David A. Dik, Rob Morrison, F. R. Sabol, Lynn Tuttle
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引用次数: 6
Abstract
Abstract In this concluding article for the special issue on COVID-19 and K-12 arts education, the authors look forward to some positive possible changes for the delivery of arts education as students return to school past COVID-19 and will address some of the barriers to these positive changes, including policy opportunities and implications. The barriers discussed are not new to arts education – resource and funding challenges, a focus on remediation pulling students from arts classes, and a continued inequitable access to arts education for students in poverty and students of color. The article will discuss how the pandemic has exacerbated some of these long-standing challenges, as well as ways to address those challenges from a policy perspective as well as through advocacy work at the federal, state, and local levels. The article suggests ways to rethink how we approach areas of educational policy, particularly the accountability structures of public education, in order to address inequitable access now and in the long term.
期刊介绍:
Arts Education Policy Review ( AEPR) presents discussion of major policy issues in arts education in the United States and throughout the world. Addressing education in music, visual arts, theatre, and dance, the journal presents a variety of views and emphasizes critical analysis. Its goal is to produce the most comprehensive and rigorous exchange of ideas available on arts education policy. Policy examinations from multiple viewpoints are a valuable resource not only for arts educators, but also for administrators, policy analysts, advocacy groups, parents, and audiences—all those involved in the arts and concerned about their role in education. AEPR focuses on analyses and recommendations focused on policy. The goal of any article should not be description or celebration (although reports of successful programs could be part of an article). Any article focused on a program (or programs) should address why something works or does not work, how it works, how it could work better, and most important, what various policy stakeholders (from teachers to legislators) can do about it. AEPR does not promote individuals, institutions, methods, or products. It does not aim to repeat commonplace ideas. Editors want articles that show originality, probe deeply, and take discussion beyond common wisdom and familiar rhetoric. Articles that merely restate the importance of arts education, call attention to the existence of issues long since addressed, or repeat standard solutions will not be accepted.