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Exploring the Benefits of Art
in Elementary Education
Ashley Flory
Beneficial Art. I have always felt that I have
had some connection to art on some level,
since I was a child. I can remember trying to
prolong art assignments in elementary school
for as long as I could. I preferred not to go on
to math or social studies because I would
rather spend my time working on art and
creating something that I was truly satisfied
with and proud of. Frequently I would not
entirely complete art assignments and I would
feel slightly uncomfortable about them being
displayed on the classroom wall. I am sure
that to my teachers and the majority of my
fellow students art time was merely that, a
brief period of art lasting no more than
twenty-five minutes and when it was done it
was done, but I longed for it to last an entire
day or more.
Being exposed to art often throughout my
college experience has really made me come
to understand that there are many positive
outcomes possible. Younger children are
typically more apt to enjoy drawing and
coloring and are usually not resistant to being
exposed to art. From the time that children
are barely beginning to go to school the use of
art materials helps them to become more
aware of and comfortable with their
surroundings, both physically and mentally.
I worry that art is disappearing from too
many classrooms, particularly outside of the
younger grades in elementary school. I
observed in a fourth grade classroom for two
months in which there was no art instruction,
and its absence was horrible. I know that art
can enhance children’s learning and for many
children can provide a healthy outlet from
traditional teaching methods as it did for me.
Art is not a component of the state
standardized tests that are given every year
and so it is vanishing from the classroom.
Art in the elementary classroom has great
beneficial effects on student learning by
stimulating the multiple intelligences present
in a typical group of students. Art activities
can serve as a bridge to understanding for
students; in addition, art has the potential to
act as therapy for students with emotional
issues. During early development, students
who have difficulty verbalizing ideas can use
art as an alternative way to express
themselves. With the current emphasis on
standardization and high stakes testing, art has
lost a place in the curriculum, to the
disservice of the students emotionally and
cognitively. Unfortunately, a typical
classroom teaches primarily to visual and
auditory learners while leaving others by the
wayside. Effective use of art in the classroom
can bridge learning across all of the multiple
intelligences and benefit all types of learners.
The multiple intelligences tend to be
neglected in a typical classroom environment.
Linguistic and visual learners tend to be the
students that thrive best in a traditional
classroom environment. If curricula only
address those two intelligences a great
percentage of students are placed at a
disadvantage. Art in the classroom can be
used to bridge instruction to many of the less
frequently addressed intelligences. The
bodily/kinesthetic learner can be reached
through performance. Musical learners can
create songs for concepts or work to a beat.
Most of all, though, art in the classroom
makes learning more fun and therefore more
meaningful to students.
Students Need Art. This project originated
from my observations in various elementary
level classrooms. I noticed that in higher
grade levels art tended to be less utilized than
in lower grades. From my personal viewpoint
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it seemed that this deficiency was detrimental
to the learning environment. I found that
students who had difficulty expressing
themselves verbally or through writing could
express themselves magnificently through
illustration. This was particularly evident at
the kindergarten level. Over the past three
years I have done over one hundred hours of
observation in elementary classrooms and
have noticed the effectiveness of art in
instruction. My goal is to examine the
importance of this neglected area of
education.
The following paper is organized into
three main sections. In the first section I will
discuss how art helps bridge understanding of
difficult subjects. Next I will discuss how No
Child Left Behind (NCLB) has crippled the
art curriculum to the detriment of students.
Therefore, in this project, described in the
third section, I will show how young students
can use art to express themselves as an
alternative to verbalization.
Wise Eisner. Thus far in my research, I have
found a considerable amount of evidence to
suggest that art’s influence on children helps
them to better succeed academically. There is
definitely a correlation between students’
involvement with art and their overall
academic success. There are many important
elements of a child’s cognitive development
that are enhanced by art. Elliot Eisner, a
major advocate for the arts, created a set of
examples of the importance of including art in
schools called: Ten Reasons to Teach Art.
