Institute for Education and the Arts

Archives postings and announcements from the Institute for Education and the Arts, an organization that supports arts integration in the academic curriculum, based in Washington, DC. These postings are also sent to our listserv members; to subscribe, please send an email to ieanewsletter [at] gmail [dot] com. For more information about the Institute's works, visit our website at www.edartsinstitute.org.

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

IEA Special Announcement for Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Dear Readers,

I am writing to share with you some news about the Institute, and to ask for your thoughts and suggestions. As you may recall, since our establishment in 2001 IEA has legally been the education program ofthe National Music Center and Museum Foundation, which has been our fiscal agent and 501(c)3. The National Music Center board recently decided to close that foundation, effective August 31, 2008.

So that we can stay in business, the Institute has been legally transferred to become a Sponsored Program Fund of the Community Foundation of the National Capital Region, which will allow us tocontinue in a non-profit status as we plan for the future. Our website will remain the same – http://www.edartsinstitute.org/ – and I can still be reached at rfstowe@edartsinstitute.org . The Community Foundation will be our fiscal agent; its website is http://www.cfnr.org/; and it is based inWashington, DC.

As we review our plans, one immediate question is whether our research and information messages are providing a significant benefit, and to how many of you. To help us decide on next steps, would you be willing to answer a few brief questions at this survey?

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=XYylx27TdMG3qVBFJOwLZg_3d_3d

Alternatively, you can reply to this email and answer these questions:
1) Do you read the newsletter?
2) Do you want them to continue?
3) With what frequency? And
4) If a modest charge were essential for us to continue thenewsletter, what would you consider a reasonable subscription fee?

We very much appreciate the commitment and energy that so many of you bring to the cause of helping all children and students learn better,both through and about the arts, and we are gratified by your continuing interest in the work of the Institute.

With best regards,

Ron Stowe
President, Institute for Education and the Arts

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Institute for Education and the Arts
1156 15th St. NW, Suite 600Washington, DC 20005
(202) 223 - 9721
http://www.edartsinstitute.org/
ieanewsletter@gmail.com

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

IEA Newsletter for Wednewsday, August 27, 2008

Welcome to the Institute for Education and the Arts' newsletter for Wednesday, August 27, 2008. The newsletter is published each Wednesday to the IEA listserv and archived on the IEA blog at http://edartsinstitute.blogspot.com.


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WANT KIDS TO UNDERSTAND? SPEAK SLOWLY.
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SLOWING SPEECH EASES CHILD’S ABILITY TO LEARN
Suzanne Perez Tobias, Wichita Eagle, 8/22/08
“Toddlers can be a tough audience lively, distracted, always on the move - but Amy Hockenberry knows how to grab them. ‘Let's get in a circle,’ she tells her class at Wichita State University's Child Development Center. ‘We're going to sing some songs.’ Hockenberry speaks slowly and clearly. The children watch her intently, then meld into a cluster for music time. Wichita State audiology professor Ray Hull would say the children heard something unusual and irresistible: an adult they can understand. Because the trick to get children to listen to really hear and comprehend, whether they're toddlers or high school students isn't speaking up, Hull says. It's slowing down.”
Read more>>


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FUNDING FOR EXTRACURRICULAR ARTS
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BEYOND SPORTS, ACTIVITY FEES TOO
Kathleen Conti, Boston Globe, 8/24/08
“A combination of expense increases and less state aid has forced area school district administrators to impose fees. For several districts, the trend started with athletics. Now, many charge for everything from drama club to parking. In most districts, students who meet a low-income classification don't have to pay a fee, or are eligible for a reduced fee. Administrators said that for the most part, waivers or discounts are available, on a case-by-case basis, to anyone who can prove a financial hardship.”
Read more>>

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THE WHOLE CHILD
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HORSESHOES AND HAND GRENADES
ASCD, 8/21/08
“Whole child education isn't easy. Sometimes even with all the right intentions we fall short of the mark. Like when we fund athletic programs by selling candy. Or when we mandate community service instead of engaging students in real service learning. Or when we extend the school day with drill and kill "tutoring" instead of enrichment, project-based learning, or a host of other activities that have a direct positive impact on achievement.”
Read more>>

