Advertisement

Latest News

July 8, 2023
|

Aside from letting leftist indoctrination take over our public school system, the biggest mistake we conservatives made in education over the years was in thinking that art and music classes were expendable luxuries and should be slashed to concentrate on “the three ‘R’s.” Not only are art and music classes important in themselves, but they are also beneficial to helping students excel in other subjects, including math and reading.

As the so-called “triumph of the nerds” has shown us, the twenty-first century will belong to the creative; they will thrive and prosper, both as individuals and as societies. The creative ones will be the competitive ones. This is why China goes to so much trouble and expense to try to steal our patents and infiltrate our universities and corporate R&D departments.

While you can't teach creativity the way you do state capitals and multiplication tables, you can nurture it by offering art and music to all of our students, all the way through school. I believe that our secret weapons for remaining creative and competitive in the global economy are art and music, what I call our "weapons of mass instruction."

Studies have shown a direct correlation between music education and math scores. Music develops both sides of the brain and improves spatial reasoning and the capacity to think in the abstract. Music teaches students how to learn, and that skill is transferable to learning foreign languages, algebra, or history.

Art and music education levels the differences in academic performance among students from different socioeconomic backgrounds and reduces delinquent behavior. Art and music education results in what all parents and school districts are looking to brag about: higher SAT scores. I am a living example of how learning to play guitar can take a shy kid out of his shell and set him on a path to success in life he might otherwise never have imagined. This is why I support organizations that provide instruments to underprivileged students.

Some children decide early on that they're not good at school and they hate it. Art and music can save these children and keep them in school. For them, biology may be broccoli and Spanish may be spinach, but when they get to art class or band practice, that's a hot fudge sundae. If it weren't for these opportunities where they feel successful and worthwhile, where they're enthusiastic and engaged, many students would drop out of school. According to research by the Education Commission of the States, there is an established correlation between art and music education and high school dropout rates.

It infuriates me when people, especially my fellow conservatives, dismiss art and music as extracurricular, extraneous, and expendable. To me, they're essential to a well-rounded education.

In reality, creativity doesn't really have to be "taught" because it is naturally "caught" by every child.

Do you have to beg a three-year-old to sing or a four-year-old to draw pictures or a five-year-old to playact various roles when playing fireman, doctor, or parent? What happens between the naturally creative early years and the bored-to-death teenage years? Those years are spent in a classroom in which students are told to sit down, be quiet, face forward, get your head in the book, and be still.

Students today aren't dumb. The people who run the educational establishment, who want to create a conveyor belt that treats students like parts in a manufacturing plant (like the one in the Pink Floyd video for “Another Brick in the Wall”), are the dumb ones. And there's no reason to let it stay that way.

Leave a Comment

Note: Fields marked with an * are required.

Your Information
Your Comment
BBML accepted!
Captcha

More Stories

Remembering September 11th

The Meaning of Memorial Day

Comments 21-30 of 64

  • Robin Bateman

    07/08/2023 02:58 PM

    YES!!!

  • Mike Dodaro

    07/08/2023 02:40 PM

    My wife and I are both musicians. I'm sung fully staged opera productions and both of us have been church musicians for about fifty years. We both benefitted from school music classes and bands. One thing that gets lost in these kinds of discussions is that music is not just a matter of taste. In church, it isn't as innocuous as "the color of the carpet". If you are serious about the issues involved, read this: https://church-alienation.blogspot.com/2005/04/form-and-meaning-in-liturgical-art.html
    Or this: https://church-alienation.blogspot.com/2005/04/all-shook-up-music-passion-and.html

  • Brenda Estep

    07/08/2023 02:22 PM

    Excellent article. Many good points made!