These reasons are listed in Eisner’s book
entitled The Arts and the Creation of Mind
(2002). One of the most important reasons
listed is one that states: “The arts teach
children to make good judgments about
qualitative relationships. Unlike most of the
curriculum in which correct answers and rules
prevail, in the arts it is judgment rather than
rules that prevail” (Eisner, 2002). This is
undoubtedly one of the biggest life lessons of
all and it can be well taught through art.
Instilling this quality in children at a young
age will help them in becoming more
successful adults. Being able to make good
judgments is an essential life skill as it is
necessary in the workforce, the home and in
society in general. Having the ability to use
good judgment lends itself to good decision
making. Art has the ability to teach essential
life lessons and so it too should be an
essential subject at all levels of education.
Elliot Eisner has long been recognized for
his role not only as a teacher, but also as an
advocate for the inclusion of arts in education.
I think that what I learned most from Eisner’s
ten criteria as a whole is that they help to
show how students have the ability to attain
success not only inside the classroom, but in
the world as well. Leaving art out of the
curriculum only has the potential to hurt
students’ chances later in life.
Art as presented by Eisner seems to
improve the social attitudes of children.
Opening the idea of creativeness and
alternativeness to a child allows for greater
levels of acceptance and understanding. I
think that it is important for students to know
that not everyone thinks exactly alike and that
alternative approaches to a problem are a
good thing. Students will come with their
own mix of learning patterns which can either
be accepted or regarded as incorrect ways of
thinking.
Absence of Art Encourages Standardization.
As teachers we are not raising robots. NCLB
assessment is a means of molding students
into standard, diligent, and ultimately
unthinking individuals. If we do not embrace
the teachings of Eisner and take into
consideration the benefits of incorporating art
we are only setting students up for failure.
Allowing for multiple perspectives early in
education helps promote understanding and
acceptance of others while also helping to
create a desire to learn. I do not think that it
is healthy for teachers and students to have to
fear the classroom because of the current
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mandates that are in place. While the
problem of NCLB has yet to be solved, it is
still important to take into consideration the
positive outcomes of integrating art with
every other subject.
Recently I have learned one major benefit
that art provides. Initially when I first became
interested in this subject, I felt that I wanted
to describe art as a form of communication.
When I watch a Kindergartener draw or paint
or create in any way through art, there is
something that happens that does not ever
happen with any other class activity. It is like
witnessing a surge of creativeness; art seems
to come more naturally for young children.
At the age of only four or five years old, most
students are not very advanced in their writing
ability. However, with art, children are able
to communicate without having to be very
proficient writers. If they can successfully
communicate something through art they will
be more inclined to want to learn how to
communicate that same message through
writing. Art stimulates their minds and
encourages them. This can probably be
traced back to the fact that there are no
defined rules with art; there are no guidelines.
You cannot draw something the wrong size or
paint something the wrong color and kids are
very accepting of art because art is accepting
of them.
Deborah West, an elementary school
teacher, discusses art as a language in her
article “An Arts Education.” She suggests we
view art
as a special kind of language. It may take
the form of language as we know it, as in
a formal critique, or it may be in the form
of visual images. Either way, the language
of art, similar to what Pond stated, is an
effective means of communication. Art
encompasses what is tangible and what is
imagined, thus balancing realistic
representation with abstraction. As artists,
young children need to develop the
symbolic tools of literacy in the visual arts
(West, 2000).
West is explaining something I myself
experienced but always found difficult to
express in words. The way kids could light
up when starting to draw, and the way they
automatically gravitated toward an
engagement with their artwork, was directly
in response to what art generates for them.
Art seems to help the student with their own
comprehension of their surroundings as well
as to communicate their feelings to others.
From my observations, I have collected
student drawings that demonstrate great
artistic ability, but limited writing ability.