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ACCESS TO PRE-KINDERGARTEN PROGRAMS
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A PROMISE OF PRE-K FOR ALL IS STILL FAR OFF IN NEW YORK
Winnie Hu, New York Times, 8/23/08
The not-so-universal state of pre-kindergarten has frustrated many parents and children’s advocates, who cite studies showing that access to early education classes can be critical in smoothing out socioeconomic differences in vocabulary and development and in preparing children for the demands of schoolwork.
Read more>>


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READING AND WRITING
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WRITING TO LEARN
Kathleen Kennedy Manzo, Education Week, 8/27/08
“The workshops sponsored by the Bay Area chapter of the National Writing Project have drawn a steady and loyal following over more than three decades among teachers seeking to refine their own skills, reflect on their practice, and learn strategies for teaching their young scribes. But at a time when the demands of high-stakes testing have led to a curriculum dominated by reading and mathematics instruction, discussion in the seminars these days is more likely to turn to the practical challenges of fitting writing into the school day, and how to show that it makes a difference in student achievement. After years of fending off critics and proposed budget cuts, the long-standing national program is moving beyond the notion of writing as an art form to promoting writing as a learning tool. And officials are collecting data they say will prove the program’s benefits to teachers and students.
Read more>>

WE’RE TEACHING BOOKS THAT DON’T ADD UP
Nancy Schnog, Washington Post, 8/24/08
“[A]s school starts up again, it's time to acknowledge that the lure of visual media isn't the only thing pushing our kids away from the page and toward the screen. We've shied away from discussing a most unfortunate culprit in the saga of diminishing teen reading: the high-school English classroom. As much as I hate to admit it, all too often it's English teachers like me -- as able and well-intentioned as we may be -- who close down teen interest in reading.”
Read more>>


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GRANTS AND AWARDS
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METLIFE FOUNDATION CREATIVE AGING PROGRAM
National Guild of Community Schools for the Arts
Deadline: September 26, 2008
Maximum Award: $7500
This pilot program will provide in-depth technical assistance and seed grants of $7,500 to eight National Guild members to enable them to design, implement and evaluate sustainable creative aging programs (participatory, skill-based arts education programs for adults age 60 and above) using best practices detailed in the Guild's latest publication, Creativity Matters: The Arts and Aging Toolkit. Technical assistance will focus on capacity-building with particular attention to outcome-based evaluation measuring changes in the health of participants.
Learn more>>

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Wednesday, August 20, 2008

IEA Newsletter for Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Welcome to the Institute for Education and the Arts' newsletter for Wednesday, August 20, 2008. The newsletter is published each Wednesday to the IEA listserv and archived here on the IEA blog.

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REPORTS
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STARTING KINDERGARTEN LATER GIVES STUDENTS ONLY A FLEETING EDGE
ScienceDaily, 8/18/08
“New research challenges a growing trend toward holding kids out of kindergarten until they’re older, arguing that academic advantages are short-lived and come at the expense of delaying entry into the workforce and other costs. The findings show older kindergartners fare better academically largely because they learn more before starting school, not because age improves aptitude, said Darren Lubotsky, a University of Illinois economics professor who co-wrote the study.”
Read more>>

INSTANT MESSAGING FOUND TO SLOW STUDENTS’ READING
Debra Viadero, Education Week, 8/15/08
“Students who send and receive instant messages while completing a reading assignment take longer to get through their texts but apparently still manage to understand what they’re reading, according to one of the first studies to explore how the practice affects academic learning. ‘Students who are managing busy lives may think they are accomplishing more by multitasking, but they will actually need more time to achieve the same level of performance on an academic task,’ said Laura L. Bowman, a psychology professor at Central Connecticut State University in New Britain.”
Read more>>


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MUSIC EDUCATION
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TEACHER’S HELPER FILLS GAPS IN MUSIC INSTRUCTORS’ DEVELOPMENT
Jonathan Devin, (Memphis) Commercial Appeal, 8/18/08
“When Dr. Deanna Stark taught elementary school music for Memphis City Schools, she found herself, like many teachers, struggling for classroom resources and creative freedom … Last September, Stark created her own business, Sister Squared, filling in the gaps in music teachers’ professional development and resources using Orff Schulwek, a methodology for teaching music adopted by Memphis City Schools’ elementary curriculum to enhance the learning experience for teachers and students alike.”
Read more>>


