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Déjà Vu All Over Again

bySBO Staff
September 19, 2022
in Guest Editorial, April/May 2014, Choral
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deja

New music/arts standards will drive education for the next decade… or longer.

By Bob Morrison

In March of 1994, just over 20 years ago, two of the most historically important efforts to advance music and arts education came to fruition:

1. The codifying of the arts as a core subject with the passage and signing of the Goals 2000 Educate America Act (the Clinton Administration’s name for the Elementary and Secondary Education Act that governs all  public education in this country) and,

2. The release of the National Standards for Arts Education. 

These two events, culminating simultaneously, set the stage for the future growth (and defense) of music and arts education.

The passage of Goals 2000 was important because, for the first time in history, our nation was defining what “core subjects” meant. Earlier attempts to do this relegated the arts to the margins, on the outside looking in – nowhere to be found among the proposed subjects of English, Math, Science, History, and Geography. Think about that. In 1989, Geography was considered one of five core subjects proposed for our national education goals!

The long battle for inclusion, highlighted in this publication two years ago in my column “Untold Story of How Music and Arts Education Became Core Subjects,” hinged on the critical partnership between MENC (now NAfME), NAMM, and NARAS (The Recording Academy) to bring music and the arts to their rightful place at the table.

With music and arts education finally included with the force of law as a core subject, state and local advocates now had a policy document (Goals 2000) from which to make the case for the role of music and the arts in our state policies and in guiding the view of our local school districts. (How we were able to keep the U.S. Senate in session to actually vote to pass the law is a topic for a whole other article.)

Having a policy, though, would not be enough – and here is where the National Standards for Arts Education come into play.

Working in parallel to the advocacy efforts to define the arts as a core subject, the national organizations in each of the four arts disciplines (dance, music, theater, and visual arts) set out to define “what students should know and be able to do” in each arts area (with funding from the U.S. Department of Education and the National Endowment for the Arts). The process had started in 1991 to take advantage of the whole movement towards standards that was occurring across education. In fact, the arts was the second area (after math) to release national standards.

With the arts now a core subject and a set of freshly minted national standards for arts education available for use, state and local advocates had the tools needed to create state level standards and to inform the development of local curriculum.

National Standards for Arts Education have been adopted or adapted by 49 state departments of education, and have become the benchmark document by which K-12 arts learning is measured in dance, music, theatre, and visual arts. Curriculum designers, teacher training programs, funders, and federal and state policy makers have relied on the 1994 arts standards to help guide their decision-making.

Why did this matter? Because a recent study showed that including the arts as a core subject and the development and implementation of standards for arts education has been responsible for increasing the perceived role of the arts in education, which, in turn, has protected programs from wholesale elimination.

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These two actions (creating standards and the declaring the arts as a core subject) created the foundation for building the modern era of music and arts education and the advocacy efforts to support the progress that has been made and the defense needed against various threats from budget cuts, teacher evaluation systems, common core, and a whole host of other issues.

That was then.

Now we are on the precipice of the release of the National Core Arts Standards, the long-awaited revision of the 1994 National Standards for Arts Education. I say “long-awaited” because I wrote in this space in 2006 that the time had come to revise the standards.

Think about it. What was the world like in 1994 when the standards were released? Or 1991 when the process to write them began? No Google, no real public Internet, and MIDI was a relatively new phenomenon. The world was very different then from where we are today. That is where the new National Core Arts Standards come into play.

The National Coalition for Core Arts Standards (NCCAS), a diverse group of organizations from across arts education, plans to complete its work and release new, national voluntary arts education standards in the fall of 2014. In creating the next generation of core arts standards, the primary goal of NCCAS is to help classroom educators better implement and assess standards-based arts instruction in their schools.

Toward that goal, the revised arts standards will address 21st-century skills, guide the preparation of the next generation of arts educators, and embrace new technology, pedagogy, and changing modes of learning. To take full advantage of today’s digital information tools, the new arts standards will exist in an online “evergreen” format, allowing for periodic, scheduled reviews and updates, and wiki-environments where student work, lesson plans, and new research can be posted to support standards-based teaching and learning.

As the current phase of education reform moves through our nation, we will be constantly challenged to defend our programs and define our role in the educational process. The National Core Arts Standards will be an important arrow in our quiver.

I predict the new standards will be embraced by states with even greater speed than the 1994 standards. And I predict that 20 years from now someone will write about the important role the 2014 standards have played in advancing the field.

It will be up to all of us currently in the field of music and arts education to make that happen.

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Get informed and get involved: learn more about the new National Core Arts Standards at: nccas.wikispaces.com.

Robert B. Morrison is the founder of Quadrant Arts Education Research, an arts education research and intelligence organization. In addition to other related pursuits in the field of arts education advocacy, Morrison has helped create, found, and run Music for All, the VH1 Save The Music Foundation, and, along with Richard Dreyfuss and the late Michael Kaman, the Mr. Holland’s Opus Foundation.

He may be reached directly at [email protected].

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