Students might not understand the
imaginative and literal interpretations of their
art, but there is actual substance to it. A
student might draw what looks like a tree, but
incorporate unrealistic colors because of their
own preference. Art allows students to
simply express themselves in a medium that is
an alternative to verbal or written
communication.
The proof is in the pudding. When thinking
about the question “Why is it important for
my child to learn about art?” I can imagine all
sorts of arguments for why art should be left
out of the curriculum, but of course know that
none of these arguments are valid. These
arguments exist within the minds of very
ignorant people who probably lacked the
privilege of experiencing art when they were
children themselves. Art is a gateway to other
areas of learning. Through art, children are
exposed to math and science. I know that art
is often overlooked for all the benefits that it
does have simply because people do not
realize what art has to offer. Susan Striker
argues that “We tend to compartmentalize
different subjects and think of art as being
quite separate from writing or mathematics.
Children are learning scientific and
mathematical facts as they work with art
materials; removing or subtracting clay as
they model, adding on when they create
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constructions, experiencing balance as they
build” (Striker, 2001). Art in itself is separate
from other areas in that it is the only subject
that can branch itself out to so many other
subjects that require the very same skills.
However, while there are many similarities
between art and its neighboring subjects, it
should still be regarded as something
completely special all on its own. Art should
be appreciated as it provides so much for
young learners.
Joan Bouza Koster also makes the claim
that art lends itself to other areas of learning.
In her book, Growing Artists: Teaching Art to
Young Children (2005), Koster promotes the
view that “Art and other curriculum areas are
interrelated. Art enhances learning in other
subjects, and activities in other curriculum
areas extend learning in art” (Koster, 2005).
Art truly brings out the best in children as it
opens their minds to everything else around
them. The application of art to other subjects
provides a safety zone for students to fall
back on when they are struggling or to excel
in when they understand. In part due to the
manner in which art is graded and judged,
students are more willing to take chances with
art-inclusive projects when incorporated in
the classroom. Teachers tend to grade art
more leniently and students know this.
Incorporating art across the curriculum can
lower inhibitions and put students more at
ease in particularly challenging subjects.
While art provides another language for
children as well as being applicable to various
other subjects, it also aids in physical
development. Robert Schirrmacher argues
that “Art activities provide experience and
practice in developing and refining gross
motor or large muscle skills. Art involves
physical and manipulative activity. While
easel painting, children use their entire arms
and upper torsos in making large, sweeping
motions with paintbrushes” (Schirrmacher,
1998). Art helps to facilitate muscle
formation. Other forms of art also
incorporate physical activity. Performance art
helps students by engaging their bodily-
kinesthetic learning styles. Increasing
physical activity helps encourage memory
retention as well. When students perform in
the classroom, not only are they developing
physically, but they are also increasing the
chance that they will remember and learn
more effectively.
Art Influences Student Behavior. Students I
observe generally vary in their classroom
performance. Students in classrooms
incorporating frequent art activities tend to
participate more in class. I typically see more
students volunteering to answer questions in
classes that promote art. When art is left out,
the students are generally more reluctant to
answer questions. I think this can be
explained at least partially by some of Elliot
Eisner’s insights. Eisner argues that exposing
kids to multiple perspectives through the use
of art helps them to become more effective
problem solvers. While most subjects heavily
emphasized in schools do not allow for more
than one correct answer, educators still expect
students to answer questions correctly with
ease. However, it has been my observation
that teachers are often too critical of student
answers and some children are genuinely
afraid to ask questions. I believe that in art-
friendly classrooms where multiple
perspectives are presented more openly and
frequently, children are more likely to want to
voice their opinions. Children are likely to be
more productive and have higher success
rates if they are encouraged to participate.
Part of this success can be attributed to good
questioning strategies, but also the inclusion
of art in the classroom places emphasis on the
correctness of multiple perspectives.