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SCHOOL FUNDING
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COULD BUMPY ECONOMY LEAD TO SLUMPING EDUCATION?
Libby Quaid, Associated Press/USA Today, 8/18/08
“Harder times and higher fuel prices are following kids back to school this fall. Children will walk farther to the bus stop, pay more for lunch, study from old textbooks, even wear last year's clothes. Field trips? Forget about it. This year, it could cost nearly twice as much to fuel the yellow buses that rumble to school each morning. If you think it's expensive to fill up a sport-utility vehicle, try topping off a tank that is two or even three times as big. At the same time, bills are mounting for air conditioning and heating, for cafeteria food and for classroom supplies, all because of the shaky economy. And parents have their own tanks to fill. The extra costs present a tricky math problem: Where can schools subtract to keep costs under control?”
Read more>>


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EDUCATION AND TECHNOLOGY
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AT SCHOOL, TECHNOLOGY STARTS TO TURN A CORNER
Steve Lohr, New York Times essay, 8/7/08
“[T]he time may have come to reconsider how large a role technology can play in changing education. There are promising examples, both in the United States and abroad … In the classroom, the emphasis can shift to project-based learning, a real break with the textbook-and-lecture model of education. In a high school class, a project might begin with a hypothetical letter from the White House that says oil prices are spiking, the economy is faltering and the president’s poll numbers are falling. The assignment would be to devise a new energy policy in two weeks. The shared Web space for the project, for example, would include the White House letter, the sources the students must consult, their work plan and timetable, assignments for each student, the assessment criteria for their grades and, eventually, the paper the team delivers. Oral presentations would be required.”
Read more>>


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ARTS IN SCHOOLS
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KIDS ARE THE STARS OF THIS SUMMER SHOW
A TWIST ON THE CLASSIC 'SNOW WHITE' IS A PLEA TO KEEP THEATER IN SCHOOLS
Paul Nyhan, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 8/8/08
“[I]n an era of widespread standardized testing and tight budgets, formal theater and arts programs are harder to find in schools. Nearly three-quarters of Washington public schools didn't offer all students weekly theater classes, according to a 2005 report by the Washington State Arts Commission. Some worry there isn't nearly enough art education, particularly at schools that serve lower-income families. ‘A lot of schools obviously are choosing to let go of art, or in some cases, in elementary schools, recess,’ said Tina LaPadula, education director at Arts Corps, a nonprofit that runs independent arts programs in Seattle schools. ‘I feel right now there is not a lot of equity between who has access to that well-rounded education.’ Change may be coming. Seattle Public Schools is conducting an audit to identify any gaps in arts offerings – part of a broader, five-year arts partnership with the city. It plans to begin making changes tied to its report in the 2009-10 school year.”
Read more>>


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GRANTS AND AWARDS
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TE@CH AWARDS
Best Buy
Deadline: 10/12/08
Maximum Award: $5,000
“The Best Buy Teach Award program recognizes creative uses of interactive technology in K-12 classrooms. Winning programs focus on kids using technology to learn standards-based curriculum, rather than on teaching students to use technology or educators using technology that children aren't able to use hands-on. The purpose of the Best Buy Teach Award program is to reward schools for the successful interactive programs they have launched using available technology. Please do not be discouraged from applying if your school does not have the most current equipment.”
Learn more>>


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Wednesday, August 13, 2008

IEA Newsletter for Wednesday, August 13, 2008 ***our 200th blog post!***

Welcome to the Institute for Education and the Arts' newsletter for Wednesday, August 13, 2008 and our 200th blog post! The newsletter is published each Wednesday to the IEA listserv and archived here on the IEA blog.

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REPORTS
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STUDY: ARTS EDUCATION IN DECLINE
LOCAL SCHOOLS BUCK TREND THROUGH PARTNERSHIPS
Charles Menchaca, Wausau (Wisconsin) Daily Herald, 8/13/08
A new report that suggests fewer students are learning about the arts has local school administrators grateful for community partnerships. The report, released by Arts Wisconsin and the Wisconsin Alliance for Arts Education, shows there has been a 5 percent decline in overall student participation in arts classes among state students in grades 6 to 12 during the past four years.In addition, the report noted that most students do not have opportunities to participate in or learn about dance and theater.
Read the article>>
Read the report>>

