public school for the arts that has excelled in spite of its dilapidated facilities.

For over a decade, advocates for arts education, including parents, teachers, administrators, and the presidents of the six major arts colleges in Boston, have worked hard to fulfill a vision of a school for the arts that rivals those in major cities across the nation and is worthy of Boston as a cultural and educational center. Now is the time to make it happen.

Kay Sloan

President emerita

Massachusetts College of Art and Design

Boston

 

American Theatre Magazine: The Technical Answer

An American Theatre Magazine article, The Technical Answer, talks about the advances in technology in theatre and how (or if) we are training the next generation of theatre makers in this new technology. Jared Mezzocchi (Astro Boy and the God of Comics) is interviewed in the article and talks about the multimedia class he teaches at the University of Maryland. Read the article here.

HowlRound: Taking the Drama Out of High School

On HowlRound, Jack Serio’s essay, Taking the Drama Out of High School, talks in depth about the unwillingness of high schools across the country to do plays that feature so-called “controversial” themes for fear of offending anyone. Therefore, it leads to high schools producing the same plays and musicals over and over again with content that is more than likely not relevant to what they’re experiencing in their lives. I think this is extremely relevant to how we engage with high schoolers that we interact with through our programs and shows at C1. Read the full article here. This article is a part of a larger HowlRound series called School Days.

Boston Globe: Boston Schools Need a Superintendent with an Arts Background

This Boston Globe article highlights how essential it is for the future superintendent of Boston Public Schools to support the arts by alloting finances and instructional time for the programs. Also, Orchard Gardens, a K-8 school in Roxbury, made arts education a priority, and over the past three years, the children have excelled academically. Full text is below.

After much anticipation, Boston Mayor Marty Walsh has begun to make key appointments in his new administration. One of the most important positions that remains open is that of school superintendent. Technically, it is the school committee that hires a superintendent. But the mayor (who appoints the school committee) has tremendous influence. In choosing a new superintendent, Walsh and the Boston School Committee should seek someone with a strong background in arts education, someone who will make arts a priority in the city’s schools, both in terms of funding and classroom time.

Arts education — despite postrecession cutbacks nationwide — is not a luxury but a necessity, as important as reading and math. Recent studies as well as evidence from arts programs already in place in Boston have shown that underperforming students improve across the disciplines when they are enrolled in some kind of arts education — theater, dance, visual arts, music, etc.

Perhaps the most dramatic example is the Orchard Gardens school in Roxbury. The school (grades K-8) was one of the worst in the state, beset not only by poor test scores but by violence. Ironically, when Orchard Gardens was created as a pilot school in 2003, its facilities included a dance studio, visual arts studios, a theater, and a band room. But by 2010, the dance studio was reportedly being used for storage and the band instruments were mostly untouched. That is, until a new principal, Andrew Bott, took over. He fired all the security guards, and used that money to reinstitute a broad-based arts program.

The results: Three years later, Orchard Gardens has catapulted essentially from worst to best, producing some of the strongest MCAS test scores in the state. In September, Governor Deval Patrick — who boasted about the school at the 2012 Democratic National Convention — visited the students to congratulate them on their improvement.

Orchard Gardens is not an isolated case. A 2012 report from the National Endowment for the Arts, entitled “The Arts and Achievement in At-Risk Youth,” concluded that students “who have arts-rich experiences in school do better across-the-board academically, and they also become more active and engaged citizens, voting, volunteering, and generally participating at higher rates than their peers.” These words echo Patrick’s comments about the students at Orchard Gardens: “They’re doing really well on the MCAS, but they’re not focused on the MCAS in classroom . . . They’re focused on the love of learning. They’re focused on the puzzle solving and problem solving.”

Granted, as a designated Level 4 “turnaround” school, Orchard Gardens was part of a targeted program that called for longer school hours and bulked-up programs in athletics as well as arts. But the arts were a cornerstone.

Arts education isn’t simply about some vague notion of “creativity.” Nor is it about raising a generation of artists (though worse things could happen). It’s about learning a skill involving discipline and practice. It’s a way of thinking and — as the NEA and Governor Patrick cited — a way of being engaged.

Years ago when I was teaching freshman writing at a local college, a group of my colleagues asked the eminent Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson what was most important in generating ideas. Much to our surprise, he didn’t talk about field observations or statistical studies. Instead he said that all new ideas begin with metaphor — defined, simply, as that which is symbolic of something else. Metaphor is the key building block of all art. As Wilson used the word, it was not as a way to explain an idea, but a way to have one. And, clearly, art is another way to have an idea.

The arts were a big part of Walsh’s campaign. His closest campaign adviser, Joyce Linehan, who comes from an arts background as both a publicist and music industry professional, is now his chief of policy. This point of view is promising. But what’s important now is that Walsh and his administration maintain the courage of their convictions. As Walsh has reiterated, the arts are crucial to the health of the city. As such, they’re also crucial to the health of the city’s schoolchildren.

Read the article here.