Clearly there is an abundance of benefits
to be had by students of all ages. While I
would like to focus on younger children and
their connection to art, I would also like to
emphasize that art should be continued
throughout a student’s schooling. Art
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stimulates the mind, provides a means of
transition to other subjects and builds on
physical development. Art truly serves as a
building block as it leads to a student’s
enhancement in the classroom and later in
life. Exposure to art and artistic expression
contributes to the development of well-
rounded individuals. For this reason, as a
future teacher, I plan to utilize every
opportunity to incorporate and integrate art
into my teaching.
Multiple Intelligences for All. Instruction
based on Howard Gardner’s Theory of
Multiple Intelligences has been a staple in
classrooms for several decades now, but with
the shift towards high-stakes testing, the focus
on Multiple Intelligences has been getting
pushed aside. So much concentration and
emphasis have been given to test-taking skills
and addressing the massive curriculum that
teachers simply cannot take the time to
include any art projects or activities that
might focus on the less-taught intelligences.
These areas are not areas that can be tested
and they are consequently not on any state
tests. Precious instruction time is not
therefore “sacrificed” for some of these
essential areas of understanding and students
are suffering. Because the required
curriculum is so large, teachers are pressured
to move as quickly and efficiently as possible
through the grade-designated material.
Because of this, the arts and consequently
Multiple Intelligences-related instruction are
cut.
Unconventional Experimentation. In one
instance, a school has seen the benefit of
incorporating multiple intelligences into
instruction and applying it to standardized
testing. In one Maryland school, they decided
to incorporate multiple intelligence teaching
practices school wide as a constant tool for
learning. Their results were excellent. Jan
Grenhawk, a teacher at the school notes:
In one year our students’ scores on the
Maryland Performance Assessment rose
by 20 percent. They [the students]
remembered information more accurately
and were confident enough to use it to
solve problems… They demonstrated a
flexible approach to problem solving.
They were taking traditional pencil-and-
paper tests, but using a variety of
strategies to complete them. Even
students whom we did not consider strong
readers or writers were able to use
strategies we taught to write good
answers. (Grenhawk, 1997)
Multiple intelligences strategies that were
taught helped students achieve more than
simple memorization and re-gurgitation;
students learned how to be true problem-
solvers and critical thinkers. The interactive
and varied approaches taken toward education
helped students apply their knowledge on the
standardized state tests. This inclusion,
stressing among other things the importance
of art, allowed students to actually learn
instead of to memorize and forget.
The No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB)
was enacted in 2001 after a strong push from
the Bush Administration. The aim of NCLB
is to make all students show proficiency in
math and reading by 2014. NCLB enforces
standardized testing as a way of assessing
student and school progress. This approach is
criticized by those who believe no single
testing method is ever appropriate for all -- or
that accurate assessment is impossible when a
single measure is emphasized in this manner.
Under NCLB, schools face reprimands when
their students are not performing at
“acceptable” levels. Many students who are
presented with standardized tests are second-
language English learners and may lack the
ability to perform successfully.
In one particular case reported last year,
involving Bailey’s Elementary School for the
Arts and Sciences in Virginia, students were
rated as performing under state standardized
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testing requirements. The teachers and district
administrators for Bailey’s argue that
reformed testing protocols would more
accurately show student achievement levels.
Teachers at Bailey were given district
approval to supplement testing with “work
portfolios” in place of reading tests to assess
their ESL students. The portfolios were given
to a sample of 169 students. Of these
students, 97% passed, meeting federal
academic goals (US News & World Report).
Improper assessment through the
implementation of NCLB seems to indicate
that standardized testing is not effective.
Standardized assessments tend to test only the
basic knowledge aspect of Bloom’s
Taxonomy. None of the higher levels of
learning are really assessed in the process.
This high emphasis on testing is not really
relevant to the real world. Students are not
learning the skills that are needed for entry
into the workforce. Schools are being judged
as in need of improvement when in reality it
is NCLB that needs to be reformed. Students
and teachers alike are suffering. Teachers are
being seen as incompetent and not qualified to
teach their students required skills. They are
forced to modify their teaching in a way that
prepares students for testing. The arts are
regarded as “frill” aspects of the curriculum
and unnecessary.