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UNCOVERING A SHAKESPEAREAN THEATRE
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EARLY LONDON THEATER DISCOVERED
Julie Bloom, New York Times, 8/7/08
“Archaeologists in London have unearthed the remains of what is believed to be one of the earliest playhouses in the city and the second to present a Shakespeare play, Agence France-Presse has reported. The open-air theater in Shoreditch, in East London, was once known as the Theater and was where Shakespeare appeared as an actor with the troupe Lord Chamberlain’s Men.”
Read more>>


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WHO TEACHES THOSE IN GREATEST NEED?
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EXPERIENCED TEACHERS NOT IN NEEDIEST SCHOOLS, REPORT SHOWS
Kate Alexander, Austin American-Statesman, 8/5/08
“Teachers at Texas schools serving largely minority and low-income students tend to have less experience and less expertise than their counterparts at wealthier, low-minority schools, according to a study released Monday. ‘The students most in need of the most qualified teachers are the least likely to be taught by them,’ the Association of Texas Professional Educators said in the study.”
Read more>>


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EDUCATION AND TECHNOLOGY
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VOTERS WOULD BE WISE TO TARGET SKILLS GAP
David Brooks, opinion piece, Dallas Morning News, 8/2/08
“America's educational progress was amazingly steady [earlier in the 20th century], and the U.S. opened up a gigantic global lead … But the happy era ended around 1970 when America's educational progress slowed to a crawl. … America's lead over its economic rivals has been entirely forfeited, with many nations surging ahead in school attainment. This threatens the country's long-term prospects. It also widens the gap between rich and poor. Ms. Goldin and Mr. Katz describe a race between technology and education. The pace of technological change has been surprisingly steady. In periods when educational progress outpaces this change, inequality narrows. The market is flooded with skilled workers and so their wages rise modestly. In periods like the current one, when educational progress lags behind technological change, inequality widens. The relatively few skilled workers command higher prices, while the many unskilled ones have little bargaining power.”
Read more>>


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IMPROVING INSTRUCTION
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EDUCATORS PEER OVER STUDENTS’ SHOULDERS AT MICH. MATH LAB
Sean Cavanaugh, Education Week, 8/13/08
“Hunched over tables, peering over one another’s shoulders, a group of 5th graders is attempting to conquer some of the most difficult—and essential—material in elementary school math. They are not alone. On one side of their classroom, about 30 adults are sitting on risers, watching the students closely. They jot down notes. They listen to the students’ comments and questions, broadcast to them over a sound system. And when the students leave the room for a break, the adult observers move in to peruse the answers the children have scrawled in their notebooks. This unconventional classroom arrangement is part of the Elementary Mathematics Laboratory, a forum held here over a two-week period this summer at the University of Michigan’s school of education. The lab, now in its second year on this campus, brings together teachers, college students preparing for the teaching field, and academic researchers from across the country to observe and discuss the challenges elementary educators face in trying to help students struggling in math.”
Read more>>


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ACCESS TO THE ARTS FOR KIDS
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$12 MILLION DONATION TO THE U. WILL BOOST ART OPPORTUNITIES FOR CHILDREN
Brian Maffly, Salt Lake Tribune, 8/11/08
”For the past few weeks, Beverley Sorenson's mind has been on Maria Menchaca, the 7-year-old Salt Lake City girl killed in a shoot-out allegedly among teen-age gangsters. Sorenson, an arts philanthropist who unveiled a blockbuster gift to the University of Utah on Monday, was pondering the toll on school children stemming from the disappearance of arts education in elementary schools, according to her son Jim Sorenson. Can the arts channel the energy of at-risk children into more productive and fulfilling paths? … [T]he Sorensons believe that the arts help. Thanks to the family's support of a new ground-breaking interdisciplinary arts program at the U., Utah school kids will have more access to music, dance and visual arts than they've had in recent years.”
Read more>>



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GRANTS AND AWARDS
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NATIONAL SCHOOLS OF CHARACTER
Character Education Partnership
Deadline: 12/8/08
Maximum Award: $10,000
Every year, the Character Education Partnership (CEP) names approximately 10 public and private schools and districts (K–12) as National Schools of Character (NSOC) for their outstanding work in character education. The awards program honors these exemplars, showcase their work, and facilitates their leadership in the field of character education.
Learn more>>

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Thursday, July 31, 2008

IEA Newsletter for Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Welcome to the Institute for Education and the Arts' newsletter for Wednesday, July 31, 2008. We apologize that extenuating circumstances delayed this issue’s publication by a day. The newsletter is published each Wednesday to the IEA listserv and archived here on the IEA blog.

