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July 8, 2023
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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.

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Comments 41-50 of 64

  • Norma holmes

    12/27/2022 09:51 PM

    Art and music also bridge language and cultural differences. — agree 100% with your case for both through high school

  • Elaine Liming

    12/27/2022 07:53 PM

    I began teaching in the elementary grades. I was fortunate to have had art and music in my school years. That experience helped me to focus on the total gifts of the children I taught. My students loved art and music time. Both were included in all the subjects I had to teach for that grade level. My students thrived on my approach. My nickname "the singing teacher". I agree with you that these subjects should always be a part in developing the total child. My later years in a Catholic High school I continued my approach. I taught religion. I received a cd on the gospel of Mark. The music enabled me to teach the total gospel's meaning. Their final exam---I will play a song from the gospel of Mark; tell me the meaning, I went through all the songs on the cd. Lowest grade was 89%. With religious art samples, the life and times of Jesus gave them meaning. Many of my former students have gone to the Holy Land and Rome and have written me notes of thanks for those religion art classes. Thanks for writing about this. Art and music to mean are soul gifts. Thanks again

  • Ellena ANDERSON

    12/27/2022 06:20 PM

    Totally true! Another loss: the lost art of cursive writing -- or legible writing, spelling and grammar of any kind. How does a teacher not know the difference between "I" and "me," or that "it's" is not a possessive???

  • Barbara Pugh

    12/27/2022 05:42 PM

    You are so right about music and/or art keeping kids in school. If it wasn't for band in high school, I probably would have dropped out. Instead, in order to keep my 1st chair cornet/trumpet position, I was required to keep at least a "C" average. However, I did better than that. I know many other kids in band were similar to me. And now, at age 75, I still play in a community jazz band and concert band and it keeps the cobwebs out of my brain.

  • Margaret Howerton

    12/27/2022 05:32 PM

    I completely agree. There are many people today who do not know how to read music. To me, it is essential to know how. Some people may not excel in other subjects, but could do so in music or art, and that could eventually create their dream job or career.

  • Rebecca Hammack

    12/27/2022 04:17 PM

    This article about the music and art programs is so true. When in school I was bullied badly. But the music department was my sanctuary of peace. Music helped me deal with the other teenage problems that I dealt with and gave me not only a chance at a place to succeed but the release into a creativity instead of anger was a great blessing.

    I would also thing the industrial arts departments and home Ec also would have the same effects on the young minds with creative aspects. Thinking outside of the box is taught in all these types of creative programs. And we need those kind of programs to help children find their own self worth and talents .

    I also want to thank you for your Weekend show with your telling of the "real" nativity. It was the most realistic view I have heard told, of a tale watered down into something perfectly beautiful. The reality of being with the animals and the low-ness of a real manger was so much more of a striking story. Putting reality back into the telling of the tale of the coming of the baby Jesus.

    Thank You for sharing your truths in all you speak.
    -Becky

  • Muriel Miller

    12/27/2022 03:40 PM

    Many years ago, I was in the midst of a divorce. My former husband was really not a good father, and the judge realized this. He did not want my ex to have much influence in the kids' lives, and told me to put the kids in every activity - Music, scouts, church, 4-H, acting. If their activities interfered with a visit from their father, the activity was given the preference. This was written into the divorce decree. I followed the judge's orders. My children all received college scholarships - one a full-ride music scholarship, and he has a joint music and finance degree and has a great position with a large bank. They have master's degrees and accounting degrees. And I firmly believe the music and acting and church activities broadened their minds to help them succeed. Absolutely, music and art are essential to mind development.

  • Debra Reynolds

    12/27/2022 03:27 PM

    The problem with art and music in schools is largely that it's being taught (very much like history) as a boring, sit-and-listen type class with no fun, no ability to express creativity--and that's been going on for a very long time. (I'm 59, and that's how it was even then.) Also, band and chorus tend to be super competitive, focused on a few "stars" and miserable for others who really wanted to belong there. I've seen so many children turned off school by band, or chorus! For myself, "Library" was the only "class" I wanted to attend. Now I look back and realize that if I'd had any encouragement, I'd have done much better. I've learned so much since I left school, taught myself so many things. It's sad that I was raised in a rural, low-volume, "better" school and this was still the case. If it hadn't been for my parents and grandparents encouraging me in many ways, I would have let my native intelligence lie fallow.

  • Ellizabeth Yacoubian

    12/27/2022 03:10 PM

    I agree. In elementary school where Iive in Long Beach, they allow 30 minutes. That’s enough time to get their instruments out, play for 15 minutes and put them away! Ridiculous!

  • Mike Dodaro

    12/27/2022 03:01 PM

    Music and art are important in education, but we're losing the culture in our churches where derivative pop music has become the norm. If we can't maintain the cultural ethos inside our buildings, why do we argue in public that our Judeo-Christian heritage needs to be preserved? Western Civilization is, in addition to regenerated lives, the best evidence we have that the gospel preached by the apostles was not mythology born of cognitive dissonance after Jesus’s crucifixion. A tree is known by its fruit. Let us not consign the high art that goes with the moral advances of the West to the dustbin of history in the name of cultural neutrality. Neutrality is impossible when we're talking about basic ideals by which the church either thrives or languishes. Rooms full of enthusiasts who have no grasp of the historical revelation in which salvation is embodied do not by virtue of their numbers constitute an argument for dismissal of the best of Western art. There probably is, as we are being told, a place for pop art in some of the ministries of the church, but not when it drives out sublime art that has been created through the patronage of the church and Christian people through so many centuries. https://church-alienation.blogspot.com/2005/04/form-and-meaning-in-liturgical-art.html