Cultivating Common Ground: Integrating Standards-Based Visual Arts, Math and Literacy in High-Poverty Urban Classrooms.

Marisol Cunnington, A. Kantrowitz, S. Harnett, Aline Hill-Ries
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引用次数: 23

Abstract

The Framing Student Success: Connecting Rigorous Visual Arts, Math and Literacy Learning experimental demonstration project was designed to develop and test an instructional program integrating high-quality, standards-based instruction in the visual arts, math, and literacy. Developed and implemented by arts-in-education organization Studio in a School (STUDIO), in partnership with the New York City Department of Education, the Framing Student Success curriculum was designed by experienced professional artist instructors collaborating with school-based visual arts, math, and literacy specialists and classroom teachers. The Framing Student Success curriculum units were designed to make explicit connections between subjects (visual arts and ELA or math), while maintaining the integrity, depth and rigor of instruction in both subject areas. While students were receiving arts-integrated instruction during each of the twelve six-week units, classroom teachers and arts specialists were receiving embedded professional development. Regular cross-site professional development was also provided for teachers, specialists, and school administrators. As a randomized control trial study, the three-year Framing Student Success study provides robust evidence of the potential impacts of an interdisciplinary, arts-integrated curriculum for students growing up in poverty. The mixed-method study assessed the effects of staff professional development and standards-based arts-integrated instruction in three urban, high-poverty elementary schools. Results indicate that rigorous interdisciplinary instruction that links visual arts, literacy, and math skills, and supports cognitive skill development, can increase students’ literacy and math learning while nurturing their art making skills and enhancing their ability to meaningfully reflect on their own work and that of their peers. Qualitative findings suggest that interdisciplinary educator collaborations were critical to project success, and highlight the project’s successful engagement of lower-performing students and students with disabilities. Survey and focus group results suggest that training can build the capacities of teachers, arts specialists, and administrators to implement an interdisciplinary curriculum, providing educators with additional tools to teach engaging, Common Core aligned lessons addressing academic and cognitive competencies.
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培养共同点:在高度贫困的城市教室中整合基于标准的视觉艺术、数学和读写能力。
构建学生成功:连接严格的视觉艺术、数学和识字学习实验示范项目旨在开发和测试一个教学计划,该计划整合了视觉艺术、数学和识字方面的高质量、基于标准的教学。由艺术教育组织Studio in a School (Studio)与纽约市教育部合作开发和实施的框架学生成功课程由经验丰富的专业艺术家导师与学校视觉艺术、数学和识字专家以及课堂教师合作设计。框架学生成功课程单元的设计是为了在学科之间建立明确的联系(视觉艺术和ELA或数学),同时保持两个学科领域教学的完整性、深度和严谨性。当学生们在12个为期6周的单元中接受艺术综合教学时,课堂教师和艺术专家则接受嵌入式专业发展。还为教师、专家和学校管理人员提供定期的跨站点专业发展。作为一项随机对照试验研究,为期三年的框架学生成功研究提供了强有力的证据,证明跨学科、艺术综合课程对贫困家庭学生的潜在影响。混合方法研究评估了三所城市高贫困小学的教师专业发展和基于标准的艺术综合教学的效果。结果表明,严格的跨学科教学将视觉艺术、读写能力和数学技能联系起来,并支持认知技能的发展,可以提高学生的读写能力和数学学习,同时培养他们的艺术创作技能,增强他们对自己和同龄人的工作进行有意义反思的能力。定性研究结果表明,跨学科的教育者合作对项目的成功至关重要,并强调了该项目成功地吸引了表现较差的学生和残疾学生。调查和焦点小组的结果表明,培训可以培养教师、艺术专家和管理人员实施跨学科课程的能力,为教育工作者提供额外的工具,教授引人入胜的、符合共同核心的课程,解决学术和认知能力问题。
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自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
审稿时长
32 weeks
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