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21ST CENTURY LEARNERS
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PREPARING CREATIVE AND CRITICAL THINKERS
Donald J. Treffinger, Educational Leadership Online, Summer 2008
“Once upon a time, educators might have said to their students, ‘If you'll pay close attention to what I'm going to teach you, you'll learn everything you need to know for a successful life.’ It's doubtful that this message was ever entirely true, but it's certainly not true today. We don't know all the information that today's students will need or all the answers to the questions they will face. Indeed, increasingly, we don't even know the questions. These realities mean that we must empower students to become creative thinkers, critical thinkers, and problem solvers—people who are continually learning and who can apply their new knowledge to complex, novel, open-ended challenges; people who will proceed confidently and competently into the new horizons of life and work.”
Read more>>

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ARTS IN EDUCATION FILM
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DOCUMENTARY TRACKS SUCCESS OF SOUTH L.A.’S FOSHAY CHOIR
Mary Engel, Los Angeles Times, 7/27/08
“It all started 10 years ago when middle school student Helen Camarillo walked up to music executive Tom Sturges at a Christmas party for youths and adults interested in mentoring … Sturges, a son of legendary screenwriter and director Preston Sturges, asked Helen where she went to school. Foshay Learning Center, she told him, naming a school in a crime-ridden neighborhood in South Los Angeles … For the next six years Sturges worked with the Foshay Learning Center Choir as members wrote and performed songs before ever-growing audiences. The choir's journey was featured in a documentary that premiered Saturday in West Hollywood as part of the Dances With Films independent film festival. The audience included 150 Foshay students and Sturges, who is now working with a new group of choir members. Directed by Reginald D. Brown, ‘Witness to a Dream’ chronicles the success of not only the choir but also of the students. In a school district known for high dropout rates, Helen and 30 other sixth-grade choir students graduated from high school in 2003, and 97% were accepted to four-year colleges. Of those, 92% are now college graduates.
Read more>>


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ONLINE LITERACY
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LITERACY DEBATE: ONLINE, R U REALLY READING?
Motoko Rich, New York Times, 7/27/08
“Books are not Nadia Konyk’s thing. Her mother, hoping to entice her, brings them home from the library, but Nadia rarely shows an interest. Instead, like so many other teenagers, Nadia, 15, is addicted to the Internet. She regularly spends at least six hours a day in front of the computer here in this suburb southwest of Cleveland … Her mother … would prefer that Nadia, who gets A’s and B’s at school, read books for a change. But at this point, Ms. Konyk said, “I’m just pleased that she reads something anymore.” Children like Nadia lie at the heart of a passionate debate about just what it means to read in the digital age. The discussion is playing out among educational policy makers and reading experts around the world, and within groups like the National Council of Teachers of English and the International Reading Association. As teenagers’ scores on standardized reading tests have declined or stagnated, some argue that the hours spent prowling the Internet are the enemy of reading — diminishing literacy, wrecking attention spans and destroying a precious common culture that exists only through the reading of books.”
Read more>>


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SCHOOLS FOR THE ARTS
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STATE GIVES $250,000 TO HAGERSTOWN HIGH SCHOOL
Baltimore Examiner/Associated Press, 7/24/08
“The state is giving a quarter-million-dollar boost to a planned, arts-oriented high school in downtown Hagerstown [MD]. The Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development says the grant will help finance the renovation of an old movie theater … the school will offer a college-preparatory academic curriculum in the arts to 300 students. They will be trained in the instrumental, performing, visual and vocal arts.”
Read more>>


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ARTSPACE
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ARTISTS TO GET THEIR SPACE IN ELGIN
Chicago Daily Herald, 7/25/08
“The Minneapolis-based group [Artspace] has chosen Elgin for its second Illinois project to create a co-op for artists. What put the city over the top? ‘Leadership, a vision, a drive - those were all the big indicators,’ said Stacey Mickelson, Artspace director of government relations, Thursday before a meeting with artists and community leaders. ‘We had a gut reaction in our first visit here that told Wendy (Holmes, Artspace vice president of resource development) and I this was the place.’ The 29-year-old not-for-profit group has 23 projects in 14 states. Artspace uses federal, state and local grants to convert neglected warehouses and old buildings into apartments, studio space, galleries and other commercial-use spaces.”
Read more>>