  • Ed Thompson

    07/08/2023 02:20 PM

    One of my favorite things about school (public school I might add) was music class. My grade school was a little two room school house. Four grades in two separate rooms, first and second in one room and third and fourth in the other. It was my first exposure to the classical music genre, everything up to that point in my life was either cowboy style or traditional country, bluegrass, hillbilly, with a sprinkle of the “new rock and roll” that was just starting out. As the years went by I realized that I had talent for music, singing and playing drums. I have been offered some very interesting opportunities in my life associated with my abilities as a drummer but decided that my passion for drumming was superseded by my passion for aircraft. But at least I was exposed to music and all of its nuances that gave me a choice of what I wanted from life. Without the opportunity to be exposed to music or arts, children are being denied a chance to try something that could be a great moment in their lives. I’ve seen schools do everything possible to keep their sports programs open and going, we owe it to our children to do as much with music and arts.

  • Melissa Thatch

    07/08/2023 01:32 PM

    Amen! Music and art should be a critical part of the education of every child. As a singer music was one of the major components of my formative years, I can't imagine my life without song and all manner of musical and artistic expression--most of my family members (and there are many) would wholeheartedly agree. Music, art, dance, poetry, theater are all important to a well rounded person and the source of a great deal of enjoyment.

  • Carol Carlton

    07/08/2023 12:29 PM

    I so agree with you. I was the shy kid who didn't have many friends and did poorly in school. I handed in blank papers in art as it was and still is, difficult for me to draw anything but stick figures. Let me go to the music room and I blossomed. I tried to play the clarinet but didn't have enough wind for it. I took piano lessons and did well so I got to practice with all of the soloists for the musical we were doing. I wasn't good enough to play for the musical itself but would rather have practiced with soloists. I knew everyone's part and sang in the different sections to help them learn their part; bass all the way up to soprano. No, I didn't have the range but could hear it and sing it to them.
    I majored in music in college and teach piano still past retirement age because I love teaching.
    My mother basically homeschooled me every evening with all of the other subjects. She became a teacher after my dad passed away and taught into her retirement age as well. We all love music and now she sings with the choir in heaven as she passed away a year ago.

  • Jayne Hampton

    03/09/2023 10:08 PM

    Agreed! I loved being part of music and arts programs throughout my school experience. I did something every day related to music. I had free voice lessons, free clarinet lessons ( with instrument provided, because my parents could not have afforded it), and I performed in numerous concerts at school and beyond. I learned to sing in multiple languages, and learned about many different cultures. My children and grandchildren are enjoying the art and music programs in their schools also! Some of my (and their) best friendships have been formed with fellow artists and musicians, too.

  • Peggy Chapman

    03/08/2023 03:47 PM

    Mike, I agree with you concerning art and music!…..music began with me in 7th grade with clarinet in Junior High (Middle school now!) band…..to be a part I had to take lessons which carried also into Miami Senior High School Concert and Marching Band, (Million Dollar Marching One Hundred!) Miami, Florida. (In the mid 1950’s) Talk about fun and great memories! Orange Bowl Parade and Orange Bowl halftimes!!….I have an appreciation for all types of music in that day….that was before rock! ?? I love when the National anthem is played in a majestic triumphant manner….. “Drum roll please” ???? Twenty years later I played in my church orchestra for several years.
    I will add that sewing is my Art which I still enjoy to this day!

  • Noble E. Johnson, P.E.

    03/08/2023 03:33 PM

    I taught the Junior High Youth Group and Sunday School Classes at our church for over a decade. The biggest challenge we had for every group that graduated into the Junior High class was to train them out of being quiet and keeping their hands and their thoughts to themselves. It normally took months to convince the kids to understand that their thoughts, opinions, and feelings were valuable and even longer to teach them how to share them with others with any degree of confidence. The kids who were involved in music programs had a much easier transition as they were already used to "sharing" their music. Another challenge was teaching the kids to use information to draw conclusions rather than just parroting information without serious thought and analysis. Again, the kids involved in music programs made this transition with greater ease than those without them.

    Thank you for all you do,
    Noble

  • Janet Kay Snyder

    03/08/2023 02:59 PM

    The arts are ignored but sports programs are over rated