NCLB claims to be benefiting education
by attempting to help struggling students, but
clearly it is not doing so. Additionally, at the
same time that it is not helping students in
need it is taking away from students who are
viewed as performing above average. Gifted
students are ignored while their fellow
classmates are “helped.” The focus of NCLB
is trying to get failing students to pass
standardized tests and therefore prove that
teachers and schools are competent as a
whole. However, NCLB is only hindering the
school system as well as the students who
depend on it.
Hypocracy of No Child Left Behind. NCLB
has continued to prove that it is not
contributing to the success of our schools. It
is seen as an enemy to many teachers and
future teachers like myself. Schools must
expect the unexpected from their students
since NCLB requires that every student is
passing standardized tests in every category
for their schools to be safe from reprimand. If
a school’s test scores are deemed too low the
school is labeled as underperforming and
further action can be taken if the school does
not improve.
Welcome Diversity. We happen to live in a
country that is full of very diverse individuals.
Many families chose to leave their own
countries in the hopes of finding better
opportunities here in the US. Many students
have not had much previous academic success
due to the conditions of their former school
system. We are supposed to be the welcomed
change and yet for many immigrant families it
must seem like we are perpetuating failure.
Bring on the Tests. An article in NEA
magazine used four schools’ data to show that
NCLB is doing nothing but hurting our
schools and hindering our students. The
standardized testing agenda that comes along
with NCLB is supposedly aimed at helping
students and schools as wholes to progress.
For students at Napa High school in
California, the tests are helping them to fail.
Many students at Napa High are arriving
after leaving their country and culture behind,
speaking their native language. It should not
be expected that these particular students will
easily pass any sort of English proficiency
exam, but it is. Scores of the entire school are
then lowered because students who could
reasonably be expected to fail are failing.
This particular high school has been
honored with awards for student achievement
in dance, music and journalism classes, and
has been deemed a distinguished school.
However, the effort of the school’s teachers
and students is being completely ignored
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when students from foeign countries are being
unfairly tested. Katy Howard is an English
Learner (EL) teacher at Napa High and says
that many of her students come from Mexico
and are tested very early after arriving at the
school. Howard claims “they’re tested too
early. They’re tested the minute they arrive.
Probably 60 percent of my students are not
even proficient in Spanish” (NEA Today
January 2008 issue). It seems ridiculous that
a school that can be recognized as
distinguished and praised for its efforts to
incorporate music, dance and journalism so
effectively can still be labeled as a school in
need of improvement.
When the arts are utilized in the classroom
they can have nothing but positive outcomes.
Creative approaches to teaching have proven
to be more effective than standardized
teaching and testing.
Unfortunately there is a great deal of
political strife involved in the administration
of the education system. I can only hope that
some serious action takes place soon to better
the current situation. As a future teacher I
am concerned for the wellbeing of the
students that I will end up teaching. The
multiple intelligences truly need to be
implemented in the classroom: all students
learn differently and it cannot be expected
that all will flourish with the close-minded
values of NCLB in place.
References
Eisner, E. (2002). The Arts and the Creation of Mind, In Chapter 4, What the Arts Teach and
How It Shows. (pp. 70-92). Yale University Press
Grenhawk, J. (1997). Multiple intelligences meet standards. Educational Leadership, 55(1), 62-5
Koster, J.B. (2005). Growing Artists- Teaching Art to Young Children. US: Thomson Delmar
Learning
Ramirez, E. (2007, November 12). Room to improve. U.S. News and World Reports, 45-50
Schirrmacher, R. (1998). Art and Creative Development for Young Children. New York: Delmar
Publishers
Striker, S. (2001). Young at Art. New York: Henry Holt and Company
West, D. D. (2000). An Arts Education: A Necessary Component to Building the Whole Child.
Educational Horizons, 78(4), 176-8