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GRANTS AND AWARDS
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MUSIC GRANTS
Mockingbird Foundation
“The Mockingbird Foundation, Inc. ("Mockingbird") offers competitive grants to schools and nonprofit organizations that effect improvements in areas of importance to the Phish fan community. Our programmatic focus is music education for children.”
Learn more>>

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Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Welcome to the Institute for Education and the Arts' newsletter for Wednesday, July 23, 2008. The newsletter is published each Wednesday to the IEA listserv and archived here on the IEA blog.

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REPORTS/PUBLICATIONS
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NEW RESOURCE HELPS TEACH 21ST-CENTURY SKILLS:
FREE ONLINE GUIDE MAPS DIGITAL-AGE SKILLS TO SOCIAL STUDIES PROJECTS AND TASKS
Laura Devaney, eSchool News, 7/18/08
“Social studies teachers now have a new resource to help them integrate 21st-century skills into their lessons: a free online document that maps various social studies projects, tasks, and outcomes to corresponding skills--such as problem solving and critical thinking--that are becoming increasingly important for 21st-century success. The 21st Century Skills and Social Studies Map, developed by the Partnership for 21st Century Skills (P21) and the National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS), demonstrates how integrating these 21st-century skills will help support teaching, while also preparing students to become effective and productive citizens in the 21st century. The map gives educators concrete examples of how 21st-century skills can be infused into classroom practices at various grade levels, and it highlights the critical connections between social studies and 21st-century skills.”
Read the article>>
View the guide map>>


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WHEN FIELD TRIPS BECOME TOO EXPENSIVE
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GAS PRICES FUEL RISE IN VIRTUAL FIELD TRIPS:
AS SOARING COSTS MAKE TRADITIONAL TRAVEL IMPOSSIBLE FOR MANY SCHOOLS, EDUCATORS ARE TURNING TO THE INTERNET
Laura Devaney, Senior Editor, eSchool News, 7/14/08
“As schools grapple with budget cuts and rising fuel costs, many districts are finding it necessary to reduce or eliminate field trips, leaving students and teachers with a surprisingly attractive option--virtual field trips. Virtual field trips typically involve students using video conferencing software or using a simple web browser to visit an online destination, such as the web site of a national museum, that offers virtual tours through the facility and up-close, three-dimensional views of geological formations, art work, and so on. They are different from webquests, which tend to be inquiry-based activities in which students use the internet to answer a set of questions. Some virtual field trips are conducted through video or web conferencing, while others are available on individual computers by clicking a link on an organization's web site.”
Read more>>


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MUSIC AND LEARNING
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HAWTHORNE’S HIP HOP HIGH LOSES ITS CHARTER
Mitchell Landsberg, Los Angeles Times, 7/10/08
“Students at Hip Hop High know all about adversity. For many, life has been a minefield of gangs, violence and family chaos. They were academic failures, most of them, kicked out of school after school, allowed to fail their way from one grade to the next. At their charter school in Hawthorne, they say, they found a home -- a place that is quirky and rough-hewn, but one where students are given the motivation to learn. Now, they fear, a bureaucratic breakdown will cause the school, formally known as the Media Arts Academy Charter School, to close ... Giovanna Zepeda told the board that in traditional schools, ‘people looked at me like a low-life gangster. . . . When I got to Media Arts Academy, they looked at me different, they looked at me like I was somebody.’ Sobbing, she continued, ‘This is the only place we can be ourselves and express ourselves.’"
Read more>>

STUDENTS GET SHOT AT STARDOM – AND MATH GETS A GOOD RAP
Meghan Gilbert, Toledo Blade, 7/20/08
“Math is going to make these kids superstars. They're musicians, having recorded an album with a multi-platinum music producer, and actors currently rehearsing for a movie written and to be directed by professionals in the entertainment world … So have you heard of the Smart Shorties? If not, listen up and you'll say you knew them when. In a new age spin on the classic School House Rock education tool, the Smart Shorties rap, sing, and dance to today's hip hop hits. Only these musicians sing about math, specifically multiplication. … All involved will get royalty payments with music and movie sales. And they should be compensated, Ms. Smith said, since they did a lot of the work writing the lyrics, recording the songs, memorizing their lines for the film, and even coming up with the name Smart Shorties … The youngsters will spend three weeks in New York next month to film the movie, which should be finished by October. Although it will be theater quality, Ms. Smith said, it will probably go straight to DVD because of the expense of promoting a film on the big screen.”
Read more>>


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COMMUNITY ARTS CONFERENCE
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71ST ANNUAL CONFERENCE FOR COMMUNITY ARTS EDUCATION
National Guild of Community Schools of the Arts
Hyatt Regency Penn’s Landing, Philadelphia, PA, 10/29 – 11/1/08
“Presented by the National Guild of Community Schools of the Arts, the Conference is the preeminent gathering of community arts education providers in the United States. Over 500 delegates--leading more than 350 community arts education organizations in over 45 states, Canada and the U.S. Virgin Islands--are expected to convene this year to discuss the latest research findings in community arts education, share information on best practices and emerging trends, and develop and share strategies and tactics for success. The conference is the only national event of its kind tailored to address the specific interests and needs of community arts education providers. Sessions led by nationally renowned experts in the field are organized into progressive tracks to provide in-depth training in best practices in Program Development, Assessment and Evaluation; Leadership and Governance; Development and Marketing; and Collaboration and Community Engagement.”
Learn more>>


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GRANTS AND AWARDS
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GRANTS FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD, TECH AND COMMUNICATION FOR LEARNING, SPORTS FOR YOUTH
Lego Foundation
Maximum Award: $5000
Deadline: 8/1/08 ***coming soon***
“The Foundation awards grants to qualified tax-exempt organizations (as determined under section 501(c) (3) of the Internal Revenue code) including educational organizations as defined in USC 26 § 170 (C) with specific, identifiable needs primarily in these areas of support early childhood education and development, technology and communication projects that advance learning opportunities, or sport or athletic programs that concentrate on under-served youth.”
Learn more>>

MINI-GRANTS FOR SERVICE-ORIENTED PROJECTS
Pay It Forward
Deadline: 9/15/08
Maximum Award: $500
“Pay It Forward Mini-Grants are designed to fund one-time-only service-oriented projects identified by youth as activities they would like to perform to benefit their school, neighborhood, or greater community. Projects must contain a "pay it forward" focus - that is, they must be based on the concept of one person doing a favor for others, who in turn do favors for others, with the results growing exponentially - to be considered in the grant making process.”
Learn more>>

STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT GRANTS
NEA Foundation
Maximum Award: $5000
Deadline: 10/5/08
“The NEA Foundation provides grants to improve the academic achievement of students in U.S. public schools and public higher education institutions in any subject area(s). The proposed work should engage students in critical thinking and problem solving that deepen their knowledge of standards-based subject matter. The work should also improve students’ habits of inquiry, self-directed learning, and critical reflection. Proposals for work resulting in low-income and minority student success with honors, advanced placement, or other challenging curricula are particularly encouraged.”
Learn more>>




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Wednesday, July 16, 2008

IEA Newsletter for Wedneday, July 16, 2008

Welcome to the Institute for Education and the Arts' newsletter for Wednesday, July 15, 2008. The newsletter is published each Wednesday to the IEA listserv and archived here on the IEA blog.

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PAKISTANI/AMERICAN ARTS EDUCATION
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TEACHERS CROSS CULTURES
Victoria Guay, The Citizen of Laconia (NH), 7/13/08

“The rhythmic beat of drums and chorus of voices singing "Funga Alafia," a welcoming song from Liberia, could recently be heard emanating from a second-floor music room in the Draper Maynard building on the Plymouth State University campus. The voices belonged to a blend of New Hampshire and Pakistani teachers who were taking part in a workshop Wednesday during a week-long arts in education initiative …The group of 20 teachers and administrators from Pakistan are taking part in the graduate-level Pakistani Educational Leadership Institute, now in its fifth year. ‘This institute is exposing them to some sophisticated and groundbreaking educational ideas that they can bring back to their country and share with other educators,’ PSU spokesman Bruce Lyndes ... According to the Idara-e-Taleem-o-Aagahi, based in Lahore, Pakistan, the organization that partners with PSU in the summer institutes, those who have been trained at PSU have gone on to train approximately 10,000 more educators in Pakistan.”
Read more>>

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CREATIVE WRITING
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THE SHORT, HAPPY LIVES OF TEACHERS

John Norton, Teacher Magazine, 7/9/08
“It’s a good time to share this fun (and often illuminating) activity we tried out recently in the Teacher Leaders Network discussion group. The idea came from a newspaper feature describing a trend toward "succinct prose." The story cited a recent book published by Smith Magazine which carried the intriguing title, Not Quite What I was Planning: Six-Word Memoirs by Writers Famous and Obscure. As the feature story noted, this and similar collections of extremely short prose have been inspired by a six-word novel said to have been written by Ernest Hemingway on a dare. The novel read: ‘For sale: baby shoes, never worn.’ Here’s the specific question we tossed into the TLN Forum arena: ‘If you were writing a mini-memoir of your teaching life, what would your six words be?’”

See what teachers wrote>>


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ARTS CONSORTIA
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ARTS, EDUCATION, AND LEADERSHIP: POWERFUL NETWORK OR TANGLED WEB?

Essay by Laura Reeder, Arts Education Information Quarterly, 7/08
Reeder, Founding Executive Director of Partners for Arts Education in Syracuse, NY, wonders whether the current focus being given to the development of consortia and arts education networks is an advantage ‘or are we just building something that will ultimately draw dollars and time away from our children and their arts education?’
Read her essay>>



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CHILDREN AND EMPATHY
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EMPATHY COMES NATURALLY TO CHILDREN: STUDY
Julie Steenhuysen, Reuters/ABC News, 7/11/08

“When children see others in pain, their brains respond as if it were happening to them, U.S. researchers said on Friday. This response, which also has been shown in adults, suggests that normal school-age children may be naturally prone to empathy, they said. ‘What it shows us is that we have this inborn capacity to resonate with the pain of others. That's probably a very important step toward empathy,’ said Jean Decety of the University of Chicago, whose study appears in the journal Neuropsychologia. Decety said he hopes to use these results to better understand brain function in children who are aggressive or engage in anti-social behavior, such as bullying.”

Read more>>


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RETHINKING TEACHING
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HOW TO SPEND MORE TIME WITH THE CHILDREN:
THE PRESSURES OF RED TAPE AND TARGETS ARE DRIVING EARLY-YEARS TEACHERS INTO THE WORLD OF FRANCHISES

Janet Murray, The Guardian (UK), 7/8/08

After 20 years as a primary school teacher Jayne Stanton was feeling jaded. Each new initiative (and there were many) brought hours of additional paperwork. While she still loved working with children, the pressure to meet government targets meant she was fast losing her passion for the job … Two years on, she is a small business owner, providing pre-school music classes in and around Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire. After spotting an advert in a trade publication, she bought a franchise of Musical Minis - which provides music classes for babies and toddlers - and has never looked back.”
Read more>>


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GRANTS AND AWARDS
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SCHOOL COUNSELOR OF THE YEAR
American School Counselor Association

Deadline: 9/5/08
ASCA's School Counselor of the Year program honors the best of the best -- school counselors who are running a top-notch, comprehensive school counseling program at either the elementary, middle or high school level. This newly enhanced program brings 10 finalists and their nominators to Washington, D.C., in late January, where they participate in a congressional briefing, tour Washington, D.C., and are honored at the School Counselor of the Year Gala. From these 10 finalists, one school counselor of the year is selected.”
Learn more>>


NATIONAL GRANT COMPETITION

Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy

Maximum Award: $65,000

Deadline: 9/5/08

“The Foundation's grant-making program seeks to develop or expand projects that are designed to support the development of literacy skills for adult primary care givers and their children. A total of approximately $650,000 will be awarded; no grant request should exceed $65,000. The organization must operate an instructional literacy program that has been in existence for at least 2 years and includes one or more of the following components: literacy for adults, parent education, pre-literacy or literacy instruction for children pre-k to gra
de 3, and intergenerational literacy activities (Parent and Child Together time or P.A.C.T. time).”Learn more>>

OUTSTANDING YOUNG EDUCATOR AWARD
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development

Deadline: 8/1/08

“Do you know any emerging education leaders who exemplify excellence and equity in teaching and learning? Share their spirit and successful strategies and skills with the education community by nominating them for the ASCD Outstanding Young Educator Award (OYEA) Program.”
Learn more>>


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